427 results
Search Results
2. Cognitive Structure of Origami Imagery.
- Author
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Fujiki, Akiko and Nishihara, Shinkichi
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ANALYSIS of variance ,COGNITION ,IMAGINATION ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,VISUAL perception ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,FACTOR analysis ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,VISUALIZATION ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
While previous studies found that origami, when used for cognitive training and education, can improve spatial ability, the underlying mechanisms of this change, presumably associated with the origami folding process, remain unclear. In the present study, we focused on origami imagery in which participants imagined the process of folding paper to create a work of art; and we examined the cognitive factors involved in the imagery process and their association with mental transformations and the extent to which visual imagery was vivid. We identified four specific relevant cognitive factors in origami imagery: (a) controllability of origami transformations, (b) visual imagery of shapes, (c) hand sensations, and (d) visual imagery of colors. We associated the first two of these with non-rigid transformations: the controllability of origami transformations and the visual imagery of shapes. Moreover, vividness of visual imagery was related to all four cognitive factors. We propose this cognitive model of origami as one that considers the key relationships between origami imagery, mental transformations, and vividness of visual imagery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. A systematic literature review of cognitive exchange in higher degree visual art education.
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Heaton, Rebecca and Chan Lai Kuan, Shannon
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ART education ,LITERATURE reviews ,SOCIAL exchange ,COGNITIVE ability ,ART ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This literature review paper presents ways cognitive exchange occurs in higher degree visual art education. It also attempts to demystify concerns regarding the value and presence of cognitive exchange in art education, this is because cognitive exchange is not considered in art education with the same breadth or depth as in higher education. Cognitive exchange research in higher degree visual art education is limited but there has been a surge in interest about cognitive functioning in higher education. It is therefore timely to consider how cognitive exchange is understood across visual art practices at this level. This paper presents a two phased systematic review, where cognitive exchange literature in the higher degree context is considered alongside such literature in art education. Four spaces: the individual, social, pedagogic, and policy orientated are discussed to present cognitive exchange practices in higher degree visual art education. The spaces and forms of cognitive exchange profiled, provide a knowledge contribution to disciplines that intersect with the arts and humanities. This is because they mobilize where and how cognitive exchange forms, they present opportunities and uses for cognitive exchange and help suggest ways to support its growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Toward Person-Focused Assessment and Understanding the Human Need to Be Perfect: Commentary and Introduction to the Third Special Issue on Perfectionism.
- Author
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Flett, Gordon L. and Hewitt, Paul L.
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SERIAL publications ,NEED (Psychology) ,MEDICAL research ,PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) ,COGNITION ,SELF-perception - Abstract
In the current introductory article, we discuss the importance of balancing the variable-centered research in the perfectionism field with a person-focused approach. We examine the utility of a person-centered approach in assessment, research, and theory and the need to revisit overlooked themes central to understanding people who are extreme perfectionists. Our analysis focuses on addressing the core unaddressed issue of why perfectionists as unique individuals absolutely need to be perfect. We describe measures to assess individual differences in this need to be perfect and themes reflecting the need to be perfect that require investigation. The papers in this third special issue on perfectionism are then introduced and considered as examples of the merits of a broad approach that goes beyond trait perfectionism to also include perfectionistic self-presentation and the cognitive experience of perfectionism. We conclude by examining how certain variable-centered studies described in the current special issue yield insights about perfectionists as people when individuals are considered from a person-focused perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Insight in the Conspiracist's Mind.
- Author
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Van de Cruys, Sander, Bervoets, Jo, Gadsby, Stephen, Gijbels, David, and Poels, Karolien
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CONSPIRACY theories ,EXPERIMENTAL psychology ,PSYCHOLOGICAL research ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,COGNITION - Abstract
The motto of the conspiracist, "Do your own research," may seem ludicrous to scientists. Indeed, it is often dismissed as a mere rhetorical device that conspiracists use to give themselves the semblance of science. In this perspective paper, we explore the information-seeking activities ("research") that conspiracists do engage in. Drawing on the experimental psychology of aha experiences, we explain how these activities, as well as the epistemic experiences that precede (curiosity) or follow (insight or "aha" experiences) them, may play a crucial role in the appeal and development of conspiracy beliefs. Aha moments have properties that can be exploited by conspiracy theories, such as the potential for false but seemingly grounded conclusions. Finally, we hypothesize that the need for autonomous epistemic agency and discovery is universal but increases as people experience more uncertainty and/or feel epistemically excluded in society, hence linking it to existing literature on explaining conspiracy theories. Recent events have made it painfully clear that conspiracy beliefs can tear deep rifts in society and that we still have not found an adequate, de-escalating response to this. To understand the appeal of conspiracy theories and find new, humanizing ways to talk about them, we propose in this perspective paper to start from the universal human need to autonomously make discoveries through personal knowledge-generating actions. Indeed, psychological research shows that the aha experiences that accompany subjective discoveries create confidence in and perceived ownership of ideas that may be exploited by conspiracy theories. We hypothesize that people experiencing more uncertainty and/or epistemic exclusion in society will especially feel the need to re-establish autonomous epistemic agency and discovery. While this explanation starts from shared human experiences and practices, it also illustrates the potential of those processes to lead to a narrowed world and ossified cognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Enjoyment of Physical Activity among Children and Adolescents: A Concept Analysis.
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Bajamal, Eman, Abou Hashish, Ebtsam Aly, and Robbins, Lorraine B.
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SCHOOL health services ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SELF-perception ,CHILDHOOD obesity ,PLEASURE ,COGNITION ,PHYSICAL activity ,SELF-efficacy ,SCHOOL nursing ,HEALTH behavior ,EXERCISE ,CONCEPTS ,HIGH school students ,PHYSICAL education ,BODY image ,CHILDREN ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Although enjoyment has been linked to participation in physical activity (PA), a thorough analysis of the concept is lacking. Health-related behavior research emphasizes the necessity of focusing on individual psychological requirements, such as enjoyment in PA, to boost children and adolescents' motivation for PA. The current paper is a report on a conceptual analysis of the enjoyment of PA among children and adolescents. We adopted the concept analysis procedure by Walker and Avant. Several databases (PubMed, CINAHL, ERIC, PsychInfo, and Sport Discus) were searched and used to extract relevant articles about the enjoyment of PA. The review process yielded a final set of 72 papers. A refined definition of enjoyment in PA, attributes, cases, antecedents, and consequences of enjoyment in PA were presented. A conceptual understanding of enjoyment in PA can enable nurses to plan interventions that help children and adolescents get appropriate PA and improve their health habits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Exploring the Correlations Between Measures of Listening Effort in Adults and Children: A Systematic Review with Narrative Synthesis.
- Author
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Shields, Callum, Sladen, Mark, Bruce, Iain Alexander, Kluk, Karolina, and Nichani, Jaya
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ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,AUDITORY perception ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,COGNITION ,HEARING disorders ,MEDLINE ,ADULTS ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Listening effort (LE) describes the cognitive resources needed to process an auditory message. Our understanding of this notion remains in its infancy, hindering our ability to appreciate how it impacts individuals with hearing impairment effectively. Despite the myriad of proposed measurement tools, a validated method remains elusive. This is complicated by the seeming lack of association between tools demonstrated via correlational analyses. This review aims to systematically review the literature relating to the correlational analyses between different measures of LE. Five databases were used– PubMed, Cochrane, EMBASE, PsychINFO, and CINAHL. The quality of the evidence was assessed using the GRADE criteria and risk of bias with ROBINS-I/GRADE tools. Each statistically significant analysis was classified using an approved system for medical correlations. The final analyses included 48 papers, equating to 274 correlational analyses, of which 99 reached statistical significance (36.1%). Within these results, the most prevalent classifications were poor or fair. Moreover, when moderate or very strong correlations were observed, they tended to be dependent on experimental conditions. The quality of evidence was graded as very low. These results show that measures of LE are poorly correlated and supports the multi-dimensional concept of LE. The lack of association may be explained by considering where each measure operates along the effort perception pathway. Moreover, the fragility of significant correlations to specific conditions further diminishes the hope of finding an all-encompassing tool. Therefore, it may be prudent to focus on capturing the consequences of LE rather than the notion itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Assessing Developments in Play of Young Children.
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Mason, Emanuel J., Lifter, Karin, Cannarella, Amanda, and Medeiros, Haley
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PLAY ,MOTOR ability ,RESEARCH funding ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CAREGIVERS ,CHILD development ,FACTOR analysis ,COGNITION ,CHILD behavior ,INTER-observer reliability ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
This paper follows an earlier report of young children's object play activities investigated in a cross-sectional sample of 289 typically developing children. Thirty-minute videotaped observations were taken of children at 8, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42, 48, 54, and 60 months of age in their homes. Forty-nine percent were boys. Children were identified as White (70%); mixed racial/cultural backgrounds (14%); Asian (7%); Black (6%); and Latinx (3%). This study reports patterns of cognitive development based on mastery scores derived from frequency and variety of activities in the 27 categories identified in the earlier study. Mastery scores afforded evaluation of the robustness of certain play categories, and the retention and reduction of others, yielding a final set of 14 to describe and assess developments in play. Discussion centers on the value of differentiated categories along with scores that yield a standard for an assessment of children's play. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Both Meaningful and Embodied: Moving Towards Dynamical Approaches in the History of Experience.
- Author
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van Haaster, Marie
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HISTORIANS ,COGNITION - Abstract
Over the past two decades, historians have developed methods for the history of emotions based on frameworks from philosophy and cognitive science. Although these methods are often applied by others in the field, there has been less engagement with the theoretical frameworks on which they were based. This paper argues that historians made use of frameworks that are in part incompatible with their central aim of accounting for meaningful, situated, and embodied experiences. Building on and combining the work of authors such as William Reddy, Monique Scheer, and Rob Boddice, this paper aims to provoke further research based on dynamical, situated, and biocultural frameworks, which are more compatible with the aims and principles of the history of emotions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Implementing Montessori approaches after training: A mixed methods study to examine staff understanding and movement toward action.
- Author
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Kennedy, Katherine A, Snow, A Lynn, Mills, Whitney L, Haigh, Sylvia, Mochel, Amy, Curyto, Kimberly, Bishop, Teddy, Hartmann, Christine W, Camp, Cameron J, and Hilgeman, Michelle M
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TREATMENT of dementia ,INDEPENDENT living ,HUMAN services programs ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-efficacy ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,INTERVIEWING ,TEACHING methods ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL theory ,CONFIDENCE ,PATIENT-centered care ,NURSING care facilities ,PROFESSIONS ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,CLINICAL competence ,ONLINE education ,COGNITION - Abstract
Background: This paper uses Normalization Process Theory (NPT) to examine staff impressions of Montessori-based program training and implementation at Veterans Affairs Community Living Centers (VA CLCs; nursing homes). Methods: We conducted a mixed-methods evaluation of Montessori Approaches to Person-Centered Care (MAP-VA) at eight VA CLCs. Trainings were conducted as either a live virtual course or a pre-recorded asynchronous class. Two NPT constructs, coherence building and cognitive participation, informed qualitative interview questions, surveys, and analyses focused on staff movement from knowledge to action during initial implementation. Data collection included staff-completed standardized post-training exams (N = 906), post-training evaluations (N = 761), and optional validated surveys on perceptions of Montessori training (N = 307). Champions (peer-leaders) from each CLC completed semi-structured qualitative interviews post-training (N = 22). Findings: The majority of staff (83%–90%) passed all courses. Staff evaluated the training highly (80%+ agreement) on learning relevant new knowledge and confidence applying new skills. On average, staff felt MAP-VA would become a normal part of their work (7.68/10 scale), and reported increased familiarity with Montessori approaches after training (p =.002). Qualitative interview data from staff trained in Montessori supported three themes concordant with the NPT dimensions of coherence building and cognitive participation. (1) Coherence regarding Montessori: staff demonstrated an understanding of the program and mentioned the benefits of Montessori compared to their previous usual routines. Cognitive participation or engagement with Montessori: (2) staff had positive feelings about Montessori principles/applications and demonstrated a willingness to try the Montessori approach, and (3) staff made sense of the new intervention through early rehearsal of Montessori principles/practices and recognized opportunities for using Montessori in future interactions. Conclusions: Montessori virtual training resulted in high levels of coherence and cognitive participation among multidisciplinary staff, evidenced by high knowledge, self-efficacy, and readiness to act. The asynchronous and synchronous trainings were accessible, relevant, and supported diverse learners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Parametric Urban Design Thinking: Shared Patterns in Design by Algorithm and Design by Drawing.
- Author
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Çalışkan, Olgu, Barut, Yavuz Baver, and Ongun, Gökhan
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URBAN planning ,DESIGN thinking ,CITIES & towns ,COGNITION ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Planning Education & Research is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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12. From Natural to Novel: The Cognition-Broadening Effects of Contact With Nature at Work on Creativity.
- Author
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Tang, Pok Man, Klotz, Anthony, McClean, Shawn, and Lee, Randy
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CREATIVE ability ,NATURE ,COGNITION ,EMPLOYEES ,ATTENTION restoration theory ,WORK environment ,OPENNESS to experience - Abstract
Historical and contemporary accounts suggest that natural elements can facilitate creativity in one's work. Despite this potential connection, researchers have largely overlooked how nature may enhance employees' creativity, an oversight that takes on additional meaningfulness in light of increasing investments by organizations in work designs that bring employees in contact with nature. In this paper, we draw from attention restoration theory (ART) to develop a model explaining how contact with nature at work may affect employee creativity—via broader cognitive processing. In addition, we follow the guidance of ART to deepen our understanding of for whom the creativity-generating effects of nature will be most impactful. Specifically, we describe how employees with high levels of openness to experience are particularly primed to experience expanded cognitive processing due to contact with nature at work. We test this model using a mixed-method research approach: two online experiments in the United States (Studies 1 and 2); two multiwave, multisource field studies in Taiwan and Indonesia (Studies 3 and 4), and an experience-sampling field study in Canada (Study 5). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Accidental Thinking: A Model of Serendipity's Cognitive Processes.
- Author
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Ross, Wendy
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ATTENTIONAL bias ,INTELLECT ,CONCEPTUAL models ,CREATIVE ability ,PSYCHOLOGY ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,THOUGHT & thinking ,COGNITION - Abstract
Serendipity captures the interaction between a skilled human agent and a fortuitous event in the environment. Although it features in many stories of invention and discovery, its antecedents remain elusive. This paper combines research from different domains of psychology to present a model of the cognitive processes required for a serendipitous episode to occur. The model describes a prepared mind that consists of an informational state and an attentional state. Both states are considered as dynamic rather than fixed. An accident is then the trigger event that updates both of these and feeds information back into the prepared mind. If the accident is noticed, a cycle of judgement and amplification occurs, eventually leading to an output. The model generates novel predictions that point to an increased understanding of how best to scaffold serendipitous moments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Development of Three Psychology Sub-Disciplines Over the Past 30 Years: A Citation Analysis.
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Singer, Susanne
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TIME ,PSYCHOLOGY ,REGRESSION analysis ,COGNITION ,CITATION analysis ,PERIODICAL articles ,COGNITIVE therapy ,PSYCHOANALYSIS ,IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) - Abstract
At the end of the last century, there was a debate about whether cognitive psychology had superseded behavioral psychology and psychoanalysis, and the question was raised of whether the latter two might even be dead. The aim of this study was to investigate how these sub-disciplines have developed since then. The citation count, Journal Impact Factor (JIF), and Immediacy Index of four leading journals from each sub-discipline were abstracted for the years 1998, 2008, and 2018. Trends were analyzed using joinpoint regression analysis. The average number of times each sub-discipline's journals were cited increased between 1988 and 2018. The cognitive journals' JIF increased slightly, the behavioral journals' doubled, and the psychoanalytic journals' remained at the same level. The average annual percentage change for citations to the International Journal of Psychoanalysis showed that the number of citations statistically significantly increased over the years. This was also the case for the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis. Its JIF trend changed at one point: it decreased up through 2006, after which it increased. Citations to Cognitive Psychology also increased over time, while there was no evidence that its JIF changed. This shows that all three sub-disciplines are still alive and relevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Embodied Imagination: Lakoff and Johnson's Experientialist View of Conceptual Understanding.
- Author
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Clark, Kevin M.
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PREDICTION models ,METAPHOR ,PHILOSOPHY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,MATHEMATICAL models ,IMAGINATION ,THEORY ,SEMANTICS ,COGNITION - Abstract
This paper reviews an embodied or experientialist view of conceptual understanding. It focuses on George Lakoff and Mark Johnson's theory of embodied cognition and its framing of human conceptualization and reasoning in terms of embodied imagination. These ideas are summarized as ten basic claims: (a) objectivist assumptions are problematic; (b) many human categories have non-classical structure; (c) conceptual systems consist of cognitive models; (d) thinking utilizes frames, metonymies, and prototypes; (e) metaphor is prevalent and primarily conceptual; (f) image schemas structure our experiences; (g) the mind is embodied; (h) abstract thought is largely metaphorical; (i) truth is relative to embodied understanding; and (j) philosophy should be empirically responsible. Lakoff and Johnson's theory of embodied cognition offers a view of conceptual understanding that is cognitively realistic (or empirically responsible), biologically plausible, and self-critical, while providing adequate theories of meaning and truth grounded in embodied experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Experiential Product Promotions on e-Commerce Platform: From the Perspective of Consumer Cognition and Emotion.
- Author
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Yang, Xian, Lai, Bilian, and Tang, Chaolan
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ELECTRONIC commerce ,CONSUMER psychology ,CONSUMER behavior ,COGNITION ,ONLINE shopping - Abstract
To probe into consumer behavior from the perspective of cognition and emotion, meanwhile offering objective and quantitative physiological evidence for advertisers, e-commerce platforms selling experiential products, and other e-commerce platforms for holiday promotional activities. This paper adopted a combination of multi-channel physiometer and questionnaire survey, in which a total of 42 subjects including 18 men and 24 women is selected and recruited. (1) Factors such as promotion, music background, and model backdrop help to enhance the festive atmosphere of e-commerce platforms and stimulate positive emotions of consumers; (2) Greeting cards can stimulate positive emotions among female consumers, but they are not statistically significant in stimulating male consumers; (3) The effect of warm and cold colors on the sympathetic nerves of consumers is significant, among which warm colors can significantly ignite the positive emotions; and (4) Although not all indicators of multi-channel physiometer are consistent with questionnaire data, the differences can be explained, so it proves to be a sound method to quantitatively measure emotions. This paper conducted multi-channel physiometer research on E-commerce platform promotions and consumer behaviors from the perspective of cognition and emotion, which provided an objective quantitative method for online retailers and marketers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Expanded stereoscopy: Alternative aesthetics for artistic expression in 3D films.
- Author
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Hattler, Max and Cheung, Terrie Man-Chi
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3-D films ,THREE-dimensional imaging ,PERCEPTUAL illusions ,DEPTH perception ,EXPERIMENTAL films ,OPTICAL illusions ,BINOCULAR vision - Abstract
3D cinema has been defined by a quest for increased realism and immersion and the recreation of realistic depth perception. However, instead of merely seeing stereo vision as a visual enhancement of 2D cinema, some contemporary moving image artists explore unique types of perceptual illusions and ambiguous perceptions in their stereoscopic films. Through the experimental stereoscopic films of Blake Williams and Kazuhiro Goshima, and interviews with the artists, this paper focuses on the artists' motivations behind their works and their intended impacts on audiences. Drawing mainly on aesthetic, perceptual and technical perspectives, the paper examines how artists use experimental approaches to stereoscopic imaging and theorises the resulting aesthetics and perceptual forms for S3D films. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Classroom acoustics and cognition: A review of the effects of noise and reverberation on primary school children's attention and memory.
- Author
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Mealings, Kiri
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REVERBERATION time ,SCHOOL children ,PRIMARY schools ,COGNITION ,ACOUSTICS ,COGNITION in children - Abstract
Classroom acoustic conditions are often suboptimal, so how do they affect children's cognition? This review synthesized research assessing the effect of different classroom acoustic conditions on children's attention and memory. A comprehensive search of four online databases was conducted in January 2022 using the search term classroom AND (noise* OR reverberat* OR acoustic*) AND (cognit* OR attention OR memory OR processing). The results revealed 21 relevant papers plus an additional 10 from their references. The papers assessed the effect of a range of chronic and acute acoustic exposures on different attention and memory processes. Overall, the majority of studies showed a negative effect or no effect of higher noise levels, longer reverberation times, or lower speech clarity on children's cognition. It would therefore be beneficial to improve classroom acoustic conditions if possible. Suggestions for future research to more fully understand the effect of different classroom acoustic conditions on children's cognition are posed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Adapting Cognitive Remediation Group Therapy Online: Focus Groups with People Aging with HIV.
- Author
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Eaton, Andrew D., Hui, Jenny, Muchenje, Marvelous, Kon, Taylor, Murzin, Kate, Chan Carusone, Soo, Novik, Nuelle, Quigley, Adria, Kokorelias, Kristina, and Ibáñez-Carrasco, Francisco
- Abstract
Cognitive health is a significant concern for people aging with HIV/AIDS. Psychosocial group therapies may help people aging with HIV who experience cognitive challenges cope with their symptoms. The COVID-19 pandemic revealed in-person group therapies need adaptation for technology-mediated delivery. Peer-led focus groups discussed adapting cognitive remediation group therapy (CRGT) as an online intervention. CRGT combines mindfulness-based stress reduction and brain training activities. Purposive sampling recruited people aging with HIV (40+) who self-identified cognitive concerns and resided in one of two Canadian provinces. Thematic content analysis was employed on transcripts by seven independent coders. Ten, 2-hour focus groups were conducted between August and November 2022. Participants (n=45) responded favorably to CRGT's modalities. Alongside support for its continued implementation in-person, participants requested online synchronous and online asynchronous formats. Preferred intervention facilitators were peers and mental health professionals. We also discuss how to adapt psychosocial HIV therapies for technology-mediated delivery. Plain Language Summary: Changing an in-person support group about cognitive health to an online support group via focus group consultations with middle-aged and older adults living with HIV/AIDS Cognitive health concerns are common for people living with HIV as they grow older. Support groups may help individuals make connections with each other and develop ways to manage symptoms of cognitive impairment. In-person support groups need to have online adaptations for many reasons, including access for rural and remote communities. We conducted ten focus groups, led by people living with HIV, to discuss how to change an in-person support group to be online. The support group uses mindfulness and brain training activities. Forty-five people over age 40+ who are living with HIV in Ontario and Saskatchewan, Canada, and concerned about cognitive health participated in these focus groups. Seven researchers analysed the focus group transcripts. Participants liked the idea of the support group, both in-person and online. They specifically requested two forms of an online support group: synchronous, where everyone attends together at the same time, and asynchronous, where people attend at different times. This paper discusses how to change other in-person counselling and support group options for HIV to online formats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Network Dynamics and Organizations: A Review and Research Agenda.
- Author
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Chen, Hongzhi, Mehra, Ajay, Tasselli, Stefano, and Borgatti, Stephen P.
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SOCIAL networks ,BUSINESS networks ,ORGANIZATIONAL research ,ORGANIZATIONAL sociology ,MANAGEMENT ,COGNITION - Abstract
This paper reviews the growing body of work on network dynamics in organizational research, focusing on a corpus of 187 articles—both "micro" (i.e., interpersonal) and "macro" (i.e., interorganizational)—published between 2007 and 2020. We do not see "network dynamics" as a single construct; rather, it is an umbrella term covering a wide territory. In the first phase of our two-phase review, we present a taxonomy that organizes this territory into three categories: (1) network change (i.e., the emergence, evolution, and transformation of network ties and structures), (2) the occurrence of relational events (i.e., modeling the sequence of discrete actions generated by one actor and directed towards one or more other actors), and (3) coevolution (i.e., the process whereby network and actor attributes influence each other over time). Our review highlights differences between network dynamics based on relational states (e.g., a friendship) and relational events (e.g., an email message), examines the drivers and effects of network dynamics, and in a methodological appendix, clarifies the assumptions, strengths, and weaknesses of different analytical approaches for studying network dynamics. In the second phase of our review, we critically reflect on the findings from the first phase and sketch out a rough agenda for future research, organized in terms of four overarching themes: the interplay between the dynamics of social networks conceived as relational states and relational events, mechanisms underlying network dynamics, outcomes of network dynamics, and the role of cognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. Early literacy and child wellbeing: Exploring the efficacy of a home-based literacy intervention on children's foundational literacy skills.
- Author
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Derby, Melissa, Macfarlane, Angus, and Gillon, Gail
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LITERACY ,HOME environment ,WELL-being ,HUMAN rights ,COGNITION ,FAMILIES ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,PHONETICS ,INTELLECT ,VOCABULARY ,CROSSOVER trials ,READING ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This paper reports on findings from a doctoral study that explored the efficacy of a home-based literacy intervention in advancing preschool children's foundational literacy skills. Two key cognitive skills critical for early literacy success were examined in particular, those being phonological awareness, and elements of oral language, including vocabulary knowledge, which is the specific skill discussed in this paper. The intervention consisted of two main areas of focus – one, named Rich Reading and Reminiscing (RRR), concentrated on stimulating children's oral language skills, and the other, called Stimulating Sound Sensitivity (SSS), aimed to generate shifts in children's phonological awareness abilities. Data sets were gathered with eight children and their families over a twelve-week period, which corresponded with the duration of the intervention. A final set of data was collected six months after the intervention ceased. The study employed a crossover design, where four children and their families participated in the RRR component of the intervention, which ran for six weeks, followed by the SSS portion of the intervention. The remaining four children participated in the same parts of the intervention but in reverse order of delivery. The crossover approach established a control in the study, and allowed the effects of each part of the intervention on the children's early literacy skills to be more clearly revealed. This paper reports on two children – one from each cohort – whose results are evidence of the efficacy of the intervention in advancing key aspects of children's foundational literacy skills. Key Findings: The children who participated in the RRR component of the intervention first showed improvements in vocabulary knowledge mid-intervention. Conversely, the children who participated in the SSS component first made gains in their phonological awareness skills before the other cohort of children did. These findings have implications for early childhood educators and families concerning the strategies adopted by these stakeholders which aim to foster strong cognitive skills critical for literacy success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Max Weber and Charles Taylor: On normative aspects of a theory of human action.
- Author
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Raza, Sebastian
- Subjects
HUMAN behavior ,ACTION theory (Psychology) ,AGENCY theory ,SUBJECTIVITY ,COGNITION - Abstract
This paper seeks to make two distinctive sets of contributions through a supplementary reinterpretation of Max Weber in the light of Charles Taylor's expressivist-hermeneutical theory of human agency. First, it offers a reinterpretation of Weber's work. Focussing on the concept of stance, the paper highlights that Weber's theorising on values and their relation to cognition, action and identity is less underpinned by subjectivism, representationalism, emotivism and decisionism than is typically thought. Instead, Weber sets values within a non-naturalist dimension where agents find their bearings and are constituted as such. In this dimension, orientation to meaning takes place; identity, action and thought are constituted; and normative experiences (such as freedom, or responsibility) are made possible. Weber recognised that this non-naturalist dimension has variegated modes, but seemingly studied them in their purest and most logical form (the 'ideal type'), hence his focus on explicit belief systems and world-images. Second, there is a prospective supplementation of Weber's theory through Taylor's notion of expression. For Taylor, we take a stance and orient ourselves expressively through the domain of strongly valued meanings. The notions of strong evaluation and articulation prove central to understanding embodied, symbolic and representational meaning-orientation in the non-naturalist dimensions of values. This supplementary reading places Weber as a central figure in current American, British and French debates about, respectively, the normative nature of human agency; the question of culture, meaning and their different forms and modes of operation; and the question of how to examine identity-formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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23. Building Human-Like Artificial Agents: A General Cognitive Algorithm for Emulating Human Decision-Making in Dynamic Environments.
- Author
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Gonzalez, Cleotilde
- Subjects
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RESEARCH funding , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *DECISION making , *LEARNING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DECISION trees , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *COGNITION , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
One of the early goals of artificial intelligence (AI) was to create algorithms that exhibited behavior indistinguishable from human behavior (i.e., human-like behavior). Today, AI has diverged, often aiming to excel in tasks inspired by human capabilities and outperform humans, rather than replicating human cogntion and action. In this paper, I explore the overarching question of whether computational algorithms have achieved this initial goal of AI. I focus on dynamic decision-making, approaching the question from the perspective of computational cognitive science. I present a general cognitive algorithm that intends to emulate human decision-making in dynamic environments, as defined in instance-based learning theory (IBLT). I use the cognitive steps proposed in IBLT to organize and discuss current evidence that supports some of the human-likeness of the decision-making mechanisms. I also highlight the significant gaps in research that are required to improve current models and to create higher fidelity in computational algorithms to represent human decision processes. I conclude with concrete steps toward advancing the construction of algorithms that exhibit human-like behavior with the ultimate goal of supporting human dynamic decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Reflections on the physical, executive developmental and systems applied framework in child neuropsychological rehabilitation.
- Author
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Byard, Katie, Gosling, A Sophie, Tucker, Peter, Richmond, Josephine, Ashton, Rebecca, Pickering, Andrea, Charles, Florence, Fine, Howard, and Reed, Jonathan
- Subjects
WHEELCHAIRS ,EXECUTIVE function ,MEMORY ,SPECIAL education ,TRAFFIC accidents ,COGNITION ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,BRAIN concussion ,VISION ,ATTENTION ,BRAIN injuries ,ATAXIA ,MOTOR ability ,SPEECH - Abstract
This paper describes the influence of the Physical, Executive, Developmental and Systems (PEDS) framework on the delivery of community-based child neuropsychological rehabilitation and how it has been enhanced by the proliferation of neuroscientific, neuropsychological and psychosocial research and evidence-base in childhood brain injury and rehabilitation over the past decade. The paper signposts to some of the key models, theories and concepts currently shaping service delivery. Application of the PEDS framework in a clinical case is described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Literary dynamics in The.PowerBook by Jeanette Winterson and Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood.
- Author
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O'Leary, Irene
- Subjects
FICTION ,READING - Abstract
Interaction between text and reader is a prominent concern in stylistics. This paper focusses on interactions among stylistic processes and subconscious microcognitive processes that generate changes to narrative and interpretation during reading. Drawing on process philosophy and recent neuroscientific research, I articulate this dynamism through analysis of a brief narrative moment from each of The.PowerBook by Jeanette Winterson and Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood. I argue that high densities of stylistic and microcognitive perturbations lead to frequent narrative and interpretive changes in the two moments. The analyses reinforce portrayals of reading as intensely complex, dynamic and changeable. Complexity, dynamism and mutability also characterise the stylistic changes in the two narrative moments. This paper advocates greater attention to the role of volatile stylistic and cognitive microdynamics in shaping the reading of prose fiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Remotely Delivered Psychologically Informed Mindful Movement Physical Therapy for Pain Care: A Framework for Operationalization.
- Author
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Sullivan, Marlysa B., Hill, Kelsea, Ballengee, Lindsay A., Knoblach, Daniel, Fowler, Christopher, Haun, Jolie, and Saenger, Michael
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain ,MINDFULNESS ,VETERANS' hospitals ,NEUROSCIENCES ,BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL model ,PHYSICAL therapy ,MOTIVATIONAL interviewing ,SELF-perception ,SELF-control ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,COGNITION ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SELF-efficacy ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,LEARNING strategies ,HEALTH care teams ,ACCEPTANCE & commitment therapy ,BODY movement ,DECISION making ,QUALITY assurance ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation ,TELEMEDICINE ,GROUP process ,TRUST ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Background: While there is recognition by the greater medical community and physical therapists to address the biopsychosocial needs of people with chronic, persistent pain, there are challenges in implementation and delivery including wide variability in interventions, lack of clear rationale, and absence of clinical models that are feasible and acceptable on a large scale. Important components for psychologically informed physical therapy (PiPT) for pain care include behavioral approaches (e.g., Acceptance and Commitment Therapy), mindfulness, pain neuroscience education, motivational interviewing (MI), and interoceptive skills-building. The Empower Veterans Program (EVP) Mindful Movement framework blends these components and emphasizes a mindfulness and self-compassion approach with MI and body-based experiential learning. This program was offered in-person at the Atlanta and Maryland VA Health Care Centers with published positive Patient Reported Outcomes (PRO) pre-COVID 19 crisis and shifted to entirely remote delivery in March 2020. Objective: This paper offers an evidence-based and theory driven framework to operationalize a remotely delivered group-based psychologically informed mindful movement physical therapy intervention as part of an interdisciplinary pain care program. Methods: Since 2021 PRO and demographics are collected using a survey administered through Qualtrics over a 12-month period at baseline, immediately post TelePain EVP, at 6 months, and at 12 months, with findings forthcoming. Discussion/Results: Tele-pain EVP offers 6-9 groups a week with 7-9 veterans from Atlanta based team and 3-4 groups a week with 5-9 veterans from Maryland based team. Adaptations for remote delivery optimized mindfulness and active learning strategies including interoceptive skills-building and use of MI to support self-efficacy to trust, restore a sense of safety in the body, and explore adaptations for safe movement. Conclusion: TelePain-EVP Mindful Movement provides a framework for other programs to translate for their populations and systems to further develop best practices in PiPT for pain care and integration into interdisciplinary care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Biologies and Beings: World-Making, Cognition, and the Making of Self.
- Author
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Ross, Norbert
- Subjects
COGNITION ,ONTOLOGY ,THEORY of knowledge ,CULTURE ,CHILD development - Abstract
In this paper, I explore some of my previous and ongoing research at the intersection of folk biology and cognition, focusing on wider philosophical implications. Specifically, I intend to destabilize previous findings of my own research, interrogating them with data from my more recent work and a perspective of ontology, epistemology, and world-making. In doing so, I aim to inject folk biological data to the discussion of ontology and vice versa. In a sense, I address the question of whether ontology is just another word for culture, pushing for more specific definitions of what we might mean by ontology, culture, and reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Sharing reasons and emotions in a non-ideal discursive system.
- Author
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Billingham, Paul
- Subjects
DILEMMA ,EMOTIONS ,PUBLIC spaces ,SHARING ,COGNITION ,DELIBERATION - Abstract
This paper critically evaluates two aspects of Maxime Lepoutre's important book, Democratic Speech in Divided Times. First, I examine Lepoutre's approach to the shared reasons constraint—the requirement to offer shared reasons within public deliberation—and the place of emotions in public discourse. I argue that he, and indeed all who adopt such a highly inclusivist approach, face a dilemma that pushes him either to apply the shared reasons constraint more widely than he desires or to abandon it completely. I chart a course through this dilemma, but one that involves significant revisions to Lepoutre's position, particularly regarding the need for idealization. Second, I consider Lepoutre's use of the systemic approach to public discourse, which is central to many of his arguments, including his responses to critics of the discursive democratic ideal. Using his arguments regarding angry speech and dogmatic group cognition as illustrative, I highlight the somewhat speculative nature of these systemic arguments, which often rely on conjectures about how the system might operate, how its parts fit together, and how the system as a whole might attenuate seemingly problematic features of its component parts. This limits the ultimate persuasiveness of Lepoutre's responses to skepticism about democratic speech in our divided times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Socioeconomic Disparities in Cognitive Functioning Trajectories Among Older Filipinos: Applying the Characteristics Approach.
- Author
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Vicerra, Paolo Miguel Manalang and Estanislao, Juniesy M.
- Abstract
Health functioning declines with age, but there are disparities in its progression with regard to socioeconomic status, particularly education attainment, income, and wealth. This paper focused on the use of the characteristics approach to present the trajectories of cognitive performance among older adults with different education and wealth levels in the Philippines. Using an analytical sample of 5209 adults aged at least 60 years, extracted from the first wave of the 2018 Longitudinal Study on Ageing and Health in the Philippines, it was observed that having higher levels of education delayed lower cognitive performance, whereby men had further gains than women. Greater wealth and income were also shown to slow diminishing cognitive performance, and women gained more in this regard. Viewing health only from an age perspective is limiting; and the results show that the older population is heterogeneous and social gradients exhibit disparities in health performance at later ages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Social media fatigue: Causes and concerns.
- Author
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Sunil, Shweta, Sharma, Manoj Kumar, Amudhan, Senthil, Anand, Nitin, and John, Nisha
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ONLINE information services ,PERSONALITY ,SOCIAL media ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,INFORMATION overload ,COGNITION ,SOCIAL factors ,PARENTING ,ACADEMIC achievement ,MEDLINE ,MENTAL fatigue ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Background: Social Media Fatigue (SMF) has seen a significant increase through the COVID-19 pandemic. It refers to high levels of information overload experienced due to extensive usage of social media. Aim: To understand the causes and consequences for mitigating social media fatigue. Methods: PRISMA model was followed, and 20 papers were consolidated from the years 2014 to 2021. Seven papers were screened out due to duplication and exclusion criteria. Results: The studies found implicated the existence of four umbrella factors, like Cognitive Factors, Self and Personality Factors, Environmental Factors and Social Factors. Self and Personality Factors include personal and intrinsic factors that make one susceptible to developing SMF more easily, whereas aspects like increased boredom and information overload include cognitive factors that increase susceptibility to SMF. Environmental and Social Factors include aspects like parenting and social media role conflict respectively. Conclusions: The current findings have implications to promote research to assess the levels of social media fatigue among the individuals and to evolve psychotherapeutic interventions and digital literacy programs to manage social media fatigue among the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. An innovative approach to working with children who have experienced developmental trauma: An introduction to the Building Underdeveloped Sensorimotor Systems (BUSS®) model.
- Author
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Lloyd, Sarah
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL models ,FOSTER children ,ADOPTION ,SENSORIMOTOR integration ,CONFIDENCE ,CHILD abuse ,SELF-perception ,CHILD development ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,COGNITION ,PARENTING ,PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
BUSS® (Building Underdeveloped Sensorimotor Systems) is an innovative treatment model for children who have experienced developmental trauma. It is based on an understanding that just as a baby needs responsive, attuned and empathic relationships to grow and develop psychologically, attention needs to be given to the impact of the absence of these kinds of relationships on a child's bodily development and regulation. The premise underpinning BUSS® is that these two processes – the need for an attuned caregiver and the progression through predictable stages of motor development – are inextricably linked; one cannot happen without the other. A case study is used to illustrate this innovation in practice, its frame of reference, methods and evaluation. Improvements were seen in physical development, parent–child relationships, cognitive functioning, self-esteem and confidence in parenting capacity. Consideration is given to how this model fits alongside therapies for children who have experienced developmental trauma and their families. This early evidence suggests that BUSS® is a clinically effective and cost-effective intervention that has positive benefits on physical and psychological development for children who have been impacted by early trauma. Further research will be required to establish both the consistency of outcomes and the mechanisms underlying its efficacy, especially in relation to psychological changes. Plain language summary: Babies need predictable, loving care to develop physically and emotionally. They need the grown-ups in their lives to protect them from harm or stress. As newborns, babies are entirely dependent on those adult relationships for their survival – they can't feed themselves and they don't have control of their head or limbs. They need to be held, carried, cared for and played with to grow into their bodies, so that by the end of the first year of life, they're able to move around and are beginning to explore their world and the people in it. Babies in frightening or stressful situations (during pregnancy and once they're born), miss out on these crucial experiences and, as a result, the normal development of their brain and central nervous system is disrupted. This affects how children move and the sense they have of themselves and their bodies – what we call bodily regulation. Good bodily regulation is knowing where our body is without having to think about it, knowing how much pressure or force to use when we're doing something like giving someone a hug or hanging our coat up on a peg. It's knowing that our arms and legs will work together in a helpful way when we're running or climbing. We're much more used to thinking about how early adversity affects a child's emotional or psychological wellbeing, and we haven't paid as much attention to how this affects bodily regulation. BUSS® is designed to bridge that gap – where there has been disruption to these earliest stages of development it's possible to go back and fill in those touch, nurture and movement experiences that have been missed. This paper explores the BUSS® model and hears from a parent about their experience of using the model with their child. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Attention: The Cognitive Effects of Learning to Read in Arabic by Chinese Learners at an Old Age.
- Author
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Hong Liu
- Subjects
ARABIC language ,FOREIGN language education ,OLDER people ,AGE factors in cognition ,SHORT-term memory ,BILINGUALISM - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a retrospective study that investigates the cognitive effects of learning a foreign language in late adulthood. The learner group, consisting of 21 L1 Chinese speakers who have been learning to read Arabic for 2 years and 4 months, were compared to the matched group on their performance on a series of cognitive tasks that tap into working memory, processing speed, reasoning, conflict monitoring, and attention. The results showed that the learning group's performance was significantly better in attention (measured by the Posner cueing attention task). Their working memory capacities (measured by the digit span tests) were also better, but the difference only reached marginal significance. The findings suggest that language learning may lead to improvement in attention abilities, which is in line with the converging evidence in the field of bilingualism showing that executive attention may underlie the mechanism of how bilingual experience can alter brain and the cognitive system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Thinking, fast and slow on the autism spectrum.
- Author
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Brosnan, Mark and Ashwin, Chris
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of autism ,THOUGHT & thinking ,MEMORY ,RESEARCH ,COGNITION ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INTUITION ,LEARNING ,ATTENTION ,THEORY ,FACTOR analysis ,CHI-squared test ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,MEDICAL logic - Abstract
The Dual Process Theory of Autism proposes that autistic individuals demonstrate greater deliberative (slower) processing alongside reduced (faster) intuitive processing. This study manipulated the reasoning time available to investigate the extent to which deliberative and intuitive processing are sensitive to time context in autism. A total of 74 young autistic people and 132 control participants completed the Cognitive Reflection Test to measure intuition and deliberation, with responses being either speeded (fast condition) or delayed (slow condition). The autistic group produced more deliberative and less intuitive responses than controls overall. Both groups showed more intuitive responses in the fast condition and more deliberative responses in the slow condition, demonstrating the reasoning style in autism is sensitive to context. What is already known about the topic Daniel Kahneman wrote a highly influential book titled 'thinking, fast and slow'. He proposes that people usually think in a rapid, automatic, intuitive style. When people realise their intuitive thinking may be wrong, a slower, effortful, deliberative style of thinking takes over. It has recently been proposed that thinking in autistic individuals can be characterised as usually thinking in the deliberative style (rather than the intuitive style that non-autistic people usually think in). What this paper adds As intuitive thinking is fast and deliberative thinking is slow, this research manipulated the time available to complete a series of reasoning questions. These questions have been developed to have intuitive answers (which are incorrect) and deliberative answers (which are correct). For the first time, a fast time manipulation (you must answer quickly) and slow (you must think about your answer before responding) was undertaken with autistic individuals. Autistic participants did produce more deliberative answers than the non-autistic participants. However, both groups produced comparably more intuitive answers and less deliberative answers in the fast condition. This shows that while autistic people tend not to use their intuition, autistic people can be encouraged to use their intuition. Implications for practice, research or policy Using rapid intuition can be useful in fast-changing contexts, such as some social situations. Future research can explore how to support autistic individuals to use their intuition when the need arises. In addition, the propensity for deliberation resulting in unbiased, correct responses reflects a strengths-based account of autism. This requires more mental effort and is less susceptible to bias and errors. This is called 'Dual Process Theory'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Chinese College Students' Death Cognition and its Long-Term Changes After Wenchuan Earthquake.
- Author
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Qi, Jiawei
- Subjects
COLLEGE students ,COGNITION ,NATURAL disasters ,RESEARCH funding ,ATTITUDES toward death - Abstract
This study explores the cognitive structure of death and long-term changes of death cognition after catastrophes for Chinese college students. Two months before Wenchuan earthquake, a week after, a year after, and ten years after, a total of 1507 participants' associated words of death were collected, after clustering high-frequency words' similarity coefficients, results showed that death was represented by four advanced clusters: death contact, death anxiety and its reminders, deathafter, and defense mechanism; a week after earthquake, death anxiety and its reminders, defense mechanism were activated; a year after, death contact, afterdeath were appreciated, death anxiety and its reminders, defense mechanism were underappreciated, this phenomenon still existed even ten years later, which suggests that the earthquake permanently changed their death cognition, and this change stabilized one year later. In addition, this paper provides an effective method to uncover cognitive structure of one certain concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Embodied graffiti and street art research.
- Author
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Fransberg, Malin, Myllylä, Mari, and Tolonen, Jonna
- Subjects
SENSES ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,RESEARCH methodology ,COGNITION ,CREATIVE ability ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,VISUAL perception ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PHYSICAL mobility ,WALKING ,WRITTEN communication ,METROPOLITAN areas ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Graffiti and street art research (GSAR) has become more acknowledged within the academic discourse; however, it has much to gain from theorising its methodological aspects. As a multidisciplinary field, GSAR has mostly used qualitative research methods, exploring urban space through methods that range from visual recordings to ethnography, emphasising the researchers' reflexivity. This qualitative approach has, however, paid little attention to the role of embodied practices. In this paper we discuss how embodied methodologies provide multisensory research results where the experienced moments, the participant's and researcher's senses, cognition and mobility in urban spaces are connected. Our discussion draws on the authors' fieldwork experiences of walking and edge working, and on the literature concerning embodiment and embodied methodology related to the context of GSAR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Improving child sexual exploitation material investigations: Recommendations based on a review of recent research findings.
- Author
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Steel, Chad MS, Newman, Emily, O'Rourke, Suzanne, and Quayle, Ethel
- Subjects
CHILD pornography ,CONTACT tracing ,SEX offenders ,COGNITION - Abstract
Child sexual exploitation material (CSEM) investigations have emerged as an area of specialization that combines multiple skillsets. Recent research has reshaped how we view CSEM offenders – they have different offense-supportive cognitions from contact sex offenders, their use of technology is no longer based on anecdotal evidence, and approaches to investigative planning, interviewing and forensics have evolved. This paper summarizes select, relevant areas of recent research related to CSEM investigations, and makes evidence-based recommendations for evolving how we approach these efforts. Current trends from other domains, including contact tracing and mental health considerations in a remote-working environment are additionally addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Differences Between Consistent and Inconsistent Handedness Remain Consistently Interesting: Ten Years of Research on the Consistency of Handedness With the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory.
- Author
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Prichard, Eric C., Clarkson, Evan M., and Christman, Stephen D.
- Subjects
MEMORY ,HANDEDNESS ,LEARNING strategies ,DECISION making ,MOTOR ability - Abstract
Almost 10 years ago Prichard et al. (2013) published a literature review on consistency of handedness. They described how consistency of handedness, typically measured by the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI), predicted outcomes in memory and decision-making paradigms better than direction of handedness. In the last 10 years, new research has extended these findings and added new theoretical perspectives. The goal of this short form review is to highlight and summarize some of these more intriguing findings and to encourage researchers in the fields of memory and decision making to incorporate handedness as a variable in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Psychological Effects of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation on Individuals With Methamphetamine Use Disorder: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Tang, Zhiming, Zhu, Zhicheng, and Xu, Jisheng
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,PREVENTION of mental depression ,ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,EXECUTIVE function ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,PSYCHOLOGY of drug abusers ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,TREATMENT duration ,DESIRE ,COGNITION ,METHAMPHETAMINE ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SLEEP ,LEARNING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDLINE ,DATA analysis software ,ANXIETY ,EMOTION regulation ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effects of rTMS on drug craving, depression, anxiety, sleep, and cognitive function in methamphetamine (MA) dependent individuals. Data sources and methods: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of rTMS interventions for MA-dependent patients were searched through PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang database, Chongqing Vipers (VIP) and China Biomedical Literature Database (CBLD). The included literature was statistically processed using Revman 5.4, and STATA 16.0 for sensitivity and bias analysis. Results: A total of 13 papers were included, and the results of the meta-analysis showed that rTMS was effective in reducing craving scores (SMD = −1.53, 95%CI:−2.08 ∼ −0.98, p < 0.00001), improving depression (SMD = −0.32, 95%CI:-0.58 ∼ −0.07, p = 0.01) and sleep scores (WMD = −1.26, 95%CI:−2.26 ∼ −0.27, p = 0.01), but had no effect on anxiety scores (SMD = −0.42, 95%CI:−0.88 ∼ 0.03, p = 0.07); in terms of cognitive function, there were improvements in the international shopping list task (ISL), Groton maze learning task (GML) and continuous paired association learning task (CPAL), except for no effect on the social emotional cognition task (SEC) and two back task (TWOB). Subgroup analysis showed significant differences in the effects of different intervention period on craving in MA-dependent individuals. Conclusion: rTMS was effective in reducing MA dependent individuals' cravings, alleviating depressive symptoms, improving sleep quality and language learning, collaborative learning and executive skills. Due to the small sample size of this study, a large number of RCTs are needed to validate this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Thinking boxes, behavioural boys and the politics of love: 'Doing' post-qualitative social work research.
- Author
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Tudor, Raewyn and Barraclough, Shanee
- Subjects
NATURAL disasters & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of men ,SCHOOL health services ,PARTICIPANT-researcher relationships ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL workers ,SOCIAL theory ,COGNITION ,BEHAVIOR disorders in children ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL work research ,LOVE ,ONTOLOGIES (Information retrieval) ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Post-humanist theories and feminist new materialism are a growing feature of social work scholarship. It is timely to explore how these theories inform qualitative social work research approaches. Drawing on post-qualitative methodology and Barad's concept and method of diffraction, in this article we engage in a performative re-analysis of an account of school social work practice with a group of boys with behavioural concerns. We illuminate the interplay of neurological and behaviourist ways of knowing boys and social workers' expertise and their linkages with the materiality of the place and space of the school-based group programme. Moving beyond merely representing these material-discursive happenings, this paper affirms new social worker identities and behavioural boys' subjectivities which emerge within the entangled relations with non-human, material objects and things in schools. Doing post-qualitative inquiry, co-configures us as researchers actively involved in knowledge generation as we seek to make differences that matter in social work practice. Diffraction not only offers methods to engage with the material-discursive interface of social work knowledge practices, but also an ethical methodology for researchers to do justice in our engagement with research data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Against generalisation: Data-driven decisions need context to be human-compatible.
- Author
-
Richardson, Sharon
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,MACHINE learning ,GENERALIZATION ,DATA science ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
During the past two decades, there have been a number of breakthroughs in the fields of data science and artificial intelligence, made possible by advanced machine learning algorithms trained through access to massive volumes of data. However, their adoption and use in real-world applications remains a challenge. This paper posits that a key limitation in making AI applicable has been a failure to modernise the theoretical frameworks needed to evaluate and adopt outcomes. Such a need was anticipated with the arrival of the digital computer in the 1950s but has remained unrealised. This paper reviews how the field of data science emerged and led to rapid breakthroughs in algorithms underpinning research into artificial intelligence. It then discusses the contextual framework now needed to advance the use of AI in real-world decisions that impact human lives and livelihoods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Application of Change Point Analysis of Response Time Data to Detect Test Speededness.
- Author
-
Cheng, Ying and Shao, Can
- Subjects
COMPUTER simulation ,TASK performance ,FISHER exact test ,COGNITION ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,DATABASE management ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,REACTION time ,STATISTICAL models ,DIAGNOSTIC errors ,PROBABILITY theory ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Computer-based and web-based testing have become increasingly popular in recent years. Their popularity has dramatically expanded the availability of response time data. Compared to the conventional item response data that are often dichotomous or polytomous, response time has the advantage of being continuous and can be collected in an unobstrusive manner. It therefore has great potential to improve many measurement activities. In this paper, we propose a change point analysis (CPA) procedure to detect test speededness using response time data. Specifically, two test statistics based on CPA, the likelihood ratio test and Wald test, are proposed to detect test speededness. A simulation study has been conducted to evaluate the performance of the proposed CPA procedure, as well as the use of asymptotic and empirical critical values. Results indicate that the proposed procedure leads to high power in detecting test speededness, while keeping the false positive rate under control, even when simplistic and liberal critical values are used. Accuracy of the estimation of the actual change point, however, is highly dependent on the true change point. A real data example is also provided to illustrate the utility of the proposed procedure and its contrast to the response-only procedure. Implications of the findings are discussed at the end. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Self-Interest, prosociality, and the moral cognition of markets: A comparative analysis of the Theory of Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations.
- Author
-
Acerbi, Alberto and Sacco, Pier Luigi
- Subjects
- *
COGNITION , *PROSOCIAL behavior , *SELF-interest , *MARKETING research , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
In this paper, we perform a text analysis of Adam Smith's two books, the Theory of Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations, to better characterize their highly disputed differences in terms of moral cognition. In particular, given that Smith's ideas are still very cited and influential in the current scholarly debate on moral cognition, we are interested in understanding whether a text analysis would unveil a semantic structure that is in line with a dual process theory interpretation or, alternatively, with a neuro-emergent cognition one. We find that, despite that the intellectual koine in which Smith's thought was originally embedded would be more in line with a dual process theory approach, the analysis reveals a better consonance with the neuro-emergent cognition approach. This opens new and interesting perspectives in future research on the moral cognition of market interactions in a Smithian tradition of thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. How May National Culture Shape Public Policy? The Case of Energy Policy in China.
- Author
-
Andrews-Speeda, Philip
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,ENERGY policy ,COGNITIVE styles ,POLITICAL culture ,EXPERIMENTAL psychology - Abstract
This paper explores how aspects of national culture may shape the design and implementation of public policy, using the example of energy policy in China. It focuses on cognitive style and on political and legal culture. China’s energy policies display a combination of pragmatism, incrementalism, internal contradiction and ambiguity. This is consistent with evidence from experimental psychology and history that the development of Chinese and East Asian cognitive styles have taken a path distinct from those of Western civilizations with their Greek philosophical heritage. These variations of cognitive style between cultures are reflected in brain function and genes. Policy implementation also bears features from imperial times in the political culture of China’s Communist Party and the contemporary legal system. These arguments reinforce existing calls for caution when seeking to transfer energy or other public policy approaches between countries with different cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Recognition of affective prosody in autism spectrum conditions: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Zhang, Minyue, Xu, Suyun, Chen, Yu, Lin, Yi, Ding, Hongwei, and Zhang, Yang
- Subjects
RECOGNITION (Psychology) ,SPEECH perception ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,COGNITION ,AUTISM ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Affective prosody recognition is an important area of research in autism spectrum conditions where difficulties in social cognition have been frequently observed. To probe into the mixed results reported in the literature, we conducted a systematic review with meta-analysis and examined potential factors that could explain the inconsistent results. Our literature search included six electronic databases for studies that compared the affective prosody recognition performance in individuals with autism spectrum condition with typically developing participants, which yielded 23 papers eligible for quantitative synthesis. Using a random-effects model, we obtained a moderate-to-large pooled effect (Hedges' g = −0.63) for the overall affective prosody recognition performance of autism spectrum condition participants, which, however, reduced substantially (to −0.26) and became non-significant after the correction for publication bias. The number of answer codes was found to be a significant moderator for the effect estimate, whereas the number of speakers was not. Moreover, the magnitude of the pooled effect estimate varied across emotions. The findings suggested moderate differences in affective prosody recognition ability between autism spectrum condition and typically developing individuals, which reduced to marginal difficulties for autism spectrum condition when the impact of publication bias was taken into account. Diversity in the number of answer codes could have differential effects on affective prosody recognition performance in autism spectrum condition, which varied across emotions. The present review and meta-analysis demonstrated the insufficiency of research on affective prosody recognition in autism spectrum condition, highlighting a need for further exploration of the contributors and underlying mechanisms for specific affective prosody recognition difficulties. Differences in understanding others' emotions and attitudes through features in speech (e.g. intonation) have been observed in individuals with autism spectrum conditions, which contribute greatly to their social communication challenges. However, some studies reported that individuals with autism spectrum condition performed comparably to typically developing individuals on affective prosody recognition. Here, we provide a comprehensive review with statistical analysis of 23 existing studies on this topic to examine potential factors that could explain the discrepancies. Compared with typically developing individuals, autism spectrum condition participants generally appeared to encounter more difficulties in affective prosody recognition. But this finding was likely due to the tendency of the existing research to overly focus on deficits in autism. The affective prosody recognition performance in individuals with autism spectrum condition was closely related to the number of answer options offered to them. Moreover, the degree of difficulty in affective prosody recognition encountered by individuals with autism spectrum condition varied across emotions. The findings of this systematic review highlighted the need for further research on affective prosody recognition in autism (e.g. studies that include tonal language speakers and autism spectrum condition individuals with lower cognitive or verbal abilities). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Cognitive processes in autism: Repetitive thinking in autistic versus non-autistic adults.
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Cooper, Kate, Russell, Ailsa, Calley, Steph, Chen, Huilin, Kramer, Jaxon, and Verplanken, Bas
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THOUGHT & thinking ,AUTISM ,VISUAL perception ,COGNITIVE testing ,SOCIAL skills ,ANXIETY ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,ADULTS - Abstract
Repetitive and restricted behaviours are a core feature of autism, and cognition in autistic individuals may also be repetitive and restricted. We aimed to investigate the relationship between repetitive behaviours and repetitive thinking. We predicted that autistic people would experience more repetitive, perseverative, visual and negative cognition than controls. We predicted that repetitive thinking would be associated with repetitive behaviours in the autistic participants. We recruited autistic (n = 54) and control (n = 66) participants who completed measures of insistence on sameness and obsessive-compulsive behaviours. Participants then took part in 5 days of descriptive experiencing sampling, recording their thoughts when a random alarm sounded. Consistent with our hypothesis, autistic participants reported more repetitive thinking. Contrary with our other hypotheses, autistic participants reported equivalent frequency of perseveration, visual thoughts and negative thoughts to non-autistic participants. Moreover, participants who reported more obsessive thinking reported more repetitive behaviour (insistence on sameness), but there was no such relationship between repetitive thinking and behaviour. Autistic participants who reported more repeated thoughts in the descriptive experience sampling had significantly lower obsessive thinking scores. We conclude that anxiety focused cognitions may drive insistence on sameness behaviours, and that the relationship between repetitive cognition and behaviour is complex and warrants further investigation. A core feature of autism is the tendency to do the same activity or behaviour repetitively. We wanted to find out if autistic people also experience repetitive thinking, for example, having the same thoughts repeatedly. We thought that there would be a link between repetitive behaviour and repetitive thinking. We asked 54 autistic people and 66 non-autistic people to complete questionnaires measuring repetitive behaviours and obsessive thinking. Next, participants were trained by a researcher to record their thoughts using a structured paper form. They then completed 5 days of thought recording, which they did each time a random alarm sounded on their mobile phone. We found that autistic people had more repetitive thoughts than non-autistic people, but they did not report having more negative or visual thoughts compared with non-autistic people. Autistic people who had more repetitive thoughts during the 5 days of thought recording did not report more repetitive behaviour. However, autistic people who reported more obsessive thinking, for example, more negative and unwanted thoughts, also reported higher levels of repetitive behaviour. We conclude that some repetitive behaviours may be linked to anxiety and that more research is needed to better understand repetitive behaviours in autism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. Systemic Racism in Canadian Occupational Therapy: A Qualitative Study with Therapists.
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Beagan, Brenda L., Sibbald, Kaitlin R., Bizzeth, Stephanie R., and Pride, Tara M.
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PREVENTION of racism ,INTERVIEWING ,COGNITION ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,QUALITATIVE research ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,OCCUPATIONAL therapists - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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47. Stepping Into the Participants' Shoes: The Trans-Positional Cognition Approach.
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Olekanma, Obafemi, Dörfler, Viktor, and Shafti, Farhad
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PHENOMENOLOGY ,COGNITION ,SHOES ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
To conduct a phenomenological study, researchers often follow the principles from either the descriptive or interpretive phenomenological schools of thought. This constrains researchers within the domain and limits the potentials of their data set. This paper introduces the Trans-Positional Cognition Approach (TPCA) as a novel synthesised phenomenological research method for conducting qualitative research to address this challenge. The TPCA synthesises the principles of the descriptive and interpretive phenomenological schools and helps to bridge the divide occasioned by polemical arguments between them. At the heart of TPCA is the process of trans-positional cognition or, in simple words, 'stepping into the participants' shoes'. TPCA, within the phenomenological tradition, proposes a structured methodological approach as a way to reduce the complexity of the extant methods, which novice researchers associate with phenomenology. The purpose of TPCA is not to pit one phenomenological research approach against another but to elucidate an inclusive approach to phenomenological research that can serve as a methodological alternative. A set of dimensions is used to compare TPCA with extant descriptive and interpretive phenomenological approaches in order to demonstrate its distinctiveness. Furthermore, an implementation study illustrates the use of the TPCA. Hence, the TPCA, by bridging the divide between the phenomenological schools of thought, could potentially help sustain the growing interest of researchers in phenomenological research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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48. Perceptions Regarding the Academic and Cognitive Performance of Individuals With Cleft Lip and/or Palate.
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Kara, İlkem, Dumbak, Aydan Baştuğ, and Kayıkcı, Maviş Emel Kulak
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ACADEMIC achievement evaluation ,SOCIAL support ,CLEFT palate ,COGNITION ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,CLEFT lip ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Introduction: Factors such as teachers' appropriate support and social interactions have an impact on the academic performance of children with cleft lip and/or palate (CL/P). This study was designed to investigate the perceptions of the teachers and the general public about the academic and cognitive performance of individuals with CL/P. Methods: This study was included 360 (male/female = 102/258) teachers and 640 (male/female = 259/381) participants that represent the general public. Anonymized web-based and paper-and-pencil self-administered questionnaire that included multiple-choice and yes/no questions were administered. Within-group differences and intergroup differences were analyzed in terms of academic and cognitive performance. Results: Most of the teachers and the general public indicated that the academic and cognitive performance of individuals with CL/P is the same as their unaffected peers. A significantly higher proportion of the teachers indicated that the academic performance of children with CL/P is the same as their unaffected peers than the general public. Conclusion: Considering that the general public's attitudes and appropriate teacher support are crucial to prevent adverse impacts on the lives of individuals with CL/P, it is important to support teachers with the appropriate information and to encourage the public to recognize that everybody with a facial difference should be treated as an individual rather than a disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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49. Origins of Values Differences: A Two-Level Analysis of Economic, Climatic and Parasite Stress Explanations in the Value Domain.
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Fischer, Ronald
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LABELING theory ,SOCIAL values ,SELF-perception ,ECOLOGY ,COGNITION ,TRANSCENDENCE (Philosophy) ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ECONOMICS ,WATER supply ,INCOME ,PARASITIC diseases ,VALUES (Ethics) ,STATISTICAL models ,CULTURAL values ,CLIMATE change ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
What variables are associated with cross-cultural differences in values at the individual level? In this study, the statistical effect of variables associated with ecological demands and available economic and cognitive resources on self-reported values are investigated in two independent samples to test the replicability of effects. Values are operationalized using a 10-item version inspired by Schwartz' value theory. The effects of national wealth, climatic demands, availability of cool water, and parasite stress at the national level are used to predict value scores of individuals within nations using nationally representative data from all inhabited continents (k = 49 and k = 58; N s = 64,491 and 81,991). Using mixed-effect models, new insights into individual- and nation-level dynamics in value scores are provided. First, the paper extends previous cultural theories to the individual level by investigating the effects of education and personal income as individual-level resources. Both personal income and education have strong direct effects on value scores. Second, higher education acts as a cognitive resource which turns climatic demands into challenges, effectively unpackaging nation-level theorizing with individual level dynamics. Third, contrary to previous nation-level research, parasite stress was not a significant predictor of individual-level values. Forth, supporting recent theorizing, individuals located in cool water regions reported significantly higher self-transcendence values. Fifth, the effects of wealth on openness values were convergent and reinforcing across levels (higher wealth is associated with more openness values), but operated in opposing directions for self-transcendence values (national wealth is associated with self-transcendent values, individual wealth is associated with self-enhancing values). The current patterns suggest that cultural research needs to pay more attention to individual versus nation-level dynamics and increase replication efforts with independent samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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50. Life is not chess: Towards a dynamic theory on altruism.
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Ahmed, Zarak
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ALTRUISM ,HUMAN behavior ,CHESS ,COGNITION ,INTUITION - Abstract
Economic theory propagates a model of the human being commonly known as homoeconomicus; an individual with a rational orientation directed towards maximizing his/her preferences. However, our everyday lives involve many altruistic acts. These can range from small gestures of kindness such as holding a door open for another person, to heroic feats such as risking one's life to save a child from drowning. During our lives we also meet certain people that instantly induce our kindness. Our nicety in these moments is not based on a pursuit to optimize our material desires. Rather, we allow our feelings and intuitions to guide the course of our actions. How do we reconcile these experiences against the economic conception of human nature as inherently selfish? Addressing this contradiction, the paper will deconstruct the economic view and repositioning it as the product of an epistemological stance that distorts our view of altruism. An alternative model on altruism will then be developed by merging anthropological theories on value with insights from cultural psychology and grounded cognition. Through this process, a passage will be shown from static and universalizing perspective towards an emergent and dynamic theory on altruism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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