• Recent methodological advances in the field of applied linguistics have emphasized the importance of studying individual learning and development in ways that showcase its complex and often dynamic nature. (lu.se)
  • International Perspectives on Sexuality Research. (xyonline.net)
  • Researching sexual violence against women : methodological and personal perspectives / Martin D. Schwartz, editor. (who.int)
  • The domain of cognitive control has been a major focus of experimental, neuroscience, and individual differences research. (researchgate.net)
  • You will be introduced to the foundations of both psychology and neuroscience, enhancing your understanding of the discipline by learning about data analysis, research methods, processes and concepts. (mdx.ac.uk)
  • Caught in the act': ethics committee review and researching the sexual culture of schools. (xyonline.net)
  • Sexual Research with Latino Men Who Have Sex with Men: Methodological Issues. (xyonline.net)
  • Methodological Problems in Trend Analysis of Sexual Behavior. (xyonline.net)
  • Sex, science, and social responsibility: Cross-cultural research on same-sex eroticism and sexual intolerance. (xyonline.net)
  • Reflections on ethical problems encountered in field research on Mexican male homosexuality: 1968 to present. (xyonline.net)
  • Negotiating ethics and emotions in researching (around) AIDS in Southern Africa. (xyonline.net)
  • Your knowledge will be deepened with the study of biological and cognitive psychology, developmental psychology and clinical neurophysiology, while continuing to nurture your approach to research with a specific focus on ethics in psychology. (mdx.ac.uk)
  • Young people's 'agency' in sexuality research using visual methods. (xyonline.net)
  • Qualitative Methods in Sex Research in Papua New Guinea. (xyonline.net)
  • also Ecological Momentary Assessment or Diary Methods ) is an intensive data collection approach which involves repeatedly prompting research participants to answer short, easy-to-complete questionnaires about their current or recent experiences, at fixed or random intervals. (lu.se)
  • In this talk we provide an accessible introduction to ESM, including its origins, give an overview of the theoretical grounding of ESM that relates to existing methods in applied linguistics research, and discuss its strengths and limitations compared to other approaches. (lu.se)
  • Importantly, we highlight how ESM bridges the long-existing tension between subjective and objective approaches--often framed as qualitative and quantitative methods--for researching the topics and questions that interest most applied linguists. (lu.se)
  • We first trace its origins as a mixed, multi-method approach to psychological research, emphasizing its utility as a means for collecting information about both the context and the content of human and social phenomena. (lu.se)
  • Volunteer bias in human sexuality research: Evidence for both sexuality and personality differences in males. (xyonline.net)
  • Our course combines broad theoretical skills of modern psychology practice with a focus on the neuroscientific explanations and research of human behaviour. (mdx.ac.uk)
  • Our course combines extensive theoretical skills of modern psychology practice with a focus on the neuroscientific explanations and research of human behaviour. (mdx.ac.uk)
  • You'll learn by researching, analysing and processing complex data and real-life case studies. (mdx.ac.uk)
  • The Experience Sampling Method (ESM) was designed to collect such in-situ and time-dense data and is particularly well-suited to applied linguistics research in intact settings (e.g., at work, in a classroom, within social institutions, at home with one's family). (lu.se)
  • The links between psychological factors and cancer are extremely complex, bringing numerous biological, psychological or even sociological systems in interactions. (psiram.com)
  • The present workshop is motivated by the desire to extend the neuroeconomics approach to behavioral and social research on aging, creating the opportunity to explore how the neurobiological changes associated with aging influence or are influenced by these social, emotional, cognitive, and motivational factors, and to improve our predictive models of life course economic behavior by revealing the neurobiological mechanisms involved. (nih.gov)
  • Within this context, the Behavioral and Social Research (BSR) Program of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) convened an exploratory workshop to share ideas about neuroeconomics and aging around a set of defined workshop goals. (nih.gov)
  • Initially founded as a Max Planck institute that investigates the provision of collective goods, the -institute has developed into an international hub that focuses in its research mainly on applied economics and on behavioral law. (mpg.de)
  • At the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods in Bonn, the behavioral economist is studying how children and young adults can be trained to manage money sensibly and follow a stable path in life. (mpg.de)
  • The institute's research expertise covers a wide range of subjects, including the formation of economic preferences, team decision-making, the analysis of credence goods markets, the definition of normative problems that call for legal intervention, the effects of legal interventions, rule generation and rule application, the psychological processes of bystander interventions against norm violations, the cognitive and affective processes leading to choices, and reasoning about social norms. (mpg.de)
  • So far, numerous researches have tempted to indicate stress, coping facing the disease, depression or "type C" personality as factors participating to the onset and/or the course of the cancer. (psiram.com)
  • It approaches investigations through the use of psychological concepts and methods developed in social psychology, developmental psychology, clinical psychology, cultural psychology and psychology of personality among others psychological sub-disciplines. (unil.ch)
  • in the mainstream of the system-methodological tradition of the school of G.P. Shchedrovitsky and intended for descriptive research of subject areas of interdisciplinary objects of scientific study. (philpapers.org)
  • Neuroeconomics has the goal of understanding the psychological mechanisms that guide economic behaviors and the neurobiological mechanisms that underlie them. (nih.gov)
  • Fueled by methodological advances in neuroscience, including the development of neuroimaging technologies such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), the neuroeconomics approach provides opportunities for a systematic investigation of the neurobiological mechanisms involved in a wide array of economically relevant behaviors such as reward processing, temporal discounting, subjective and objective valuation, overconfidence, delay of gratification, decision-making under risk and uncertainty, and affective influences on choice. (nih.gov)
  • In addition, there is the possibility of individual doctoral research. (mpg.de)
  • It focuses especially on how religious beliefs and practices contribute to the psychological construction of individual identity. (unil.ch)
  • Recent neuroeconomic research has also focused on social phenomena involved in the motivation of economic behavior including altruistic punishment, cooperation, competition, fairness, persuasion, trust and reciprocity. (nih.gov)
  • Self-esteem is an academic and popular phenomenon, vigorously researched and debated, sometimes imbued with magical qualities, other times vilified as the bane of the West's preoccupation with the self. (com.sa)
  • Please contact the directors or research group leaders at the Institute. (mpg.de)
  • Bull Cancer, 2000 Sep;87(9):655-64 Summary : Since a long time, hypothesis of links between psychological factors and cancer, have been established in our culture. (psiram.com)