In the nearly two decades since the HIV pandemic began, the rapid expansion of behavioral research on HIV prevention has prompted a crucial need for a sourcebook more advanced than an introductory textbook and broader and more readily accessible than a review periodical. The Handbook of HIV Prevention is intended as the first attempt to meet this need. The current state of affairs led us to edit a book that would represent the major areas of HIV behavioral research at a level appropriate for graduate students and experienced researchers in public health, medicine, nursing, education, and the social and behavioral sciences. In addition, we expect that the handbook will be useful in advanced undergraduate courses and as a reference book for health care professionals. Our plans to assemble the Handbook began in the fall of 1996 when we prepared a tentative outline of chapters and invited a large number of distinguished researchers in the field to be the authors of various chapters. We received an
Introduction: The Tools of Social Science Research: 10.4018/978-1-4666-8116-3.ch001: In this chapter, students are presented with the concept of empiricism, which serves as the basis for all social science research. Quantitative, deductive
FindAPhD. Search Funded Social Sciences Research Programmes in Geography, behavioral economics. Search for PhD funding, scholarships & studentships in the UK, Europe and around the world.
After leaving Loyola University, Linehan started post doctoral internship at The Suicide Prevention and Crisis Service in Buffalo, New York between 1971 and 1972. During this time, Linehan served as an adjunct assistant professor at University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. From Buffalo, Linehan completed a Post-Doctoral fellowship in Behavior Modification at Stony Brook University. Linehan then returned to her alma mater Loyola University in 1973 and served as an adjunct professor at the university until 1975. During this same time Linehan also served as an assistant professor in Psychology at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. from 1973 to 1977. In 1977, Linehan took a position at the University of Washington as an adjunct assistant professor in the Psychiatry and Behavior Sciences department. Linehan is now a Professor of Psychology and a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington and Director of the Behavioral Research ...
The use of a security video surveillance system is undertaken in accordance with the City of St. Thomas Security Video Surveillance Policy. Personal information is collected for security purposes in and around facilities that are owned or leased by the City of St. Thomas to ensure the safety and security of employees, clients, users and visitors. Security video surveillance cameras are continuously recording but may only be periodically monitored by Authorized Personnel. Further information concerning the use of security video surveillance is available in the City of St. Thomas Security Video Surveillance Policy and by contacting the Director, Parks, Recreation, and Property Management, or designate at 519-631-1680, P.O. Box 520, 545 Talbot Street, St. Thomas, Ontario, N5P 3V7. ...
The burgeoning field of behavioral economics has produced a new set of justifications for paternalism. This book challenges behavioral paternalism on multiple levels, from the abstract and conceptual to the pragmatic and applied. Behavioral paternalism relies on a needlessly restrictive definition of rational behavior. It neglects nonstandard preferences, experimentation, and self-discovery. It relies on behavioral research that is often incomplete and unreliable. It demands a level of knowledge from policymakers that they cannot reasonably obtain. It assumes a political process largely immune to the effects of ignorance, irrationality, and the influence of special interests and moralists. Overall, behavioral paternalism underestimates the capacity of people to solve their own problems, while overestimating the ability of experts and policymakers to design beneficial interventions. The authors argue instead for a more inclusive theory of rationality in economic policymaking.. ...
Due to advances in behavioral research during the last decades, the third wave or third generation of cognitive and behavioral therapies emerged in clinical psychology. The third wave puts emphasis on acceptance, mindfulness, attention and values as possible processes of behavioral change (Hayes, Villatte, Levin, & Hildebrandt, 2011). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a psychotherapy method of this cognitive behavioral tradition (Hayes, Strosahl, & Wilson, 1999). ACT has been evaluated for several clinical conditions (e.g., chronic pain, tinnitus, depression, anxiety disorders) with good results (A-Tjak et al., 2015). Mindfulness and acceptance based interventions were soon adapted to athletic populations (Gardner & Moore, 2004) and are growing in popularity in applied sport psychology. Three systematic reviews have examined the research of mindfulness and acceptance-based methods in sports. One reviewed single subject design studies, qualitative research, and randomized and ...
Due to advances in behavioral research during the last decades, the third wave or third generation of cognitive and behavioral therapies emerged in clinical psychology. The third wave puts emphasis on acceptance, mindfulness, attention and values as possible processes of behavioral change (Hayes, Villatte, Levin, & Hildebrandt, 2011). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a psychotherapy method of this cognitive behavioral tradition (Hayes, Strosahl, & Wilson, 1999). ACT has been evaluated for several clinical conditions (e.g., chronic pain, tinnitus, depression, anxiety disorders) with good results (A-Tjak et al., 2015). Mindfulness and acceptance based interventions were soon adapted to athletic populations (Gardner & Moore, 2004) and are growing in popularity in applied sport psychology. Three systematic reviews have examined the research of mindfulness and acceptance-based methods in sports. One reviewed single subject design studies, qualitative research, and randomized and ...
Jason Miller (Ph.D. The Ohio State University) is an Assistant Professor of Logistics at Michigan State Universitys Eli Broad College of Business. His primary research stream examines firms logistics operations, with an emphasis on studying motor carrier safety. He also undertakes research developing and disseminating multivariate statistical techniques. His research has appeared or is forthcoming in Academy of Management Journal, Decision Sciences Journal, Journal of Business Logistics, Journal of Management, Journal of Operations Management, Journal of Supply Chain Management, Multivariate Behavioral Research, Transportation Journal, and Transportation Research Part E. His research at Journal of Business Logistics has been recognized with the Bernard J. LaLonde Best Paper Award for the best manuscript published in 2013. Jason serves as an Associate Editor at Decision Sciences Journal and International Journal of Operations and Production Management. He serves on the Editorial Review Board ...
Fellowships (F-series). All NIH awarding components offer individual postdoctoral fellowships, which provide support for research training in preparation for careers in biomedical and behavioral research.. Undergraduate Student Training in Academic Research (U-STAR). National Research Service Awards for Individual Fellows Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards for Individual Predoctoral Fellows (F31). Individual Predoctoral Fellowships for Minority Students (F31). Individual Predoctoral Fellowships for Students with Disabilities (F31). Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards for Individual Postdoctoral Fellows (F32). In addition, the NIH funds institutional training (T32) programs within a number of universities and research institutions that have traineeship positions for doctoral students and/or postdoctoral trainees in communication sciences and disorders. For further information about NIDCD-funded T32 programs, contact Dr. Daniel Sklare (see program contacts for ...
SDIs portable eyeblink conditioning system offers exceptional ease of use while achieving the most accurate results for learning and behavioral research.
Health Behavior Courses (HB) HB 600. Social and Behavioral Science Core. This Masters level course fulfills the social and behavioral sciences core requirement for MPH students. It is designed to provide an overview of the social and behavioral sciences in public health to non-Health Behavior masters level students in UABs School of Public Health. Social and behavioral science theories and strategies in public health will be discussed in relation to preventing disease and promoting health over the life course. The course is comprised of two major sections: (1) overview of fundamentals of social and behavioral sciences in public health and (2) social and behavioral science research and strategies and application of social and behavioral sciences in public health practice and policy. This course is intended to provide students with the most current knowledge and analysis of issues influencing peoples health and well-being from a social and behavioral science perspective. Theoretical frameworks ...
Sales Handle This high-yield, rapid-fire Q&A book is written by students for students to help first and second year medical students review behavioral science for their course exams as well as prepare for the USMLE Step 1. About the Book The Deja Review series helps you Remember what you already know; the flashcard format helps medical students recall the most important, must-know facts and concepts covered in their course work for behavioral science. This rapid-fire question & answer review book allows students to quickly navigate through the information needed for their course exams and USMLE Step 1. Active recall questions reinforce correct answers to enhance learning - not just passive memorization. Behavioral Science is often a required course in many medical schools, and Psychiatric conditions are heavily covered on USMLE Step 1. Mnemonics and keywords sprinkled throughout the text facilitate focus on core facts, while clinical vignettes at the end of each chapter allow students to ...
The Wall Street Journal praised psychological research on kindergarteners that demonstrates how a picture-rich storybook could replace childrens intuitive inferences of design with Darwinian natural selection.1 Is this a good way to apply child psychology?. Boston University psychologist Deborah Kelemen has led the latest National Science Foundation funded research to help teach evolution. Her technical report appears in the journal Psychological Science. The aim of her research was to intentionally suppress childrens commonsense ways, and to explain why animals have functional traits and show signs of apparent design.2. The WSJ lauded picture book intervention as vital to sparing our youngest children from whats wrong in American science education, writing, Studies show that many secular people who say they believe in evolution still dont really understand it. Why is natural selection so hard to understand and accept? What can we do to make it easier?1. According to the ...
Hi, Im Giuseppe. Im a Clinical Psychologist and Psychotherapist, Postgraduate Program Director in Child Development Psychology, Professor of Psychology at the European University of Madrid and Head of Unit at Clinical and Developmental Psychological Service - PSISE Madrid. My professional interests are psychological research, assessment, psychotherapy, storytelling and human interactions, autism spectrum disorders, typical and atypical development. I graduated in Clinical and Community Psychology at the Second University of Naples (Italy), Specialized in Clinical Psychology at the University of Padova (Italy) with a training in psychotherapy, PhD. in Developmental Psychology at the Autonomous University of Madrid (Spain ...
Hi, Im Giuseppe. Im a Clinical Psychologist and Psychotherapist, Postgraduate Program Director in Child Development Psychology, Professor of Psychology at the European University of Madrid and Head of Unit at Clinical and Developmental Psychological Service - PSISE Madrid. My professional interests are psychological research, assessment, psychotherapy, storytelling and human interactions, autism spectrum disorders, typical and atypical development. I graduated in Clinical and Community Psychology at the Second University of Naples (Italy), Specialized in Clinical Psychology at the University of Padova (Italy) with a training in psychotherapy, PhD. in Developmental Psychology at the Autonomous University of Madrid (Spain ...
My research interests include psychological research methods, critical and feminist psychology, and womens health. My dissertation, titled Advancing critical methodologies in psychological survey research about womens health, serves as a how-to guide of two methodological practices (cognitive debriefing and systematic item review) for researchers aiming to expand the kinds of information that can be gathered from participants in surveys about their health. ...
Van Cappellen, P; Way, BM; Isgett, SF; Fredrickson, BL (2016). Effects of oxytocin administration on spirituality and emotional responses to meditation. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 11(10), 1579-1587. [doi ...
Jeungok Choi, RN, PhD, MPH is an Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, School of Nursing (SON). She has a Master of Public Health (MPH) from Tufts University with concentrations in Biostatistics and Epidemiology and a PhD in Nursing Boston College. She also had a postdoctoral research fellow training in Nursing and Biomedical Informatics at Columbia University School of Nursing sponsored by Reducing Health Disparities through Informatics Research Training Program (NINR T32NR07969).. Through her entire research career, she has been seeking for ways to improve healthcare communication for those with low literacy skills. Her approach is that appropriate pictographs (simple line drawings showing explicit healthcare actions to be taken) in addition to simplified text can improve learners cognitive learning process and enhance his/her engagement in deeper understanding. Her research has especially focused on tablet/web-based, pictograph-enhanced healthcare instructions for ...
In 1913, the attack was launched. In one of the most famous lectures[15] in the history of psychology, Watson called for a radical revisioning of the scope and method of psychological research. Introspection was to be abandoned in favor of the study of behavior. Behavior was to be evaluated in its own right, independent of its relationship to any consciousness that might exist. The concept of consciousness was to be rejected as an interpretive standard and eschewed as an explanatory device. As an objective, natural science, psychology was to make no sharp distinction between human and animal behavior; and its goal was to develop principles by which behavior could be predicted and controlled.. Published in the Psychological Review shortly after its delivery and incorporated within the first chapter of Watsons 1914 Behavior: A Textbook of Comparative Psychology,[16] this lecture would eventually come to be known as the behaviorist manifesto. Contrary to what is sometimes said, however, ...
The article below may contain offensive and/or incorrect content.. Ambulatory assessment (e.g., ecological momentary assessment) is now widely used in psychological research, yet key design decisions remain largely informed by methodological lore as opposed to systematic inquiry. The present study experimentally tested whether signal- (e.g., random prompt) and event- (e.g., complete a survey every time a target event occurs) contingent recording procedures of interpersonal behavior and affect in social situations yield equivalent quality and quantity of data. Participants (N = 286) completed baseline questionnaires, underwent cluster randomization to either a signal- or event-contingent condition, and then completed 1 week of ambulatory assessment, during which they answered questions about their social behavior and affect tied to their social interactions. Conditions were compared on response frequency, means and variances of interpersonal behavior and affect, correlations between interpersonal ...
For those who experience the phenomena of hearing voices, it can be extremely distressing and have a major impact on their ability to go about daily life. Recently, psychological research has begun to explore the phenomena of voice hearing in more depth. By more fully understanding these experiences, the better the psychological and voice hearing communities become at managing and overcoming these experiences. Other research has addressed the occurrence of voice hearing across multiple psychiatric conditions and the characteristics or properties that may be associated with the voices heard.. However, our study is unique in that we are attempting to gather examples of what exactly a person hears when they hear voice. From these examples we intended to analyse the properties of the language used and how these properties may relate to the characteristics of that voice. A study of this kind has not yet been conducted and we are hopeful that it may give us a great insight into the phenomena of ...
What do students do in the lab?. Many graduate and undergraduate students work with us in the Baby Lab each semester. This is a great way to gain experience in psychological research, which is very important for students who plan to apply to graduate school in psychology. Some students actually interact with parents and their children in the lab, playing games, asking questions, and teaching children new words. Others run our camera and sound equipment during a study session. Some students review videotapes, counting behaviors, recording words, or trying to see how a mother and child interact. Students enter data in spreadsheets, make telephone calls, discuss research articles, and eat pizza at the end of the semester. How can I get involved?. Students must have a GPA of 3.25 and agree to work in the lab for at least two semesters. Most students stay until they graduate. Students take either 2 or 3 hours of independent study credit (PSYC 4900) to work in the lab. For each hour of credit, the ...
Policy: This bill would accomplish two objectives: First, it would open channels for researchers to access and experiment with cannabis and cannabis extracts. Second, it would initiate the process at the end of which the Attorney General must make a determination as to which Schedule of the CSA is most appropriate for cannabidiol (CBD).. Impact: The impact on this legislation to state-legal cannabis businesses is rather remote-in both time and practice. The research access provisions will certainly create an uptick in medical and psychological research activity, the outcomes of which will add to our knowledge of how consuming cannabis in different forms and amounts effects the brain and body. This type of government-regulated research takes many years to process and complete, as both bureaucratic and scientific standards must be met. As for initiating the re/de-scheduling review process for CBD, this is a direct response to the 2016 denial by the DEA to re/de-schedule cannabis. That ...
Video games have become more refined, more realistic, and more gruesome than ever. A large amount of developmental and psychological research has focused on the relationship between violent video games and the negative outcomes among children and adolescents, such as aggression, hostility, anti-social behavior, delinquency, decreased empathy, and video game addiction (Adachi and Willoughby). Several hundred studies have been conducted focusing on these issues and many results have been produced, showing that violent video games do have a negative affect on the psyche of the youth players. Though the opposing side to this argument is important to consider, I believe I will cover those areas of doubt. It is true that video games are not a reality. However, what is not true is that video games do not attempt to represent reality. Video games represent reality in a way that is distorted and misconfigured. If there happens to be too much perception of this false reality, there are negative ...
A 2017 series of articles by researcher Chittaranjan Andrade in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry reviews the last 10 years of research on ketamine, the anesthetic drug that in smaller doses (0.5 mg/kg of body weight) can bring about rapid antidepressant effects. Ketamine is typically delivered intravenously (though it can also be delivered via inhaler, injected under the skin or into muscles, and least effectively by mouth). Ketamine can improve depression in less than an hour, but its effects usually fade within 3 to 5 days. Repeating infusions every few days can extend ketamines efficacy for weeks or months.. Andrade cited a 2016 meta-analysis of nine ketamine studies by T. Kishimoto and colleagues in the journal Psychological Research. The meta-analysis found that compared to placebo, ketamine improved depression beginning 40 minutes after IV administration. Its effects peaked at day 1 and were gone 10-12 days later. Remission rates were better than placebo starting after 80 minutes and ...
The views described in this document are those of the individual Forum participants and are not necessarily those of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Public Health Service, or any other part of the U.S. government. No official endorsement by any of the U.S. government agencies or organizations mentioned in this document is intended or should be inferred. Suggested Citation Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Tuberculosis Behavioral and Social Science Research Forum: Planting the Seeds for Future Research. Proceedings of the Tuberculosis Behavioral and Social Science Research Forum; December 10 11, 2003; Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2005.. ...
Understanding and Using the Head Start CARES Data. Join us for a webinar on Dec 17, 2015 at 1:30 PM EST.. The Head Start CARES (Classroom-based Approaches and Resources for Emotion and Social skill promotion) demonstration tests three distinct approaches to enhancing childrens social-emotional development on a large scale within the Head Start system - the largest federally funded early-childhood education program in the US. The three evidence-based social-emotional interventions selected for the Head Start CARES evaluation included: The Incredible Years Teacher Training Program (IY), Preschool PATHS (PATHS), and a one-year version of Tools of the Mind-Play (Tools- Play). Conceived and sponsored by the Office of Head Start and the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation in the Administration for Children and Families within the United States Department of Health and Human Services, the Head Start CARES demonstration was conducted by MDRC, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education and social policy ...
Employment quality as a determinant of health; Abnormal auditory tonotopy in patients with schizophrenia; Mindfulness may improve methadone maintenance therapy and decrease opioid cravings.
Posted July 12, 2000. Matthew Rabin, a professor of economics whose work integrates psychological research with formal economic models, is one of 25 recipients nationwide of a prestigious MacArthur Foundation genius fellowship.. Rabin, 36, will receive a $500,000 cash award over the next five years with no restrictions on how the money may be used. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced the new fellows on June 13. MacArthur Fellows are chosen for their exceptional creativity, record of significant accomplishment and potential for still greater achievement, said fellows program director Daniel Socolow in a foundation news release. This new group of fellows is a wonderful collection of extraordinary minds in motion. This is the fourth consecutive year that a member of the Berkeley community has received a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship.. Knowing that human behavior such as procrastination, addiction and playing fair can affect the choices people make and produce ...
the term should be a factor or interaction corresponding to a much simpler interpretation of the nature of effects in canonical space than Recent Advances in Visualizing Multivariate Linear Models. An object of class candisc with the following components: number of non-zero eigenvalues of \(HE^{-1}\). Graphical Methods for Multivariate Linear Models in Psychological Research: An R Tutorial, The Quantitative Methods for Psychology, in press. by Bartlett (1938) allow one to determine the number of significant and the HE plot heplot.candisc and heplot3d.candisc coeffs. Overview: CANDISC Procedure; Getting Started: CANDISC Procedure Browse other questions tagged r ggplot2 scatter-plot centroid or ask your own question. The candisc package provides computational methods for generalized canonical discriminant analysis and low-dimensional visualization via the related heplots package. # S3 method for mlm (1971). HE plots for Multivariate General Linear Models. a one-way MANOVA design. arguments to be ...
You have also seen that our memories do not operate like a computer, but instead are constructive in nature and can be changed when presented with post-event information or the views of another person.. Youve learned that we need to be exceptionally careful when dealing with the testimony of an eyewitness and should never rely on eyewitness memory alone.. It also means that police investigations, particularly interviewing and identification techniques, must be based on psychological knowledge if they are to avoid contaminating the memory of a witness and prosecuting an innocent person. A great deal of psychological research has been conducted in this area, and many police forces around the world have been able to improve their procedures as a result.. But we must not be complacent and should always think very carefully about the evidence provided by eyewitnesses.. Hopefully, you have enjoyed this course and it may even have given you some insights into how your own mind works! Psychology is not ...
Shockingly tragic acts of youth violence are on the rise in China. In recent years, the number of juvenile criminals sentenced by courts more than doubled even when the population of youth was dropping.1 An even lesser known finding is that in China, childhood verbal abuse has a strong link to adolescent delinquency.2, , , , The Center for Psychological Research, Shenyang and Ogilvy & Mather, Beijing ( O&M ) have joined hands to launch a creative campaign that raises Chinese public awareness of...
Psychological research shows that those who survive traumatic events report feeling increased anxiety, stress, aggression, depression, and thoughts of suicide. It is also believed that endorphin levels in the brain rise dramatically during traumatic events; after the event, however, endorphin levels gradually drop and may lead to a deficiency, causing further emotional distress.. Alcohol releases endorphins, causing sensations of pleasure while numbing emotional or physical pain. Due to their probable deficiency in endorphin levels, military veterans with PTSD will be very susceptible to addiction, as the brain craves the stress- and pain-relieving effects of alcohol.. While alcohol can provide a temporary respite from the symptoms of PTSD, the unpleasant side effects of alcoholism will soon take over, including poor sleep, memory loss, impaired decision making, and mood alterations. This combination of side effects makes it very difficult for veterans who have created a PTSD-driven dependence ...
Emotion analysis (EA) and sentiment analysis are closely related tasks differing in the psychological phenomenon they aim to catch. We address fine-grained models for EA which treat the computation of the emotional status of narrative documents as a regression rather than a classification problem, as performed by coarse-grained approaches. We introduce Ekmans Basic Emotions (BE) and Russell and Mehrabians Valence-Arousal-Dominance (VAD) model-two major schemes of emotion representation following opposing lines of psychological research, i.e., categorical and dimensional models-and discuss problems when BEs are used in a regression approach. We present the first natural language system thoroughly evaluated for fine-grained emotion analysis using the VAD scheme. Although we only employ simple BOW features, we reach correlation values up until r = .65 with human annotations. Furthermore, we show that the prevailing evaluation methodology relying solely on Pearsons correlation coefficient r is ...
Apparently, if we can get passed how bad it makes us feel, there is a lot of good which can emerge from a period of feeling awful. Pain and suffering, including that caused by withdrawal from antidepressants and other drugs can be a catalyst for transformation, a gift, which when unwrapped, can contain the seeds of a renewed life. Are pain and suffering destructive experiences to be avoided, or are they opportunities for people to develop an extraordinary life? The wisdom of spiritual philosophies throughout the ages has converged with modern psychological research to produce an answer: Suffering and sacrifice offer profound gains, advantages, and opportunities to those open to such boons.... 1. Suffering is Redemptive Buddhism teaches us that suffering is inevitable but can also be a catalyst for personal and spiritual growth... ...Christianity also embraces the redemptive value of suffering....For Christians, Christs suffering served the purpose of redeeming no less than the entire human ...
Human growth is a contradictory experience. We feel the boundaries of self expanding and the experience of humility growing at least as fast. Our humanity means we are the inheritors of strengths and weaknesses and some of the more embarrassing among those weaknesses is the tendency to overestimate our strengths. The explosion of psychological research since the 1960s has helpfully exposed many of our misapprehensions. Some of these need to be accounted for in our quest for psychological and spiritual growth. Take the bias of illusory superiority to which we are chronically prone: Far more people think of themselves as better than average drivers than is posible. Theres also the Dunning-Kruger effect, also known as the sophomore effect (sophomore = wise fool, hinting at the ego inflating effects of introductory knowledge).. Some specific examples? Well, meditation and its effect in enhancing day to day mindfulness is such a powerful aid to living happily that it is sometimes astonishing it is ...
SCR (skin conductance response) is highly sensitive to emotions in some people. Fear, anger, startled response, orienting response and sexual feelings are among the reactions which may produce similar skin conductance responses. SCR is widely used in psychological research due to its low cost and high utility. Oftentimes, the galvanic skin responses are combined with recording of heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure because they are all autonomic dependent variables.. ...
edited by Hans Müller, Pinkie Mekgwe and Marvellous Mhloyi. This book focuses on the social and cultural dimensions of development dynamics and, in particular, the role of values in shaping development. Values are at the core of the hopes and aspirations of individuals, communities and societies. The book therefore explains the values that motivate and inform African communities and societies, with a view to facilitating a dialogue about sustainable development in Africa among academics, intellectuals, policy and decision-makers, and the communities. It also investigates the social and cultural dynamics of development in Africa, as a better alternative to earlier studies that blame African culture for poverty and exclude the people of Africa in their definition of developments in the continent.. ...
Lu, S. C., Huang, C. Y., Tsai, I. J., Tsao, P. C., Guo, M. C. & Su, F. C., 2009, p. 1808-1810. 3 p.. Research output: Contribution to conference › Poster ...
Nikolov, N., Sing, D., Gibson, N., Evans, T., Barstow, J. K., Kataria, T. & Wilson, P. A., 21 Oct 2016, p. #202.04.. Research output: Contribution to conference › Abstract ...
Boaventura de Souza Santos (Professor at the University of Coimbra in Portugal and Director of the Center for Social Studies).. Boaventura de Souza Santos argues for an end to the Jewish state of Isreal as a way of defending the rights of Jews and Palestinians alike in the wake of Isreals recent attack on the Gaza Strip. The seeming lack of interest in this situation by the International Criminal Court is a blemish on its existence and work.. http://frantzfanonfoundation-fondationfrantzfanon.com/article2249.html. ...
On 14 November 2017, CPPF and the DPA organized a closed-door, off-the-record meeting on Brazil. The meeting brought together the UN Resident Coordinator of Brazil, officials from different UN divisions, programs and agencies, and a diverse group of experts and academics to discuss the challenges facing Brazil. The meetings discussion addressed the nature of the political and economic crises, which began in early 2014, and its enduring effect on Brazils democratic system and the day-to-day lives of its citizens. Looking ahead to the October 2018 general elections, the discussion examined various electoral scenarios as well as assessed their potential impact on the trajectories of the countrys economy and foreign policy agenda. Participants also examined some of the main challenges facing Brazil today, including the need to eradicate poverty and diminish inequality, confronting climate change and its consequences, insuring economy growth, and the need to reduce violence, corruption and ...
Graduates of Clemson University - College of Business and Behavioral Science - the names, photos, skill, job, location. Information on the Clemson University - College of Business and Behavioral Science - contacts, students, faculty, finances.
Factors to Consider When Purchasing the Best CCTV Video Surveillance Systems for Sale. You should keep watch of your premises, this will help you monitor and control everything on the ground. You should use the CCTV video surveillance system on your property for easy control and monitoring, this will help you to know the things on the ground. You have to find the best store that supplies the best CCTV video surveillance systems and equipment; this will help you to purchase the best products to ensure the safety of the premises. You should also ensure you use the right CCTV video surveillance systems to help you monitor your premise; this will increase the level of security and control the safety of the area. There are experts with experience in CCTV video surveillance systems installation services, look for the best contractor to ensure you protect your premises. There are suppliers of CCTV video surveillance systems in Oakland; you should look for the best store that has quality equipment for ...
Planning & implementing research in the behavioral sciences; analysis of data; interpretation of findings.Formulating problems & hypotheses; specification of types of variables & operational definitions; experimental & non experimental research designs; use of randomization & controls; sampling problems basic to statistical inference.
TY - JOUR. T1 - Sequential analysis of multiple analytes using a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor. AU - Chung, J. W.. AU - Bernhardt, R.. AU - Pyun, J. C.. PY - 2006/4/20. Y1 - 2006/4/20. N2 - A sequential analysis method for the analysis of two analytes was developed using a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor. A sample with both analytes was introduced into the single sensing region and then each analyte was analyzed sequentially. Two detection models were devised for the samples with the following composition: (1) one target analyte resulting in a sensor response without any label and the other analyte with only additional label, (2) both target analytes requiring additional labels for detection. A standard curve for each model was prepared and applied for sequential analysis of anti-bovine serum albumin (anti-BSA) antibodies and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The errors of the sequential analysis of Models 1 and 2 were found to be less than 6%, and this method was therefore ...
What We Do: The mission of the Division of Clinical Neuroscience and Behavioral Research is to utilize a translational approach, within a clinical research context, to improve health by advancing our understanding of brain and behavior in drug abuse and addiction. This mission is pursued through programs of clinical research and research training within three branches centered on neuroscience, development, and treatment. A major focus of the Division is the support of science for the translation of basic findings to clinical research, as well as for the translation of the results of clinical investigations to applied research. Staff Contacts: Joseph Frascella, Ph.D. - Director Barbara Usher, Ph.D. - Special Assistant to Director Carolyn Tucker - Support Staff Justin Drott - Support Staff
Dr. Saskia Sanderson is a research psychologist working in the field of psychology as applied to genomics. Saskia is interested in how people think, feel and act in response to getting personal genomic information about themselves, and she conducts research to address these questions. A key focus of her work is to provide empirical evidence on the potential value of genomic sequencing technologies for people in many contexts. She is a researcher in the Department of Behavioural Science and Health at University College London and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. Saskias training included post-doctoral research at the Centre for Cardiovascular Genetics in the UK, and in the Social and Behavioral Research Branch of the National Human Genome Research Institute in the US. She subsequently took up an Assistant Professor position at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai ...
The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), a member of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, is mandated to conduct and support biomedical and behavioral research and research training in the normal and disordered processes of hearing, balance, smell, taste, voice, speech, and language. The Institute also conducts and supports research and research training related to disease prevention and health promotion; addresses special biomedical and behavioral problems associated with people who have communication impairments or disorders; and supports efforts to create devices which substitute for lost and impaired sensory and communication function. The current director of the NIDCD is Dr. James F. Battey Jr. Dr. Battey is a Cal Tech graduate with PhD and an Md from Stanford. ...
Details of Full-Time Equivalent Employment (FTEs)1 Office / Division FY 2009 Actual FY 2010 Enacted FY 2011 PB Office of the Director 26 25 29 Office of Extramural Affairs 17 17 17 Office of Management 72 71 73 Office of Science Policy & Communications 31 31 32 Division of Epidemiology, Services & Prevention Research 33 33 34 Division of Basic Neurosciences & Behavioral Research 30 30 32 Division of Pharmacotherapies & Medical Consequences of Drug Abuse 33 33 35 Center for the Clinical Trials Network 14 14 15 Division of Clinical Neuroscience & Behavioral
Full Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 2016 - present. Associate Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 2011 - 2016. Assistant Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 2006 - 2011. Teaching Assistant, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 2000 - 2006. Research Assistant, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 1995 - 2000. Head of the Laboratory for Ergonomics, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade, Serbia, 2007 - present. Member of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Behavioral Research & Psychology (IJBRP), 2015 - present. Member of the Program board of the 6th International Symposium of Industrial Engineering, 2015. Member of the Program and Organizational board of the 5th International Symposium of Industrial Engineering, ...
These awards are made to institutions to support groups of pre- and/or postdoctoral fellows, including trainees in basic, clinical, and behavioral research.
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No systematic assessment exists that justifies the extension of ethics regulations to non-experimental social science research. Instead, three studies-by MILGRAM, HUMPHREYS, and ZIMBARDO-are repeatedly cited to support such regulation, based on their use of deception and/or covertness. Challenging such regulation requires these studies detailed re-examination. In this article we offer a critique of deception and covert research as understood solely within the context of experimentation: that framing of those research activities has narrowed their consideration in ways that do a disservice to social science research (as comparison with studies by ROSENHAN and LEO further clarifies). We show that, controversial as they may have been, these projects met a key ethics principle: beneficence, something ignored by most of the critics assessing their work. Theorizing deception and covertness, we establish distinctions between them and argue for the importance of their use in studies of powerful ...
Both basic psychological processes and psychological research methods are needed to elaborate issues in applied psychology. In the Psychology BSc Program at Leuphana University students focus exclusively on economic issues. Neither clinical psychology nor educational psychology courses are eligible as applied subjects at Leuphana University. During the course of the Psychology BSc Program students are invited to choose their main applied area in personnel and organizational psychology, work and technology or market psychology. ...
University of Washington psychology professor Anthony Greenwald is one of two researchers chosen to receive the most prestigious award of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues.. Greenwald and Mahzarin Banaji, a social psychologist at Harvard University, recently were named joint recipients of the 2016 Kurt Lewin Award for distinguished research on social issues. The pair is best known for their work on implicit social cognition, the unconscious attitudes and beliefs that humans bring to their social interactions. They helped create the Implicit Association Test, which is widely used in social psychology research, and co-authored the book Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People.. Named for the late Kurt Lewin, a founder of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues and a pioneer in the science of group dynamics, the award recognizes outstanding contributions to the development and integration of psychological research and social action, according to the ...
Behavioral and Brain Functions; Behavioural Brain Research; BMC Neuroscience; Brain and Behavior; Cerebral Cortex; Clinical Neurophysiology; Cognition; Experimental Brain Research; Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience; Brain Research; Frontiers in Sport Psychology and Movement Science; Human Brain Mapping; Journal of Cognitive Psychology; Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition; Journal of Motor Behavior; Learning and Individual Differences; Neuroimage; Neuropsychological Rehabilitation; Perceptual and Motor Skills; PLOS ONE; Psychological Research; Psychology of Sport and Exercise; Psychophysiology; Sportwissenschaft; Zeitschrift für Sportpsychologie, European Journal of Neuroscience. ...
The Centre for Psychological Services Research is an interdisciplinary collaboration between the Universitys School of Health & Related Research (ScHARR) and Department of Psychology. The Centre is headed by Professor Michael Barkham together with an executive team comprising Professors John Brazier (ScHARR), Gillian Hardy (Clinical Psychology Unit) and Glenys Parry (ScHARR).. The aim of the Centre is to improve decision-making, quality, and outcomes of services providing psychological treatment to people who have mental or physical health problems. It achieves this aim by establishing interdisciplinary and collaborative research activity via a range of research programmes operating at local, national, and international levels. Its name reflects the unique positioning of psychological services research (PSR), which combines the techniques and disciplines of health services research, including health economics, together with those of psychological research.. Hallmarks of the new Centre are its ...
The Interpersonal Perception and Social Cognition (IPSC) laboratory is housed in the Behavioural Sciences Building at York University in Toronto, Ontario. This laboratory is part of the Psychology Department in the Faculty of Health at York University. We conduct social psychological research that focuses on stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination, interpersonal processes, intergroup relations and social development. This research is conducted primarily from a social cognitive perspective.. Researchers in this laboratory include faculty, graduate students, thesis and independent study students, as well as multiple paid and volunteer research assistants. The director of this laboratory is Dr. Jennifer Steele, an Associate Professor in Social Psychology at York University. Our research, which is conducted with adult and child participants, has been funded by various external and internal sources including the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), the Canadian ...
Introduction. What is meant by the term Successful Ageing? Refer to psychological research and theories in your answer. Word Count: 2763 (excluding quotations, in-text and end-text references) The last century has witnessed substantial increases in life expectancy at birth, significant medical advances, and increasing health and social care expenditure. These changes have collectively encouraged international interest in the promotion of healthier old age and how to age successfully. The idea of successful ageing has been the subject of investigations for a variety of academic disciplines for more than 3 decades. Earlier use of the term successful ageing has been found in the research reports of social scientists in the 1960s and 1970s (Havighurst, 1963; Williams and Wirths, 1965). While the 1980s and early 1990s had psychologists and behavioural scientists studying successful ageing (Ryff, 1982), more recent work shows an interest from physicians and health service researchers as well ...
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison; M.A., University of Wisconsin, Madison Dr. Starkey joined the Department in 2003. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin, Madison and previously taught at Washington University in St. Louis and Iowa State University. His primary research interests are in emotion theory and moral psychology, and his current research examines the nature of moral experience and its relation to perception and cognition. Such research includes the relevance of emotion to moral agency and moral character. In addressing these issues, he draws on traditional ethical theory, the philosophy of mind, and empirical psychological research. Other active research interests include the psychology of courage and environmental ethics. Some recent publications include Is Courage an Accolade or a Process? A Fundamental Question for Courage Research (with Cynthia Pury) in The Psychology of Courage: Modern Research on an Ancient Virtue (2010), Classifying Emotions: ...
Jane Wardle FBA FMedSci (30 October 1950 - 20 October 2015) was a professor of clinical psychology and director of the Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre at University College London. She was one of the pioneers of health psychology in the UK and internationally, known for her seminal work on the contribution of psychology to public health, particularly the role of psychological research in cancer prevention and work on the behavioural and genetic determinants of eating behaviour and obesity. Wardle was also noted as a public health policy campaigner, and for the frank way she wrote about her own cancer diagnosis. Frances Jane Wardle was born in Oxford, England to Marcella (née Brough) and Peter Wardle, a portrait artist, the eldest of four children. The family had little money, moved often, and parents were frequently unavailable; her mother underwent lengthy hospitalisions due to mental illness and her father, to whom she was deeply attached to [..] was often absent, to the ...
An international, multidisciplinary journal, Schizophrenia Research promotes rapid publication of new international research that contributes to the understanding of schizophrenic disorders. It is hoped that this journal will aid in bringing together previously separated biological, clinical and psychological research on this disorder, and stimulate the synthesis of these data into cohesive hypotheses.. ...
In the early 1880s, biologist Henry Fairfield Osborn conducted some of the first questionnaire research in American psychology. This article details how he came to distribute Francis Galtons questionnaire on mental imagery in the United States, as well as how he altered it to suit his own burgeoning psychological research interests. The development and circulation of questionnaires at the very beginning of American scientific psychology, first by Osborn and later by G. Stanley Hall, is discussed in terms of the new psychologys often-overlooked methodological plurality. Further, Osborns late nineteenth century interest in individual variation and group differences in mental imagery ability are discussed in relation to his pervasive educational and social concerns, as well as his eventual status as a prominent eugenicist in the twentieth century United States. This research into mental imagery ability foreshadows the eugenic-oriented intelligence testing that developed in the early twentieth ...
The „Applied Social Psychology and Gender Research Lab, supervised by Prof. Dr. Friederike Eyssel, researches social psychological aspects of human-machine-interaction. Moreover, the work group investigates determinants and consequences of gender stereotypes, sexism, sexual objectification, and sexual harassment.. Focusing on psychological aspects of human-machine interaction, we conduct empirical studies on evaluation, acceptance, and usability of robots and technical systems in everyday life (e.g., during robot development in the VIVA-project, in smart environments homes, in education). In this context, we investigate attitudes towards robots and intelligent systems, the perceived quality of human-machine interaction, and user behavior during the interaction. Further, we identify key factors of user acceptance of technology and their willingness to use novel technologies. In addition, we apply well-esablished concepts from social psychological research (e.g., self-disclosure, ambivalent ...
2. To learn Ericksons guiding life principle of focusing on what is left in ones life rather than what is lost with any chronic illnesses.. Albina M. Tamalonis, Psy.D, is a licensed clinical psychologist with a full time private practice in NYC for over 25 years. She has one Masters degree in psychological research, one Masters degree in school psychology, and a Doctorate in child and adult clinical psychology. She treats people from 12 years of age and up, with an assortment of disorders. Dr. Tamalonis specializes in brief approaches to psychotherapy, which uses: meditation, relaxation and other mental techniques that alter consciousness to more easily help people change their ways of thinking and behaving. She uses active guided meditation that upgrades meditation to trance therapy to help her patients with many mind/body problems such as pain, insomnia, preparation for surgeries and healing. Dr. Tamalonis has taught internationally at various professional societies around the world, and ...
Helen Lois Koch was born August 26, 1895 in Blue Island, Illinois. She received Ph.B. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago in 1918 and 1921, and began teaching educational psychology at the University of Texas in 1922, rising to the rank of Professor by 1928. The next year she accepted an appointment at the University of Chicago as Associate Professor of Child Psychology.. At that time all courses in childcare, developmental psychology, and preschool education were under the direction of the Department of Home Economics. Koch taught the child development sequence, and also became involved with nursery school education. Appointed to the board of directors of the University Cooperative Nursery School in 1931, she was named director in 1933, which gave her responsibility for the selection of staff, the educational program, and psychological research conducted in the school by graduate students. The school was acquired by the University in 1938, becoming the University of Chicago Nursery ...
The resistance and reinforcement of structures of gender and race are central to a discussion on identity politics and intersectionality in mental health services research. The goal of the Saving Our Sisters (SOS) digital archive project (www.savingoursistersproject.com) is to have a space where Black women can find healing in others moments of clarity about self-love, self-care, mental health, and well-being. Inspired by bell hookss discourse on the gaze and rooted in community psychological research with a Womanist approach, the S.O.S. Project builds upon intrinsic motivation as applied to the mental health and well-being for Black women. The impact of the S.O.S. digital archive project has implications for both public health and mental health policy and practice, but most importantly for Black women. By focusing on community members perceptions of mental health and well-being, Black women begin to strengthen relational and shared experiences and promote agentic health behaviors as an act ...
Despite constituting one fifth of the population in Europe, elderly people (65+) are the least active group with respect to using the internet and computer-based services. Toward shedding light on rea-sons for this discrepancy, we adopt in this paper the theory of stereotype threat as a theoretical lens. Stereotype threat theory posits the perception of a social identity threat such as being old and cogni-tively slow, which in turn results in anxiety, low performance, and avoidance behavior when exposed to a stereotype-relevant situation. Psychological research has resulted in numerous studies that pro-vided evidence of perceived aging stereotypes and their implications on performance, anxiety, and avoidance. Within this research in progress, we transfer this knowledge to the phenomenon of infor-mation system (IS) avoidance by elderly people and propose a research model and multi-methodological experimental design in order to investigate the relationship between perceived com-puter-based stereotype
This study is an experiment investigating the effects of communication interface proximity on college students anxiety when they receive the alerts about on-campus crimes via e-mails and text messages. It proposes a new dimension for the traditional concept of proximity in journalism and suggests a shift in the emphasis of proximity from audience-to-event to user-to-interface. It draws the theoretical framework from multiple disciplines: human-computer interaction research, the information processing model, media effects research, as well as the psychological research of anxiety. A total of 97 college students in a large mid-Atlantic university participated in this experiment. Communication interface proximity was conceptualized as three different media platforms: desktop computer (stationary), laptop computer (portable), and hand-held device (mobile). The students were assigned to one of the three device groups based on their self-reported computer usage and received four crime alerts per day ...
Established in August 2004, the ESRC Genomics Policy and Research Forum was a novel initiative in the field of social science research. As part of the ESRC Genomics Network, the Forum acted to integrate the diverse strands of social science research within and beyond the Network; to develop links between social scientists and scientists working across the entire range of genomic science and technology; and to connect research in this area to policy makers, business, the media and civil society in the UK and abroad.. A key part of the Forums work was to exploit synergies across the ESRC Genomics Network, and to ensure the visibility and use of the Network and its output. These functions were no longer needed when the Network ceased operations and so the Forum closed in June 2013.. This archive website preserves the output of the Genomics Forum, including details of its research and publications.. ...
This project proposes that the age composition of neighborhoods is a key contributor to health and well-being in mid- and later life. This hypothesis is suggested in part by the increasing popularity of age-restricted retirement communities, which pose an interesting puzzle for the predictions of classic social scientific theories. Sociological theorists such as Matilda White Riley suggested that age segregation is detrimental to older persons productivity and social integration.
Abstract. We will approach in this article the question of human nature in economics. The traditional homo oeconomicus, as presented in mainstream economics, seems to represent the model of a perfect economic individual. We will question whether the fundamental coordinates of homo oeconomicus, rationality, self-interest and selfishness, capture the essence of human beings and if there is an universal human nature. We propose a more flexible portrait of the economic individual, with insights from recent psychological research, and we suggest that it is society which shapes human nature and character. There is no fixed or inherited human nature. An environment of inequalities makes the individual act in a selfish and utilitarian way, while a more fair social organization would make individuals altruistic and more cooperative. Values are also missing from the traditional portrait of homo oeconomicus. Human beings do not simply and always pursuit optimization, but choose often guided by ethical ...
Frédéric Gachon received his PhD in 2001 from the University of Montpellier (France). Between 2001 and 2006, he performed his post-doctoral training with Prof. Ueli Schibler at the department of Molecular Biology of the University of Geneva (Switzerland), where he started to work on the regulation of physiology by the circadian clock. In 2006, he worked at the Institute of Human Genetic in Montpellier (France) as a junior group leader before continued his career in Switzerland as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pharmacology of the University of Lausanne (2009-2012) and as a group leader at the Nestlé Institute of Health Sciences, Lausanne (2012-2018). He finally joined the Institute of Molecular Bioscience of the University of Queensland as an Associate Professor in 2019. During all these years, research of the Gachon group focussed on the understanding of the role of feeding and circadian rhythms on mouse and human physiology, contributing to the fundamental basis for ...
That the manufacture of consent is capable of great refinements no one, I think, denies. The process by which public opinions arise is certainly no less intricate than it has appeared in these pages, and the opportunities for manipulation open to anyone who understands the process are plain enough. […] [A]s a result of psychological research, coupled with the modern means of communication, the practice of democracy has turned a corner. A revolution is taking place, infinitely more significant than any shifting of economic power. […] Under the impact of propaganda, not necessarily in the sinister meaning of the word alone, the old constants of our thinking have become variables. It is no longer possible, for example, to believe in the original dogma of democracy; that the knowledge needed for the management of human affairs comes up spontaneously from the human heart. Where we act on that theory we expose ourselves to self-deception, and to forms of persuasion that we cannot verify. It has ...
Professor Biniyam Yemane will present his research on Medicaid Expansion and the Opioid crisis: the impact of increasing access to health insurance on the opioid epidemic. The United States is facing an unprecedented opioid epidemic. In 2015, over 2 million people had a prescription opiate addiction and in 2017 about 130 Americans died as a result of an opioid overdose per day
The field of psychiatry and behavioral science faces an exceptionally important challenge. Mental disorders represent the leading cause of years of life lost due to disability and premature mortality in economically-established countries, and they are the second-leading cause throughout the world. In light of its overall impact on human health, mental disorders historically have received insufficient scientific attention. And indeed, decades of research attempting to elucidate biologically valid brain disease constructs based on a descriptive clinical taxonomy have been unsuccessful. It is now broadly recognized that a major research paradigm shift is required and is, in fact, underway in Stanfords Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. This paradigm shift emphasizes the identification of typical and atypical mental states (and the dynamic shift between these states) based on the collection and simultaneous analysis of multi-dimensional data: genomic, imaging, epigenetic, biomarker, ...
Video Surveillance Systems (VSS) offer practically the highest degree of security and protection. Their purpose is real time monitoring and video images recording from cameras in the objects, as well as transferring the information to the control center, thereby a more reliable and secure protection around a wide range of objects, including those with a high degree of security, is built - it protects against trespassers, vandals, and unauthorized individuals entering restricted areas, captures incidents, allows remote video surveillance (on a computer, mobile devices, etc.). In this paper the principles of development of VSS and the possibilities of their integration into remote monitoring and control systems of complex technical sites and those with a high degree of protection are considered. The use of existing OTN-type data transmission networks also offers the following advantages: long distances, redundancy, multi-vendor video integration, cost effective, any type of video equipment and their
When it seems, that your video surveillance system is adjusted to absolute response in case of any danger, do not forget that in addition to the dangers listed above, there is a possibility, that a criminal may want to break down, to turn away, to light the camera or to cut the power cord off. Xeoma has provided a sabotage detector for these situations to provide security for you - the system of notification about sudden changes in the camera image (glare or blackout), twist of the camera, loss of communication and the lack of updating cameras images. Moreover, automatic notifications will let you know when the system does not have enough disk space or memory to process cameras; when manipulation with an archive database is detected, or the video surveillance system is incorrectly terminated. You can get notifications in any convenient form: to your mailbox, via SMS, or even in the form of an alarm. Reported issues are duplicated on the preview window. After selecting the desired font, you will ...
3.3 Analysis by authors disciplinary affiliation. · 4 Hypothesis 1: Are Evolutionary Behavioral Scientists Sufficiently Influenced by Biology in General and by Evolutionary Biology in Particular?. · 5 Hypothesis 2: Are Evolutionary Behavioral Scientists Unduly Influenced by the Evolutionary Biology of the 1970s?. · 6 Hypothesis 3: What is the Relation between Sociobiology and the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences?. · 7 Hypothesis 4: Do the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences Divide into Competing Paradigms?. · 8 An Evidence-based Characterization of the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences. An Evidence-Based Study of the Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences Edouard Machery. +Author Affiliations. Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, 1017CL, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA [email protected] Kara Cohen. +Author Affiliations. [email protected] Abstract. The disagreement between philosophers about the scientific worth of the evolutionary behavioral sciences (evolutionary ...
The Consortium of Social Science Associations (COSSA) is a nonprofit advocacy organization working to promote sustainable federal funding for social and behavioral science research and federal policies that positively impact the conduct of research. COSSA serves as a united voice for a broad, diverse network of organizations, institutions, communities, and stakeholders who care about a successful and vibrant social science research enterprise. The COSSA membership includes professional and disciplinary associations, scientific societies, research centers and institutes, and U.S. colleges and universities.. ...
[email protected] Wendy Naus became the fourth Executive Director of COSSA in 2014 following a decade of lobbying for the federal research and policy interests of scientific societies and U.S. universities. Over her career, she has worked to shape legislation, programs, and regulations important to the research community and has advocated for increased research funding across federal agencies. In her role at COSSA, Wendy serves as the lead advocate for federal funding and policy that positively impact social and behavioral science research across the federal government, representing the breadth of the social science research enterprise. She is also responsible for the day to day operations of COSSA and member engagement. A native of Buffalo, New York, Wendy holds a B.A. in political science and urban studies from Canisius College, graduating magna cum laude from the All-College Honors Program.. ...
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Behavioral Science Behavioral Science in Family Medicine Education The Behavioral Science curriculum is based on the biopsychosocial, integrated sciences model (Carr, 1999). Residency education in the Behavioral Sciences approaches each patient as a complex but integrated system of many variables
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All fees are nonrefundable. Checks should be payable to the Iowa Board of Behavioral Science.. To view the fees for your board click on the link below and scroll down to the name of the board.. Fees Link: Chapter 5 - Fees. ...
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Interest has been growing among behavioural biologists in the existence of individual differences in behavioural phenotypes of a kind now frequently referred to as animal personality [1-5]. Once considered to be the exclusive domain of human psychologists, differences in animal personality are now considered to be the result of adaptive evolutionary processes [6-8], and to occur across a wide range of taxa [9-12]. Despite some uncertainty as to an exact definition of personality [13, 14] and differences in theoretical applications of this construct, it is generally agreed that individual differences in behavioural traits need to be stable across an appreciable time span and/or different contexts to qualify [3, 4, 10, 15, 16].. More recently, attention has been drawn to the fact that there are still few studies of the ontogeny of such differences; when and how they emerge across development and how they relate to differences at later life stages [10, 17-20]. This is particularly true for mammals, ...
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Huawei supports management of unified communications, videoconferencing, and video surveillance devices to ensure stable operation of systems.