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Articles 23311 - 23340 of 26518
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Macroeconomic Environment And The Psychology Of Work Evaluation, Nina Sirola, Marko Pitesa
The Macroeconomic Environment And The Psychology Of Work Evaluation, Nina Sirola, Marko Pitesa
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
This research tested the idea that the perception of the state of the macroeconomic environment impacts the psychology underlying an essential organizational function: The evaluation of employees’ work and the associated promotion and demotion decisions. We predicted that when the macroeconomic environment is perceived to be more (less) prosperous, people’s generalized sense of the extent to which individuals have control over outcomes increases (decreases), leading them to attribute more (less) responsibility for work outcomes to individuals rather than contextual influences. In Study 1, we tested this theory using data from 124,400 respondents surveyed across 57 countries and 19 years and …
Imaginary Alternatives: The Impact Of Mental Simulation On Powerless Negotiators, Michael Schaerer, Martin Schweinsberg, Roderick I. Swaab
Imaginary Alternatives: The Impact Of Mental Simulation On Powerless Negotiators, Michael Schaerer, Martin Schweinsberg, Roderick I. Swaab
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
The present research demonstrates that negotiators can act powerfully without having power.Researchers and practitioners advise people to obtain strong alternatives prior to negotiating toenhance their power. However, alternatives are not always readily available, often forcingnegotiators to negotiate without much, or any, power. Building on research suggesting thatsubjective feelings of power and objective outcomes are disconnected and that mental simulationcan increase individuals’ aspirations, we hypothesized that the mental imagery of a strongalternative could provide similar psychological benefits to having an actual alternative. Ourstudies demonstrate that imagining strong alternatives causes individuals to negotiate moreambitiously and provides them with a distributive advantage: negotiators …
From Icon Of Empire To National Emblem: New Evidence For The Fallow Deer Of Barbuda, Sophia Perdikaris, Allison Bain, Sandrine Grouard, Karis Baker, Edith Gonzalez, A. Rus Hoelzel, Holly Miller, Reaksha Persaud, Naomi Sykes
From Icon Of Empire To National Emblem: New Evidence For The Fallow Deer Of Barbuda, Sophia Perdikaris, Allison Bain, Sandrine Grouard, Karis Baker, Edith Gonzalez, A. Rus Hoelzel, Holly Miller, Reaksha Persaud, Naomi Sykes
School of Global Integrative Studies: Faculty Publications
Barbuda and Antigua’s national animal is the fallow deer, Dama dama dama, a species native to the eastern Mediterranean that has been transported around the world by people during the last 8000 years. The timing and circumstances by which fallow deer came to be established on Barbuda are currently uncertain but, by examining documentary, osteological and genetic evidence, this paper will consider the validity of existing theories. It will review the dynamics of human–Dama relationships from the 1500s AD to the present day and consider how the meaning attached to this species has changed through time: from a …
Contextualizing Social Power Research Within Organizational Behavior, Michael Schaerer, Alice J. Lee, Adam D. Galinsky, Stefan Thau
Contextualizing Social Power Research Within Organizational Behavior, Michael Schaerer, Alice J. Lee, Adam D. Galinsky, Stefan Thau
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
Although there has been tremendous scientific interest in social power, much of this recent research has relied on experiments in context-poor settings. However, organizations – a context in which power differences emerge naturally – are more complex and dynamic. The current review discusses whether and how defining organizational features at the intrapersonal level (multiple dimensions of hierarchy, dynamics over time, attentional demands), interpersonal level (interdependence, repeated interactions), and organizational level (accountability, culture, virtual work) moderate the effects of power. We also discuss ways to systematically incorporate organizational complexities into the study of social power and recommend fruitful avenues for future …
Assessing The Validity Of Emotional Intelligence Measures, Christopher T. H. Miners, Stéphane Cote, Filip Lievens
Assessing The Validity Of Emotional Intelligence Measures, Christopher T. H. Miners, Stéphane Cote, Filip Lievens
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
We describe an approach that enables a more complete evaluation of the validity of emotional intelligence measures. We argue that a source of evidence for validity is often overlooked by researchers and test developers, namely, evidence based on response processes. This evidence can be obtained through (a) a definition of the ability, (b) a description of the mental processes that operate when a person uses the ability, (c) the development of a theory of response behaviour that links variation in the construct with variation on the responses to the items of a measure, and (d) a test of the theory …
We’Re Less Likely To Collaborate In Bad Economic Times, Nina Sirola
We’Re Less Likely To Collaborate In Bad Economic Times, Nina Sirola
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
In the fall of 1930, the U.S. economy was on a path to recovery following a contraction that occurred the year before. However, worries about the state of the economy, and the banking system in particular, prompted an increasing number of bank customers to attempt to withdraw their funds, an event known as a bank run. Because banks normally keep only a small proportion of deposits in cash, bank runs create a self-fulfilling prophecy such that initial concerns about banks’ possible insolvency ultimately cause insolvency. The bank run of 1930 resulted in the worst economic downturn in the modern history, …
We’Re Less Likely To Collaborate In Bad Economic Times, Nina Sirola
We’Re Less Likely To Collaborate In Bad Economic Times, Nina Sirola
Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business
In the fall of 1930, the U.S. economy was on a path to recovery following a contraction that occurred the year before. However, worries about the state of the economy, and the banking system in particular, prompted an increasing number of bank customers to attempt to withdraw their funds, an event known as a bank run. Because banks normally keep only a small proportion of deposits in cash, bank runs create a self-fulfilling prophecy such that initial concerns about banks’ possible insolvency ultimately cause insolvency. The bank run of 1930 resulted in the worst economic downturn in the modern history, …
Comparing Website Presentations Of "Nature" Across Vermont Ski Areas And Adjacent Rural Communities, Margaux Anna-Elizabeth Reckard
Comparing Website Presentations Of "Nature" Across Vermont Ski Areas And Adjacent Rural Communities, Margaux Anna-Elizabeth Reckard
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
Ski areas attract and cater to tourists and are often powerful symbols of cultural identity and place-based meaning. Within contexts of mountain tourism development, ski areas also communicate messages to orient visitors and residents to special features and qualities of the natural environment. This research specifically focuses on how Vermont ski areas and their neighboring rural communities use language, symbolism and imagery, within the context of website communications, to shape cultural meanings of nature and place.
A sample of small, medium, and large ski areas, representing a range of development sizes, locations, and recreational offerings, were paired with their adjacent …
Who Really Controls Haiti's Destiny? An Examination Of Haiti's Historical Underdevelopment, Endless Poverty, And The Role Played By Non-Governmental Organizations (Ngos), Patrick Scheld
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
The presence of NGOs and development agencies is often considered an apolitical phenomenon, and that the very presence of NGOs within a country is a symbol of a global humanity in action; in short, NGOs equal charity which equals good work. Unfortunately, the reality is often much more complicated as NGOs can also be found to be self-serving, anti-democratic and strictly in pursuit of their next funding source. In this thesis I advance the central hypothesis that the international community’s continued pursuit of an NGO-led neoliberal economic development model has systematically failed to contribute to the sustainable development of Haiti …
Social Isolation Predicting Problematic Alcohol Use In Emerging Adults: Examining The Unique Role Of Existential Isolation, Geneva Carolyn Yawger
Social Isolation Predicting Problematic Alcohol Use In Emerging Adults: Examining The Unique Role Of Existential Isolation, Geneva Carolyn Yawger
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
Current rates of excessive alcohol use and abuse among young adults are recognized as a major problem by scholars across a wide variety of fields. Here, I take a social psychological approach to understanding why individuals drink to excess, examining the unique role that a specific form of social isolation called existential isolation (feeling alone in one’s experiences of the world; Yalom, 1980; Pinel, Long, Murdoch, & Helm, 2017) may play in predicting alcohol use and abuse. The relationship between existential isolation and alcohol use is explored using both correlational and cross-lagged designs. Results indicate that existential isolation predicts alcohol …
Becoming Eco-Logical With Second-Order Systems Theory: Sustainability In Re-Organization Of Economies And Food Systems, Skyler Knox Perkins
Becoming Eco-Logical With Second-Order Systems Theory: Sustainability In Re-Organization Of Economies And Food Systems, Skyler Knox Perkins
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
Ecological Economics has emerged across disciplines, and has begun to disentangle, not only the relationship between biophysical earth systems and economic activity, but also, fundamental relationships between objectivity, power, value, ethics, perspective and purpose.
In part, this thesis represents an effort to illustrate basic transdisciplinary concepts necessary for understanding the project of Ecological Economics. At present, Ecological Economics is challenged by a seemingly infinite number of available considerations, with a relatively narrow repertoire of impactful mechanisms of control. Given this, it is apparent that the application of Cybernetics to Ecological Economics might provide insights. Cybernetics can help to lend concise …
Consumer Engagement With Efficient And Renewable Energy Technology: Case Studies On Smart Meter Utilization And Support For A Community Anaerobic Biodigester System In Vermont, Samantha Whitney Lewandowski
Consumer Engagement With Efficient And Renewable Energy Technology: Case Studies On Smart Meter Utilization And Support For A Community Anaerobic Biodigester System In Vermont, Samantha Whitney Lewandowski
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
Residential electricity consumption in the United States has many adverse impacts, such as greenhouse gas emissions, dependence on fossil fuels, and costs. Efficient and renewable energy technologies have the potential to help mitigate some of these impacts, but appear to be under-utilized in the United States. One major barrier to expanding the deployment of these kinds of technologies and maximizing the benefits they can provide is a lack of consumer engagement. The overall purpose of this thesis is to better understand the extent to which efficient and renewable energy technologies are being engaged with and what factors may influence such …
Some Results On A Class Of Functional Optimization Problems, David Rushing Dewhurst
Some Results On A Class Of Functional Optimization Problems, David Rushing Dewhurst
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
We first describe a general class of optimization problems that describe many natu- ral, economic, and statistical phenomena. After noting the existence of a conserved quantity in a transformed coordinate system, we outline several instances of these problems in statistical physics, facility allocation, and machine learning. A dynamic description and statement of a partial inverse problem follow. When attempting to optimize the state of a system governed by the generalized equipartitioning princi- ple, it is vital to understand the nature of the governing probability distribution. We show that optimiziation for the incorrect probability distribution can have catas- trophic results, e.g., …
Market Efficiency In U.S. Stock Markets: A Study Of The Dow 30 And The S&P 30, Colin Michael Van Oort
Market Efficiency In U.S. Stock Markets: A Study Of The Dow 30 And The S&P 30, Colin Michael Van Oort
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
The U.S. National Market System (NMS), the largest marketplace in the world for securities and exchange traded funds, suffers from geographic market fragmentation which leads to reduced market efficiency.
Communication lines transmit price updates and other information between geographically isolated exchanges at varying speeds, bounded above by the speed of light.
Market participants have access to federally mandated information provided by the Securities Information Processor (SIP) and privately offered information provided by the exchanges, often called direct feeds.
These feeds are quantitatively and qualitatively distinct, with the direct feeds tending to provide more information at a faster rate than the …
Evaluating The Utility Of The Modified Cigarette Evaluation Questionnaire And The Cigarette Purchase Task For Predicting Acute Relative Reinforcing Efficacy In Cigarettes Which Vary In Nicotine Content, Cecilia L. Bergeria
Graduate College Dissertations and Theses
Rationale: Nicotine is the addictive component in cigarettes which maintains cigarette smoking that subsequently leads to morbidity and mortality. There are growing regulatory efforts to lower the nicotine content in cigarettes so that they are minimally addictive. Valid methods for assessing the abuse liability of cigarettes are essential to these efforts. While subjective effect measures and hypothetical purchase tasks are appealing because they are far easier to administer, it is unclear whether these methods can be used to evaluate acute relative reinforcing, a critical component of abuse liability. This secondary analysis sought to evaluate the utility of one subjective effects …
“The System Had Choked Me Too”: Abused Mothers’ Perceptions Of The Custody Determination Process That Resulted In Negative Custody Outcomes, Lyndal Khaw, Autumn M. Bermea, Jennifer L. Hardesty, Daniel Saunders, Angela M. Whittaker
“The System Had Choked Me Too”: Abused Mothers’ Perceptions Of The Custody Determination Process That Resulted In Negative Custody Outcomes, Lyndal Khaw, Autumn M. Bermea, Jennifer L. Hardesty, Daniel Saunders, Angela M. Whittaker
Department of Family Science and Human Development Scholarship and Creative Works
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a public health problem that continues to affect abused mothers after separation from an abusive partner. In addition to the risk of ongoing control and violence by abusers, the custody determination process may present challenges for mothers who end up with negative custody outcomes (e.g., share custody with abusers or lose custody). Using constructivist grounded theory techniques, we conducted a qualitative analysis of interviews with 24 abused mothers with negative custody outcomes to understand how they perceive and make sense of the process as a whole, and how they cope with these outcomes. The custody …
Exposure To Gangs In Low-Income Urban Communities And Substance Use Among Hispanic Youth, Autumn M. Bermea, David T. Lardier, Bradley Van Eeden-Moorefield, Pauline Garcia-Reid, Robert Reid
Exposure To Gangs In Low-Income Urban Communities And Substance Use Among Hispanic Youth, Autumn M. Bermea, David T. Lardier, Bradley Van Eeden-Moorefield, Pauline Garcia-Reid, Robert Reid
Department of Family Science and Human Development Scholarship and Creative Works
A third of Hispanic youth live below the poverty line, making them vulnerable for exposure to gangs, substances, and violence, all of which have been associated with substance use. The aim of the present study was to test the link between these variables, using a multiple mediation model. Results suggest that the relationship between gang exposure and adolescent substance use was mediated by both access to substances and exposure to violence. Findings provide insight into how gang exposure impacts outcomes for low-income youth. Implications for prevention and policy are discussed.
Undoing Normativities And Creating Family: A Queer Stepfamily’S Experience, Autumn M. Bermea, Bradley Van Eeden-Moorefield, Jacqueline Bible, Raymond E. Petren
Undoing Normativities And Creating Family: A Queer Stepfamily’S Experience, Autumn M. Bermea, Bradley Van Eeden-Moorefield, Jacqueline Bible, Raymond E. Petren
Department of Family Science and Human Development Scholarship and Creative Works
Although the stepfamily literature is well developed, most examines heterosexual stepfamilies and fails to note the presence of those headed by same-gender couples. This especially is true of male couples assumed unlikely to have children. Our case study uses a queer lens to examine a stepfamily headed by gay men. Family, couple, and focal child interviews were coded using thematic analysis. Findings indicate family members rejected normative family labels (e.g., stepfamily) and wanted to be thought of only as a family. These stepfamily members also performed family in ways that defied heteronormativity; however, they described struggling to do so within …
Critical Peace Pedagogies At The American Center For Civil And Human Rights And The Canadian Museum For Human Rights: A Comparative Case Study, Ion Vlad
Doctoral Dissertations
The struggle for racial equity in the United States and Canada is ongoing. Troubled historical legacies in both countries have present-day implications. African Americans and Indigenous Canadians are still two of the most marginalized populations from the standpoint of socioeconomics and political representation (Giroux, 2013; Vickers, 2012). In order to redress these problems, human rights and peace education have to pose structural questions and expose systemic unbalances. In the recent past, neoliberalism has had a major influence on the organization and content of American and Canadian formal education, obscuring some of these structural questions (Ravitch, 2013). In this context, human …
Investigating The Causes And Cures For Unclear Scholarly Writing, Marlene Ingrid Mahony
Investigating The Causes And Cures For Unclear Scholarly Writing, Marlene Ingrid Mahony
Doctoral Dissertations
This qualitative dissertation investigated possible causes and cures for unclear scholarly writing. For this study, a stipulative definition of unclear scholarly writing, or “academese,” is that the language tends to be vague and verbose. The problem, according to the included literature, is that people who use or accept vague language have less academic, social, professional, and civic power. Academese, some say, can detach readers and that can accordingly diminish collective exchange. Because higher education is meant to share knowledge, promote agency, and prepare students to communicate powerfully within and beyond the university, this study researched the causes and cures of …
Changing Behavior And Renewing The Brain: A Study Of College Students, Mark Maddix, Glena Andrews
Changing Behavior And Renewing The Brain: A Study Of College Students, Mark Maddix, Glena Andrews
Faculty Publications - Doctor of Psychology (PsyD) Program
The field of neuroscience and religion continues to explode as researchers seek to understand religious experiences in the brain. Studies in religious experience, called neurotheology, attempt to draw conclusions about the truth of these religious experiences from the study of biological brain events. Given the substantial research on the science of religion, this article explores the physiological changes of college students engaged in regular spiritual practices. Students were asked to engage in intentional spiritual formational practices, such as prayer, meditation, Scripture reading, and contemplation, to see if these practices impacted their physiological activities, including brain wave, heart rate, skin response …
Assessing Adult Attachment: Relation And Validity Of Two Dynamic- Maturational Model Approaches, Albert L. Pace, Rodger K. Bufford
Assessing Adult Attachment: Relation And Validity Of Two Dynamic- Maturational Model Approaches, Albert L. Pace, Rodger K. Bufford
Faculty Publications - Doctor of Psychology (PsyD) Program
Assessing attachment is essential yet challenging. The Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) provides the best appraisal of adult attachment but is time-intensive and costly. Likewise, concerns have been raised regarding the Berkeley-AAI coding and classification method. Meanwhile, self-report measures of adult attachment are time-efficient and low-cost, but their validity is questionable. The Dynamic-Maturational Model approach to the AAI (DMM-AAI) and a novel self-report measure – the Attachment Relationship Questionaire (ARQ) – may offer a solution. However, additional investigations regarding the validity of DMM-AAI are needed and the ARQ’s psychometric properties have not be tested. The validity of the DMM approach to …
Borderplex Business Barometer, Volume 2, Number 1, Thomas M. Fullerton Jr., Adam G. Walke, Omar Solís, Esmeralda Muñiz
Borderplex Business Barometer, Volume 2, Number 1, Thomas M. Fullerton Jr., Adam G. Walke, Omar Solís, Esmeralda Muñiz
Border Region Modeling Project
No abstract provided.
Mexico Consensus Economic Forecast, Volume 21, Number 1, Thomas M. Fullerton Jr., Adam G. Walke
Mexico Consensus Economic Forecast, Volume 21, Number 1, Thomas M. Fullerton Jr., Adam G. Walke
Border Region Modeling Project
No abstract provided.
Disagreement In Assessing Neighboring And Collective Efficacy: The Role Of Social Distance, Adam Boessen, John Hipp, Seth Williams
Disagreement In Assessing Neighboring And Collective Efficacy: The Role Of Social Distance, Adam Boessen, John Hipp, Seth Williams
Criminology and Criminal Justice Faculty Works
Whereas existing research typically treats variability in residents’ reports of collective efficacy and neighboring as measurement error, the authors consider such variability as of substantive interest in itself. This variability may indicate disagreement among residents with implications for the neighborhood collectivity. The authors propose using a general measure of social distance based on several social dimensions (rather than measures based on a single dimension such as racial/ethnic heterogeneity or income inequality) to help understand this variability in assessments. The authors use data from wave I (2001) of the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey (n = 3,570) to aggregate …
Exploring The Relationship Between Group Cohesion And Compassion In Varsity Athletes, Theo Chu
Exploring The Relationship Between Group Cohesion And Compassion In Varsity Athletes, Theo Chu
Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)
Compassion is a prosocial behaviour characterized by kindness and a non-judgmental attitude to reduce one’s suffering. Typically, it is thought of as a behaviour we express outwardly to others, but compassion can also be directed internally toward ourselves. This is known as self-compassion. The benefits of having compassion for other people have been largely studied in employment settings and everyday life behaviours. Moreover, research has shown self-compassion is also related to many positive outcomes. Compared to compassion for others, self-compassion has been studied in sport, however it is still in its infancy. Although research has demonstrated the importance of both …
Reparación Simbólica Como Alternativa Para La Construcción De Paz Con La Mujer Rural-Víctima Del Municipio De Puente Nacional Santander, Karen Daniela Forero Poveda, Natalia Alejandra Rey Moya, Maria Camila Aranguren Corredor
Reparación Simbólica Como Alternativa Para La Construcción De Paz Con La Mujer Rural-Víctima Del Municipio De Puente Nacional Santander, Karen Daniela Forero Poveda, Natalia Alejandra Rey Moya, Maria Camila Aranguren Corredor
Trabajo Social
Colombia ha dado grandes pasos en la búsqueda de la paz, sin embargo, se considera que esta, implica analizar si el Estado y las instituciones brindan los instrumentos necesarios a las víctimas del conflicto armado desde sus narrativas que les permita materializar una real inclusión social, es por esto que el presente proyecto tiene como tipo de estudio: cualitativo, el cual se caracteriza por captar la realidad social ‘a través de los ojos’ de la gente que está siendo estudiada. La población escogida para llevar a cabo el proyecto de investigación son mujeres rurales víctimas del conflicto armado del municipio …
Concepto, Fortalezas Y Debilidades Del Derecho A La Salud En Niños, Niñas Y Adolescentes A Partir De La Práctica Profesional De Un Grupo De Médicos Pediatras De La Sociedad Colombiana Pediatría Regional Bogotá, Alba Katherin Clavijo Gutierrez, Catalina Melo Bravo, Ingrid Rocio Toquica Campos, Wendy Johana Riaño Valderrama
Concepto, Fortalezas Y Debilidades Del Derecho A La Salud En Niños, Niñas Y Adolescentes A Partir De La Práctica Profesional De Un Grupo De Médicos Pediatras De La Sociedad Colombiana Pediatría Regional Bogotá, Alba Katherin Clavijo Gutierrez, Catalina Melo Bravo, Ingrid Rocio Toquica Campos, Wendy Johana Riaño Valderrama
Trabajo Social
Esta investigación da cuenta de la noción del derecho a la salud de los niños, niñas y adolescentes colombianos a partir del ejercicio profesional de un grupo de médicos pediatras pertenecientes a la Sociedad Colombiana de Pediatría regional Bogotá, reconociendo el derecho a la salud como un derecho humano fundamental que está relacionado directamente con la vida, el cual está atravesado por determinantes sociales, leyes y políticas establecidas en el sistema de salud actual. El método de investigación abordado fue cualitativo, retomando un enfoque fenomenológico y un nivel descriptivo que se desarrolló a través de la técnica entrevista semiestructurada; esta …
Buenas Prácticas Sobre Programas Dirigidos A Jóvenes Con Vulnerabilidad Social Desde La Biblioteca Pública Gabriel García Márquez Parque El Tunal, Andry Yinnedt Barrios Monroy
Buenas Prácticas Sobre Programas Dirigidos A Jóvenes Con Vulnerabilidad Social Desde La Biblioteca Pública Gabriel García Márquez Parque El Tunal, Andry Yinnedt Barrios Monroy
Sistemas de Información, Bibliotecología y Archivística
Esta investigación tuvo como propósito destacar la importancia y pertinencia de los programas dirigidos a jóvenes con vulnerabilidad social que visitan la biblioteca pública Gabriel García Márquez, a partir de un análisis de dichos programas, teniendo en cuenta algunos referentes teóricos que sustentaran las categorías trabajadas, por otro lado se realizó una descripción de la biblioteca, para tener claridad de sus espacios, servicios y programas, de igual forma se planteó una metodología a partir de entrevistas, observaciones y análisis, por lo tanto los resultados se utilizaron con el fin de establecer unos lineamientos para dar continuidad y mejorar las buenas …
Propuesta De Comunidad Virtual De Aprendizaje Enfocada En Servicios Web Prestados Desde La Biblioteca De La Universidad De La Salle Para Estudiantes De Sistemas De Información, Jenny García Gómez
Propuesta De Comunidad Virtual De Aprendizaje Enfocada En Servicios Web Prestados Desde La Biblioteca De La Universidad De La Salle Para Estudiantes De Sistemas De Información, Jenny García Gómez
Sistemas de Información, Bibliotecología y Archivística
No abstract provided.