That`s Interesting - M.S. Davis 1971
... their lives in this state they are not attentive to. Harold Garfinkel (1967) has called this state of low attention or low consciousness "the routinized taken-for-granted world of everyday life." Since the interesting, by definition, engages the attention more than the non-interesting, perhaps the f ...
... their lives in this state they are not attentive to. Harold Garfinkel (1967) has called this state of low attention or low consciousness "the routinized taken-for-granted world of everyday life." Since the interesting, by definition, engages the attention more than the non-interesting, perhaps the f ...
Troubles with triangulation
... provided by Clem Adelman and his colleagues on the Ford Teaching Project. They were influenced by Cicourel, but their purpose was a more practical educational one. They elicited different perspectives about teaching situations, and then communicated these to the participants, this then producing sec ...
... provided by Clem Adelman and his colleagues on the Ford Teaching Project. They were influenced by Cicourel, but their purpose was a more practical educational one. They elicited different perspectives about teaching situations, and then communicated these to the participants, this then producing sec ...
Am I What I Wear? An Exploratory Study of Symbolic Meanings
... children–which provided an opportunity to explore shared values and patterns of consumption. In all cases, a phenomenological approach was adopted to uncover the lived experience of the respondents and their constructed reality of symbolic meanings. Interviews were conducted in a loosely-structured ...
... children–which provided an opportunity to explore shared values and patterns of consumption. In all cases, a phenomenological approach was adopted to uncover the lived experience of the respondents and their constructed reality of symbolic meanings. Interviews were conducted in a loosely-structured ...
Obsessive compulsive disorder: A review of possible specific
... escalation in dysfunctional behaviors, or cause a more intense use of thought-control strategies (e.g., thought-suppression). Rachman (1997, 1998b; Rachman & Hodgson, 1980) further suggested that the specific content of intrusions, such as themes of aggression, sex, and blasphemy, plays an important ...
... escalation in dysfunctional behaviors, or cause a more intense use of thought-control strategies (e.g., thought-suppression). Rachman (1997, 1998b; Rachman & Hodgson, 1980) further suggested that the specific content of intrusions, such as themes of aggression, sex, and blasphemy, plays an important ...
Evaluating social work students` attitudes toward physical disability
... 1966) and Interactions with Disabled Persons Scale (Gething, 1991)?” It explored the following hypotheses, that participants who: 1) have had prior positive contact with persons with physical disabilities; 2) have higher perceived levels of knowledge about issues affecting persons with physical disa ...
... 1966) and Interactions with Disabled Persons Scale (Gething, 1991)?” It explored the following hypotheses, that participants who: 1) have had prior positive contact with persons with physical disabilities; 2) have higher perceived levels of knowledge about issues affecting persons with physical disa ...
Slide 1 - rcgates.com
... LO 12.10 Factors that Govern Attraction and the Different Forms of Love ...
... LO 12.10 Factors that Govern Attraction and the Different Forms of Love ...
Increasing the Effectiveness of Communications to Consumers
... Specifically, if both motivation and ability to process a message are present, elaboration is likely to be high; however, as either motivation or ability decreases, elaboration is likely to be low. Consumers’ motivations can be influenced by several variables, such as the perceived personal relevanc ...
... Specifically, if both motivation and ability to process a message are present, elaboration is likely to be high; however, as either motivation or ability decreases, elaboration is likely to be low. Consumers’ motivations can be influenced by several variables, such as the perceived personal relevanc ...
Increasing the Effectiveness of Communications to Consumers
... Specifically, if both motivation and ability to process a message are present, elaboration is likely to be high; however, as either motivation or ability decreases, elaboration is likely to be low. Consumers’ motivations can be influenced by several variables, such as the perceived personal relevanc ...
... Specifically, if both motivation and ability to process a message are present, elaboration is likely to be high; however, as either motivation or ability decreases, elaboration is likely to be low. Consumers’ motivations can be influenced by several variables, such as the perceived personal relevanc ...
Conservation and human behaviour: lessons from social psychology
... intention to abide by proposed nature reserve rules (Seeland et al. 2002). As a result of this theory-based research, the authors cited above could specifically identify which person or groups of people (e.g. village elders, family members and friends) play a significant role in influencing whether an ...
... intention to abide by proposed nature reserve rules (Seeland et al. 2002). As a result of this theory-based research, the authors cited above could specifically identify which person or groups of people (e.g. village elders, family members and friends) play a significant role in influencing whether an ...
The illusion of transparency and the alleviation of speech anxiety
... These individuals may anchor on their internal sensations of anxiety, correct insufficiently for the fact that others are less privy to those sensations than they are themselves, and consequently overestimate the extent to which their anxiety is apparent to onlookers. As Miller and McFarland (1991) ...
... These individuals may anchor on their internal sensations of anxiety, correct insufficiently for the fact that others are less privy to those sensations than they are themselves, and consequently overestimate the extent to which their anxiety is apparent to onlookers. As Miller and McFarland (1991) ...
Introduction
... and deeply enough, they might be more assiduous in turning their general sympathy for the environment into new behavioural commitments. And yet, even where we find apparently pro-environmental values they do not necessarily translate into ...
... and deeply enough, they might be more assiduous in turning their general sympathy for the environment into new behavioural commitments. And yet, even where we find apparently pro-environmental values they do not necessarily translate into ...
Spontaneous Trait Associations and the Case of the Superstitious
... infer traits about inanimate objects (as in the case of a superstitious banana), the current approach allows us to test two issues about STT. The first issue consists of an alternative explanation for STT that stipulates that participants make trait inferences about communicators because they assume ...
... infer traits about inanimate objects (as in the case of a superstitious banana), the current approach allows us to test two issues about STT. The first issue consists of an alternative explanation for STT that stipulates that participants make trait inferences about communicators because they assume ...
Locked Closets and Fishbowls: Self-disclosing Disabilities Fiona
... moral duties to the social factors that surround or impede one’s agency of self-identifying as a person with disabilities. Thirdly, although the “closeted” members of the disability community are not only those with invisible disabilities, as I consider being out of the closet to mean living openly ...
... moral duties to the social factors that surround or impede one’s agency of self-identifying as a person with disabilities. Thirdly, although the “closeted” members of the disability community are not only those with invisible disabilities, as I consider being out of the closet to mean living openly ...
Introduction - Russell Sage Foundation
... under attack. Critics (Rawls 1971; Elster 1999) argue that it is too rosy, on the one hand, and too bloodless, on the other: too rosy because it fails to anticipate the existence of malign norms like the duel, the feud, and the vendetta, too bloodless because it ignores the emotional bedrock that gi ...
... under attack. Critics (Rawls 1971; Elster 1999) argue that it is too rosy, on the one hand, and too bloodless, on the other: too rosy because it fails to anticipate the existence of malign norms like the duel, the feud, and the vendetta, too bloodless because it ignores the emotional bedrock that gi ...
Individual and Group Behavior Tutorial
... cooperation and coordination. It further includes the study of dispute, change, technology, and external environmental forces. Some other fields of study that adds to the interest of organizational behavior are ergonomics, statistics, and psychometrics. To have a clear understanding on the topic and ...
... cooperation and coordination. It further includes the study of dispute, change, technology, and external environmental forces. Some other fields of study that adds to the interest of organizational behavior are ergonomics, statistics, and psychometrics. To have a clear understanding on the topic and ...
The Persuasive Role of Incidental Similarity on Attitudes and
... personal information does not provide any specific service to the customer, it helps to create connections and initiate conversations, particularly if the customer shares these similarities (Sommers 2009). Importantly, coincidental matches on such information are not as rare as they sound. For examp ...
... personal information does not provide any specific service to the customer, it helps to create connections and initiate conversations, particularly if the customer shares these similarities (Sommers 2009). Importantly, coincidental matches on such information are not as rare as they sound. For examp ...
Can competitive paradigms increase the validity of experiments on
... Perspective-taking (more commonly referred to as mental attribution, theory of mind, mentalizing, or mindreading) allows one to understand that the actions of other individuals are not driven by the actual state of the world, but instead by each individual’s own perceptions (i.e., visual or auditory ...
... Perspective-taking (more commonly referred to as mental attribution, theory of mind, mentalizing, or mindreading) allows one to understand that the actions of other individuals are not driven by the actual state of the world, but instead by each individual’s own perceptions (i.e., visual or auditory ...
Dual Process Theories
... This insight has inspired a disjunctive conceptualization of automaticity, according to which a process can be characterized as automatic if it meets at least one of the four criteria of automaticity. That is, a process can be described as automatic if it is either (1) unintentional, (2) efficient, ...
... This insight has inspired a disjunctive conceptualization of automaticity, according to which a process can be characterized as automatic if it meets at least one of the four criteria of automaticity. That is, a process can be described as automatic if it is either (1) unintentional, (2) efficient, ...
Egocentric Ethics - Psychology of Belief and Judgment
... disagreed (or agreed?) with both and derived yet another position, deciding that the auction proceeds should be split evenly between them (Wilstein, 2003). Stories like this are both common and predictable—diverging interests between two people, two groups, or two nations can lead to remarkably diff ...
... disagreed (or agreed?) with both and derived yet another position, deciding that the auction proceeds should be split evenly between them (Wilstein, 2003). Stories like this are both common and predictable—diverging interests between two people, two groups, or two nations can lead to remarkably diff ...
RECIPROCITY OF LIKING Theoretical Explanations Experimental
... prediction that liking causes liking: We do indeed like people more when we learn or infer that they might like us. In romantic contexts, the possibility of not being liked is often especially salient. People are loath to risk romantic rejection, and experimental research has found that people are r ...
... prediction that liking causes liking: We do indeed like people more when we learn or infer that they might like us. In romantic contexts, the possibility of not being liked is often especially salient. People are loath to risk romantic rejection, and experimental research has found that people are r ...
Disability Simulations as a Teaching Tool: Some Ethical Issues and
... care always must be taken to obtain the full informed consent of subjects (Bailey, 1982, p. Not only should subjects be informed about the potential for any harm or risk that such simulations might entail, but they also should be given the ability to choose the kind of simulation in which they would ...
... care always must be taken to obtain the full informed consent of subjects (Bailey, 1982, p. Not only should subjects be informed about the potential for any harm or risk that such simulations might entail, but they also should be given the ability to choose the kind of simulation in which they would ...
total pretest describing score= ___/9 possible total pretest drawing
... this as a framework for their own communication (Henniger, 2009). “The quality and quantity of spoken language that children hear in interactions with caregivers during the early years of life are important influences on language development” (McDonald & Proctor, 2015, p. 305). Shire and Goods (201 ...
... this as a framework for their own communication (Henniger, 2009). “The quality and quantity of spoken language that children hear in interactions with caregivers during the early years of life are important influences on language development” (McDonald & Proctor, 2015, p. 305). Shire and Goods (201 ...
Responsibility for Implicit Bias
... and can be operative in influencing judgment and behavior without the conscious awareness of the agent.2 There are three noteworthy features of this understanding of implicit bias. First, the implicit part of the bias pertains to the association, rather than to concepts implicitly held or to any imp ...
... and can be operative in influencing judgment and behavior without the conscious awareness of the agent.2 There are three noteworthy features of this understanding of implicit bias. First, the implicit part of the bias pertains to the association, rather than to concepts implicitly held or to any imp ...
THE EVOLUTION OF INDIRECT RECIPROCITY Robert
... repeatedly in an n-person prisoner’s dilemma. This assumption means that cooperation is costly to the individual, but beneficial to the group as a whole. An analysis of this model suggests that increasing the size of interacting social groups reduces the likelihood that selection will favor reciproc ...
... repeatedly in an n-person prisoner’s dilemma. This assumption means that cooperation is costly to the individual, but beneficial to the group as a whole. An analysis of this model suggests that increasing the size of interacting social groups reduces the likelihood that selection will favor reciproc ...
Overcoming Psychological Barriers to Peace Making: The Influence
... “affective intelligence theory” (Marcus & MacKuen, 1993), medium levels of emotions like fear and anxiety, which are part of the “surveillance system,” will move people from their basic perceptions, cause them to reassess their attitudes and ask for additional, new information about the situation (M ...
... “affective intelligence theory” (Marcus & MacKuen, 1993), medium levels of emotions like fear and anxiety, which are part of the “surveillance system,” will move people from their basic perceptions, cause them to reassess their attitudes and ask for additional, new information about the situation (M ...