12,605 results
Search Results
52. Evaluation of university scientific research ability based on the output of sci-tech papers: A D-AHP approach.
- Author
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Zong, Fan and Wang, Lifang
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SCIENTIFIC ability , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY , *UNIVERSITY research - Abstract
University scientific research ability is an important indicator to express the strength of universities. In this paper, the evaluation of university scientific research ability is investigated based on the output of sci-tech papers. Four university alliances from North America, UK, Australia, and China, are selected as the case study of the university scientific research evaluation. Data coming from Thomson Reuters InCites are collected to support the evaluation. The work has contributed new framework to the issue of university scientific research ability evaluation. At first, we have established a hierarchical structure to show the factors that impact the evaluation of university scientific research ability. Then, a new MCDM method called D-AHP model is used to implement the evaluation and ranking of different university alliances, in which a data-driven approach is proposed to automatically generate the D numbers preference relations. Next, a sensitivity analysis has been given to show the impact of weights of factors and sub-factors on the evaluation result. At last, the results obtained by using different methods are compared and discussed to verify the effectiveness and reasonability of this study, and some suggestions are given to promote China’s scientific research ability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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53. Quantity and/or Quality? The Importance of Publishing Many Papers.
- Author
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Sandström, Ulf and van den Besselaar, Peter
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CITATION analysis , *PERIODICAL publishing , *SWEDISH authors , *ECONOMIC competition , *PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Do highly productive researchers have significantly higher probability to produce top cited papers? Or do high productive researchers mainly produce a sea of irrelevant papers—in other words do we find a diminishing marginal result from productivity? The answer on these questions is important, as it may help to answer the question of whether the increased competition and increased use of indicators for research evaluation and accountability focus has perverse effects or not. We use a Swedish author disambiguated dataset consisting of 48.000 researchers and their WoS-publications during the period of 2008–2011 with citations until 2014 to investigate the relation between productivity and production of highly cited papers. As the analysis shows, quantity does make a difference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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54. Discussion of “Emmy Grant: Immigration as Repetition of Trauma and as Potential Space”: Commentary on Paper by Veronica Csillag.
- Author
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Tummala-Narra, Pratyusha
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REPETITION (Philosophy) , *EMIGRATION & immigration & psychology , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LIFE , *GROUP identity , *PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This commentary is a response to Veronica Csillag’s exploration of the influence of historical and transgenerational trauma on the lives of immigrants, and on the psychoanalytic process (this issue). Dr. Csillag’s paper deepens our understanding of the intrapsychic life of immigrants who have suffered collective trauma pre-migration and continue to suffer from “ghosts” from the past. Her ideas are critical to examining not only the specific traumas incurred in Europe related to the Nazi Holocaust and totalitarian and socialist regimes but also to contemporary traumas related to social identity and position in the United States. In this commentary, I elaborate three primary areas within Dr. Csillag’s contribution: (a) the illusion of choice in traumatic migration, (b) secrecy and privacy, and (c) experience of the outsider and the insider. My discussion underscores the importance of engaging with historical and ongoing trauma in psychoanalytic psychotherapy as a path to healing within individual and collective dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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55. Being more human – why children’s social care should be more about people and less about paper-work.
- Author
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Wright, Chris
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CHILD welfare , *SOCIAL case work , *CHILDREN'S accident prevention , *COMMUNITY health services , *MEDICAL quality control , *QUALITY assurance , *RISK assessment , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIAL services case management , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to argue for a strengthening of the relational aspect of social work and for initiatives that involve local people and local communities.Design/methodology/approach A think piece based on observations of the current situation and supporting evidence.Findings Social work has become distanced from those whom it seeks to help. Case management and risk assessment need to be complemented by a more human approach based on positive relationships between professionals and service users.Originality/value An informed discussion on the future of social work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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56. Caracterização da Produção Brasileira em Artigos Científicos sobre Arte e Psicologia (2004-2014).
- Author
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da Silva, André Luiz Picolli and de Camargo Viana, Terezinha
- Abstract
Art has always been an object of study and performance tool for Psychology professionals in Brazil. In order to increase the knowledge on this relationship, the present study aims to characterize as Art has been used by psychology professionals in the country. The method used was the bibliographical and exploratory research in databases on production of scientific papers on the use Art by Psychology in Brazil from 2004 to 2014. 318 abstracts from six categories of analysis of articles that had been analyzed were selected: year of publication, type of study, theoretical references, artistic expression type, field in Psychology and objective of the work. After the analysis it was concluded that, in Brazil, there is a predominance of theoretical and epistemological work in literary and visual arts, based on psychoanalytic theory, aimed at theoretical / conceptual expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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57. Position paper for guiding response to non-suicidal self-injury in schools.
- Author
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Hasking, Penelope A., Heath, Nancy L., Kaess, Michael, Lewis, Stephen P., Plener, Paul L., Walsh, Barent W., Whitlock, Janis, and Wilson, Marc S.
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MEDICAL protocols , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SCHOOL environment , *SCHOOL health services , *SCHOOL administration , *SELF-injurious behavior , *SELF-mutilation , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice - Abstract
Around the world, school staff are increasingly expressing concern about nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) and how best to address this behavior in the school setting. However, there is a notable lack of informed guidance for schools, and clear inconsistencies in the practices school staff adopt. In this position paper we draw on our collective research and clinical expertise to provide best-practice guidelines for addressing NSSI in school settings. We outline the importance of a school protocol, and the key features all school protocols should contain. We also focus on how schools can minimize contagion of NSSI within their school environment. We believe these guidelines will be an important starting point for schools interested in developing an evidence-based approach to addressing NSSI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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58. Back pain beliefs in adolescents and adults in Australasia: A cross-sectional pilot study of selected psychometric properties of paper-based and web-based questionnaires in two diverse countries.
- Author
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Boon-Kiang Tan, Burnett, Angus, Hallett, Jonathan, Amy Ha, and Briggs, Andrew M.
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LUMBAR pain , *ANALYSIS of variance , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *HEALTH attitudes , *PROBABILITY theory , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *PILOT projects , *HUMAN research subjects , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unknown whether questionnaires measuring psychosocial constructs related to low back pain (LBP) that were originally designed for adults are suitable for adolescents, and if paper and web-versions have similar measurement properties. OBJECTIVES: To examine selected psychometric properties for the paper- and web-based Back-Beliefs Questionnaire (BBQ) and the Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ-phys) among adults and adolescents in two diverse countries and to determine whether differences existed between countries and pain groups. METHODS: A sample of 156 adults (Hong Kong, n = 75; Australia, n = 81) and 96 adolescents (Hong Kong, n = 61; Australia, n = 35) participated in this cross-sectional study. RESULTS: Main effects for country and administration mode were observed in adult BBQ scores, where Australian adults reported significantly higher BBQ scores than Hong Kong adults (mean difference (MD); 95% CI: 2.85; 0.96-4.74) and significantly higher scores were recorded on the web mode compared to the paper mode (MD 0.74; 0.10-1.38). Similarly, Hong Kong adults and adolescents reported higher FABQ-phys scores than Australian adults and adolescents (MD; 95% CI: 3.40; 1.37-5.43 and 4.88; 0.53-9.23, respectively). Internal consistency values were mostly acceptable (α⩾0.7). CONCLUSION: Differences exist between cultures for LBP-related beliefs. The BBQ and FABQ-phys have acceptable measurement properties in both administration modes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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59. The impact of relationship management on manufacturer resilience in emergencies.
- Author
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Yang, Jianhua, Liu, Yuying, and Kholaif, Moustafa Mohamed Nazief Haggag Kotb
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SOCIAL exchange , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ECOLOGY , *MANUFACTURING industries , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *TRUST , *QUALITY of service - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of two typical relationship management approaches (trust relationship with suppliers and reciprocity) on manufacturer resilience in the context of the COVID-19 crisis. Moreover, this paper aims to deepen the understanding of environmental uncertainty's moderating effect on the association between the trust relationship with suppliers (TRS) and reciprocity. Design/methodology/approach: Structural equation modeling has been used to test the hypotheses on 361 Chinese manufacturing firms' managers and independent directors during the COVID-19 crisis. Findings: The results reveal that reciprocity positively enhances three dimensions of manufacturer resilience, namely, preparedness, responsiveness and recovery capability. Reciprocity positively mediates the relationships between TRS and preparedness, responsiveness and recovery capability. Moreover, environmental uncertainty moderates the association between TRS and reciprocity. Practical implications: This study highlights the critical role of reciprocity, the relational governance approach, in enhancing manufacturer resilience in practice. This paper suggests that during emergencies such as the COVID-19 pandemic, managers should adopt trust and reciprocity in supplier relationship governance to strengthen the resilience of manufacturing companies and adapt effective strategies according to the environment. Originality/value: This study is unique in developing new scales of manufacturer resilience through interviews and surveys with Chinese manufacturers and theoretical research. Based on the social capital theory and social exchange theory, this study shed light on the role of trust and reciprocity. It also bridges relational governance theory with the literature on manufacturing firm resilience literature to help manufacturers better understand the transdisciplinary links between relationship management and resilient operations in emergencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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60. An existential challenge to some dominant perspectives in the practice of contemporary counselling psychology.
- Author
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Spinelli, Ernesto
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COUNSELING , *COACHING psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Content & Focus: This paper aims to explore a number of key challenges raised by existential theory to the dominant assumptions, aims and practices within contemporary counselling psychology. It argues that the existential focus on relatedness significantly alters counselling psychology's understanding of, and ways of perceiving individuals as well as the concerns that are brought to the therapeutic encounter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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61. Counselling Psychology training: Implications for 'Self'.
- Author
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Lewis, Yvette
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGICAL literature , *CAREER development , *INTROSPECTION , *COUNSELING , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SELF , *OBJECTIVISM (Philosophy) , *HUMANISM - Abstract
It is widely accepted that Counselling Psychology is underpinned by both Humanist and Post-Modern epistemologies, and that it holds the practitioner's 'use of self' in the service of the therapeutic relationship to be paramount in the therapeutic encounter. Although Humanism and Post-Modernism can both provide theoretical pretexts for the use of self, these stances to knowledge can be experienced as in conflict with each other, and so generate ambiguity and conflict for trainees. The academic (University) contexts of training courses can feed into aspects of these epistemological conflicts in that they uphold individualist-objectivist stances to knowledge/evidence and styles of communication. In this paper psychological literature is drawn upon to explore how trainees are positioned by the discourses of 'self and 'development' that are available to them, with particular reference to the discourse of 'reflective-practice'. The concept of a plural and dialogical self is used to suggest augmenting the manner in which personal and professional development is conducted and assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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62. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in China: Practices and Exploration.
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Man, Jiao, Yan, Ru, Yang, Kaidi, Ouyang, Yuting, Shu, Chenye, Sun, Jun, Wang, Jianping, and Dobson, Keith S.
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PSYCHOTHERAPISTS , *BEHAVIOR disorders , *CHINESE medicine , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *CULTURE , *LEARNING , *EMOTIONS , *PHILOSOPHY , *PSYCHOEDUCATION , *EXPERIENCE , *MIND & body therapies , *PSYCHOLOGY , *COGNITIVE therapy , *THEORY , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *CULTURAL pluralism , *COGNITION - Abstract
The principles of CBT emphasize the interactions among cognition, emotion, and behavior. CBT's origins lie in Stoicism philosophy and share similarities with the ideas of Confucianism, Taoism, and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in China. The idea of mind–body regulation in traditional Chinese culture has laid a cultural foundation for the promotion of CBT in China. This paper analyzes the applicability and challenges of CBT in China based on the current development of CBT in mainland China and the learning and practice of CBT therapists. It also explores the potential further development of CBT in China and the integration of CBT with the Chinese culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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63. Translating (in) the margins: The dilemmas, ethics, and politics of a transnational feminist approach to translating in multilingual qualitative research.
- Author
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Burkhard, Tanja and Park, Su Jin
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QUALITATIVE research , *GENDER identity , *TRANSLATIONS , *MULTILINGUALISM , *PSYCHOLOGY , *HUMAN rights , *PRACTICAL politics , *THEORY , *FEMINIST criticism - Abstract
Drawing on two multilingual qualitative datasets (Korean/English and German/English), this paper examines the dual role and positionalities of two researchers who simultaneously act as translators, as well as the implications of this dual role for multilingual qualitative research. This work is informed by transnational feminist translation studies and transnational feminist approaches to qualitative research, and founded on the two researchers' intimate familiarity with their participants' languages, contexts, and meaning-making processes. Considering the complexity of this familiarity, this work presents unique dilemmas—challenges and opportunities—with respect to translating, representing, and writing about multilingual qualitative data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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64. Thinking Educationally about Psychology in Education:1 Gert Biesta's Critique Reconsidered.
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Sæther, Jostein
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EDUCATIONAL psychology , *YOUNG adults , *EDUCATION theory , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY of education , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *ECLECTICISM , *FREE will & determinism - Abstract
Learning and development are well established as concepts in educational psychology. Gert Biesta has used terms such as "learnification" and "developmentalism" to describe a tendency that, in his view, removes existential qualities from teaching and education. Although important in the right contexts, the concepts do not represent the core of what education should be about, he claims. Jostein Sæther notes that in many ways he shares Biesta's view on the most fundamental quality of education, i.e., helping young people exist as independent subjects in confrontation with their own will, responsibility, and freedom. In this paper, he addresses the overarching question of whether it is possible and desirable to think educationally about psychology in educational theory, specifically through relating Biesta's critique to selected handbooks, reviews, and metaliterature. Sæther does not propose integrating educational psychology into Biesta's existential theory but rather hopes to open a dialogue on different points of view that challenge each other in fruitful ways. The process of discussing certain principles, problems, and examples should yield a certain kind of "unclean" educational psychology, one that is relevant to "subjectification." There are problems related to eclecticism and the tension between essence and existence, yet, in this context, Sæther sees a dialogical project as the only way forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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65. A call for QuantCrit methodologies: Unpacking the need for a critical lens in school psychology research.
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D'Costa, Stephanie, Grant, Stephanie, Kulkarni, Tara, Crossing, Adrianna, Zahn, Miranda, and Tanaka, Marie L.
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MENTAL health , *CRIME , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *RESPONSIBILITY , *QUANTITATIVE research , *BEHAVIOR , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MEDICAL research , *CRITICAL race theory , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SPECIAL education , *SCHOOL health services , *DISCIPLINE of children - Abstract
School psychology has heavily relied on quantitative methodology to create and sustain our knowledge of best practices regarding academic, behavioral, and mental health outcomes for students. Nevertheless, underlying assumptions of the neutrality of quantitative data have obfuscated how school psychology research has perpetuated oppressive ideologies and practices, which directly harm students from marginalized identities. This paper demonstrates the need for employing a critical lens when engaging in and consuming school psychology research that utilizes quantitative methods. One such framework is QuantCrit, developed in the United Kingdom, which intentionally integrates Critical Race Theory tenets into the development, analysis, and interpretation of quantitative data. We explore specific examples of the insidious ways that 'presumed neutral' quantitative approaches have led to the perpetuation of oppressive practices in the following key areas of school psychology research: (a) discipline disproportionality, (b) special education disproportionality, and (c) school accountability metrics. Furthermore, we provide recommendations for both utilizing and publishing quantitative research that moves school psychologists towards more equitable practices for children and families across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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66. Psychologists as Pivotal Members of the Pediatric Palliative Care Team.
- Author
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Thompson, Amanda L., Kentor, Rachel A., Schaefer, Megan R., and McCarthy, Sarah R.
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MENTAL health promotion , *PEDIATRIC therapy , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *MENTAL illness , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Pediatric psychologists possess unique expertise to positively impact the care provided to children with serious illness and their families. Despite increasing recognition regarding the value of psychology in palliative care, psychologists are not yet routinely integrated into pediatric palliative care (PPC) teams. This special paper seeks to demonstrate distinctive contributions psychologists can offer to PPC teams, patients, and families, as well as highlight how psychologists enhance the work of their interdisciplinary PPC colleagues. Existing literature, consensus and policy statements, and recently developed competencies inform and provide evidence for the value of incorporating psychologists into PPC. As children with serious illness are at risk for mental and physical health symptoms, psychologists' specialized training in evidence-based assessment and intervention allows them to assess areas of concern, create treatment plans, and implement nonpharmacological therapies targeting symptom management and promotion of quality of life. By improving patient and family outcomes, psychology involvement saves money. In addition to clinical care, psychologists are skilled researchers, which can help to advance PPC interdisciplinary research. Lastly, psychologists can play a valuable role in contributing to PPC team education, dynamics, and well-being. With strong skills in research, clinical care, education, and advocacy, pediatric psychologists are exceptionally equipped to provide care to children with serious illness and their families. Given their unique contributions, it is critical future efforts are directed towards advocating for the inclusion of psychologists into PPC, with the ultimate goal of improving care for children with serious illness and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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67. Clinical Education: Psychosocial Assessment and Treatment Planning for Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
- Author
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Petrik, Megan, Kuhn, Tyler, and Kinsinger, Sarah
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INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases , *BODY image , *CLINICAL education , *BODY image disturbance , *MENTAL health screening , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Psychosocial factors play an important role in the disease course and illness experience of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Consultation with a health psychologist is an important component of care for many IBD patients and provides an opportunity to identify areas of psychosocial concern, recognize coping deficits and strengths, and facilitate treatment recommendations. Psychosocial assessment in IBD requires a nuanced approach that goes beyond general mental health screening and considers the disease-specific concerns that impact patients. In this paper, we outline strategies for an IBD-focused psychological evaluation, including specific guidance for assessing disease-specific concerns of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, sleep, pain, body image disturbance, food-related quality of life, and psychological resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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68. Difficulties in nurturing a sense of justice.
- Author
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Kuch, Hannes
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JUSTICE , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIALISM , *DEMOCRACY , *PERSONAL property - Abstract
The paper analyzes Rawls's moral psychology and the claim that a just society must foster a sufficiently strong sense of justice. When Rawls investigates the development of the sense of justice under a just basic structure, he tacitly narrows down the focus: he only demonstrates the development of a sense of justice on the premise that all members of society are already in possession of a full‐fledged sense of justice, save the one individual under investigation. This begs the question, largely presupposing what needs to be explained, namely, how citizens at large develop a sense of justice. Rawls's narrowing of perspective leads to distortions in the analysis of stability, particularly with regard to a property‐owning democracy. However, in lesser known parts of his work, Rawls offers clues for a more plausible account. Here, the idea is that institutions must be structured such that they enable all of us to nurture the sense of justice of each of us. With this idea of collective self‐transformation in place, it becomes clear that economic institutions must be broadly democratized because of their profound educational role. Thus, the choice between a property‐owning democracy and liberal socialism falls more strongly upon the latter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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69. 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
- Full Text
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70. Objectivity interrogation of racial scholarship in psychology and management.
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Torrez, Brittany, Dupree, Cydney H., and Kraus, Michael W.
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ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY , *INDUSTRIAL psychology , *OBJECTIVITY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *RACE - Abstract
Scholars of color remain underrepresented in US institutions in academia. In this paper, we will examine one factor that contributes to their continued marginalization in psychology and management: the scientific method's commitment to traditional notions of objectivity. We argue that objectivity—defined as practices and policies rooted in the heightened value placed on a research process that is ostensibly free from bias—is central to the prominence of primarily White scholarship in psychology and management research and remains central to knowledge production. To investigate this, we employ a mixed-methods approach, integrating qualitative and quantitative data to codify how scholars of color experience objectivity interrogations, or written and verbal questioning in academic contexts that implicates their scientific rigor. We also identify how scholars of color engage in objectivity armoring, or self-presentational strategies (toning down and stepping up) to contend with these interrogations. Finally, we reveal these toning down processes in language use within publications on racial scholarship. Overall, these studies reveal the unique challenges scholars of color face to legitimize and validate their work on race and racism within predominantly White institutions and disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. EquiP – the first European association for qualitative researchers in psychology.
- Author
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Demuth, Carolin, Santiago-Delefosse, Marie, Tseliou, Eleftheria, and Del Rio Carral, María
- Abstract
In 2018, the Association of European Qualitative Researchers in Psychology (EQuiP) was founded – a society that aims to create bridges among qualitative researchers in psychology across Europe – between researchers from different European countries but also between different traditions of qualitative inquiry in psychology, and bridges between academics and practitioners. In this paper, we will present the work of EQuiP in order to make it known do a wider audience. We will start by providing an overview of the history of EQuiP and the aims it pursues. We will also present an update on past and present activities and events of the association, including an outlook on the upcoming international conference in 2024 in Milano. We invite scholars to join us in our endeavour not only to strengthen qualitative research in psychology across Europe but also to highlight the plurality and heterogeneity that are inherent to this kind of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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72. Resilience enhancing programs in the U.S. military: An exploration of theory and applied practice.
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McInerney, Sarah A., Waldrep, Edward, and Benight, Charles C.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *COST control , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY of military personnel , *PSYCHOLOGY , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *MILITARY service , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *HEALTH promotion , *THEORY - Abstract
U.S. service members are at an enhanced risk for developing mental disorders. To address these challenges, while promoting operational readiness and improving mental health outcomes, the Department of Defense directed each service component to develop and implement universal resilience enhancing programs. This paper provides a review of theoretical approaches conceptualizing resilience to trauma, including the theoretical foundations of programs currently in place. The resilience programs of U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps are described, and available program effectiveness data are reviewed. Gaps between theory and practice are identified and an alternative method of assessing psychological readiness in Army units that is informed by resilience theory is offered as one way to address these gaps and scientific concerns. By comprehensively assessing the stressors affecting Soldiers at regular intervals, military leaders may be able to better identify and mitigate stressors in a systematic way that bolsters individual and unit psychological fitness. An enhanced psychological readiness metric stands to strengthen the validity of current resilience programs, bring clarity to the mechanisms of resilience, and provide a novel way for leaders to promote readiness in their units. Application of this metric within the infrastructure of existing reporting systems stands to improve mental health outcomes for Service Members, enhance the psychological readiness of the force, and reduce healthcare costs over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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73. A qualitative study on experiences of stigma among postoperative oral cancer patients.
- Author
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Zhu, Jie, Tan, Chu-Xia, Guo, Jia-Yi, Yang, Rong-Hong, and Ye, Man
- Abstract
Aim: This study aimed to explore the characteristics of stigma in postoperative oral cancer patients to provide a reference for the formulation of targeted intervention measures. Methods: A qualitative study was conducted on 25 postoperative oral cancer patients in a tertiary A hospital in Hunan, China, from March to July 2021. Semi-structured face-to-face interviews focused on experiences of stigma were performed. The interview data was analyzed using the NVivo V.12 software based on the reflexive intuitive thematic analysis method. The paper complies with the COREQ. Results: The stigma experience of postoperative oral cancer patients can be divided into 3 themes: (1) triggers (impaired appearance and oral function and psycho-social pressure); (2) forms (overall isolation, unpleasant feeling of inferiority, and unpleasant social discrimination); (3) coping strategies (positive psychological adjustment, seeking social support and coming out of the unpleasant shadows). Conclusion: Postoperative oral cancer patients clearly articulated that stigma was present in their lives and they experienced multiple forms of stigma. Further work is needed to increase education and awareness about oral cancer to guide them to take positive coping and reduce stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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74. Understanding the Factors That Contribute to Creating a Collaborative Psychological Formulation: A Qualitative Systematic Review.
- Author
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Thrower, Naomi E., Berry, Katherine, Johnston, Isobel, and Morris, Lydia
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CLINICAL psychology , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *HUMAN services programs , *SELF-efficacy , *OCCUPATIONAL adaptation , *WORK environment , *EMOTIONS , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *PEER counseling , *PSYCHOLOGY , *EXPERIENCE , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *PATIENT-professional relations , *THEORY , *ONLINE information services , *RESOURCE-limited settings , *SOCIAL support , *DATA analysis software , *QUALITY assurance , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *PROFESSIONAL competence - Abstract
Objectives: Creating a formulation is one of the key competencies of a clinical psychologist and is understood to be important for guiding therapeutic input and understanding client distress. However, client experience of formulations can vary, with some reporting it is unhelpful and distressing. This novel review explores the experiences of clinicians and clients when creating a formulation, specifically the barriers and facilitators to collaborating on a formulation. This ultimately aims to improve client experience and engagement in formulation. Methods: A systematic search of PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO and EMBASE was conducted using PRISMA guidelines. The protocol was registered on PROSPERO. This search was conducted using terms related to 'psychological formulation' and 'experience'. Nineteen qualitative papers met inclusion criteria and were appraised using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme. Findings that pertained to formulation were thematically synthesised. Results: Three analytical themes were identified: toleration of the formulation process—'a necessary evil', which highlights the potential emotional impact of formulation on the client and indicates the importance of responding to client readiness and expectations of formulation; development of the therapeutic relationship—'it's like a two way thing, isn't it?', which suggests that client empowerment, adapting to client needs and clinicians creating a safe and containing environment facilitated the formulation process; systemic factors—'walking a tightrope', which highlights the constraints of resources and team dynamics in therapists' ability to engage in collaborative formulation. Conclusion: Facilitators to a collaborative formulation include the following: simple formulations, thorough assessment and preparation for formulation, 'doing with' activities such as timelines and diagrams and working environments that include supportive colleagues and time for reflection and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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75. Integrating personality psychology and intersectionality to advance diversity in the study of persons.
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Westberg, Dulce Wilkinson and Syed, Moin
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INTERSECTIONALITY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *STRUCTURAL frames , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL justice , *PERSONALITY - Abstract
Consideration of how interrelated social structures relate with personality has been limited. In this paper, we discuss how researchers might apply an intersectional framework–which uses a social justice lens to examine how social structures are interconnected and impact individuals—at three distinct levels of personality including traits, characteristic adaptations, and integrative life narratives. We begin by providing conceptualizations of personality and intersectionality and describe considerations for their integration, including the need to widen the methodological and epistemological scope of personality science. Key areas of research that demonstrate the promise of an intersectional framework for unpacking structures of power and oppression in relation to the person are then described for each level of personality. Specifically, recommendations for how an intersectional framework may be used to examine structural identity domains in relation to trait levels, values and goals, as well as the content and process of narrated lives are offered. We conclude with discussion of how application of an intersectional framework is crucial for promoting inclusion and generalizability in personality science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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76. Piloting the Mockingbird Family™ in Australia: Experiences of foster carers and agency workers.
- Author
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McLaren, Helen, Patmisari, Emi, Jones, Michelle, Skinner, Chris, and Mather, Simone
- Subjects
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JOB involvement , *WORK , *SOCIAL workers , *QUALITATIVE research , *SELF-efficacy , *CONCEPTUAL models , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *RESEARCH funding , *PILOT projects , *INTERVIEWING , *FOSTER home care , *FOSTER parents , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONFIDENCE , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIAL change , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *ORGANIZATIONAL goals , *SOCIAL support , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *CAREGIVER attitudes ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Given that the number of children and young people needing care keeps rising and fewer people are becoming foster carers, efforts to support carers and workers in foster caring are essential. This paper considers the experiences of carers and foster care agency workers involved in Australia's piloting of the Mockingbird Family. With a view understanding experience, data were collected via focus groups with carers and agency workers (n = 20) involved in piloting, implementation and evaluation. Deductive analysis applied the theory of experience to generate understanding of experience, as both intrinsic and extrinsic dimensions to capture strengths in the Mockingbird Family's foster caring networks. These dimensions of experience included collective passions of carers and workers; experiential change over time; collective experiences as a moving force; and experiences as transformational. Understanding of experience associated with the perceived strengths of the Mockingbird Family, including strategies to promote strong professional relationships between carers and workers, is an important element in strengthening environments of children and young people in care. Safe and stable environments are crucial for wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Defences, Human Nature, and Spiritual Awakening: A Christian Counselling Perspective.
- Author
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Lam, Angel Suet Man
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN behavior , *COUNSELING , *CHRISTIAN spirituality , *CRYSTALLINE lens , *VALUES (Ethics) , *RELIGIOUS psychology - Abstract
This article delves into the intricacies of human defences in various domains, including the biological and psychological responses to protect oneself, and the abstract concept of sacrificing one's life to uphold ethical, moral, religious, and spiritual values. While physical, psychological, and moral values have been attended to in counselling, regard for the religious and spiritual aspects is still developing. As the author writes from a Christian perspective, Christian faith and values are considered. It is posited that a study of human nature, as presented in the Christian Bible, can facilitate a profound comprehension of human defences. The paper scrutinizes the correlation between "human defences" and "Christian spirituality" through a Christian lens on human nature. Furthermore, it introduces the idea of "spiritual defence" and how it is related to a spiritual awakening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. Web of well-being: re-examining PERMA and subjective well-being through networks.
- Author
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Merritt, Sean H., Heshmati, Saeideh, Oravecz, Zita, and Donaldson, Stewart I.
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- *
MENTAL health , *POSITIVE psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL networks , *RESEARCH , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *THEORY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *WELL-being - Abstract
While positive psychology has been in development for more than 20 years, positive psychologists still face the challenge of finding optimal measurements of well-being. The PERMA framework provides a new understanding of well-being based on years of research. However, whether it adds value in terms of being distinct from the already established measures of Subjective Well-Being (SWB) has recently been under debate. Certain characteristics of PERMA make it unsuited for traditional factor analysis and data analysis techniques. In this paper, we argue that a network approach is more suitable for understanding the interrelated nature of PERMA components. We then show how the components of PERMA and SWB are distinct using exploratory graphical analysis. Our results show that while PERMA predicts SWB, PERMA provides us a more nuanced way to understand the interrelated antecedents of well-being, which we refer to as the web of well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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79. Persons in a posthuman world.
- Author
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Brinkmann, Svend
- Abstract
Are we becoming ‘posthuman’, and, if so, what does that mean for our understanding of ourselves as persons? In this paper, I argue that we have good reasons to retain a notion of personhood despite posthuman claims, but that the science of psychology, which ought to be well-equipped to study and defend human personhood, has – with some notable exceptions – failed to develop illuminating ideas of what persons are and how they come into the world phylogenetically, ontogenetically, and sociogenetically. First, I articulate a short history of the concept of the person from antiquity and to the Enlightenment. Second, I describe four current challenges to these modern approaches to personhood. Third, I argue that personhood is inescapable in psychology and human life as such, and that a qualitative psychology should try to find a way of preserving the insights of posthuman thinking and its critiques without thereby abandoning personhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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80. Twelve tips for integrating podcasts into medical education curricula.
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Chaiklin, Charlotte, Onyango, Joshua, Heublein, Molly, Gielissen, Katherine, and Kryzhanovskaya, Irina
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *MEDICAL education , *TEACHING methods , *PSYCHOLOGY , *STREAMING media , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *TEACHER-student relationships , *COGNITION - Abstract
Engagement with medical education podcasts among health professions learners has been increasing steadily over the last several years. Prior '12 Tips' publications have focused on helping medical educators create and publish their own podcasts. However, there is a gap in available resources to help educators incorporate an already existing and growing library of medical education podcasts into their curriculum rather than create their own. In this paper, the authors provide medical educators '12 Tips' on how to integrate podcasts into their teaching sessions grounded in fundamental principles of curriculum development, cognitive science, and accessibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. The role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex in moral cognition: A value-centric hypothesis.
- Author
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Garr, Anna K.
- Subjects
- *
PREFRONTAL cortex , *MORAL judgment , *INFORMATION processing , *EMOTIONS , *COGNITION , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Trends in moral psychology largely support the role that emotion plays in moral cognition with human lesion studies offering the most compelling evidence to date. Specifically, data from ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) patients on moral judgment tasks has suggested the necessity of having intact emotion to behave in morally appropriate ways. However, patients with vmPFC damage also have deficits in a variety of complex judgment and decision-making tasks, regardless of whether emotion is involved. This paper argues that a basic information processing perspective of vmPFC functionality is a better interpretation of vmPFC patient deficits, specifically with the vmPFC being necessary for value assessment rather than being specific to emotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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82. Integrating Subjective Recovery and Stigma Resistance in Individuals with Schizophrenia: A Narrative Review and Theoretical Integration.
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Swistak, MSc, Zosia, Sookoo, MA, Susan, and Jewell, PhD, Tom
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- *
SELF-efficacy , *MENTAL health services , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CONVALESCENCE , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SOCIAL support , *SOCIAL stigma , *HOPE , *SELF-perception - Abstract
Stigmatised attitudes are known to be associated with negative outcomes in schizophrenia, yet there is little focus on the role of stigma in the recovery process. Attempts to develop interventions to reduce self-stigma in schizophrenia have not been found effective. This paper presents a theoretical integration based on a narrative review of the literature. PsycINFO, Medline and Embase databases were searched up to the 11th December 2023. Studies were included if they were: i) empirical studies using qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods studies investigating mental health stigma; ii) included participants based in the United Kingdom, fluent in English, between the ages of 16 and 70, meeting criteria for a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis. Fourteen studies were included. In Part 1, we propose a novel theoretical model derived from a synthesis of service-user perspectives on the relationship between stigma and schizophrenia. Stigmatised attitudes were commonly perceived to be caused by a lack of education and further exacerbated by disinformation primarily through the media and cultural communities. Stigma led to negative self-perceptions, negative emotional responses, social isolation and increased symptom severity, ultimately acting as a barrier to recovery. In Part 2, we identify several factors that ameliorate the impact of stigma and promote clinical and subjective recovery among service-users: education, empowerment, self-efficacy, self-acceptance, hope and social support. We argue that the notion of stigma resistance may be helpful in developing new interventions aimed at promoting recovery in individuals with schizophrenia. Wider implications are discussed and recommendations for future research and practice are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. Toward a queered psychology of the self: Empathy and passibility from the margins to the center.
- Author
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Guzzardi, Sam
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY , *SELF , *EMPATHY , *LGBTQ+ studies , *AMERICAN dramatists , *COMMUNITY psychology - Abstract
Beginning with Kohut's classic 1959 paper on the subject, empathy has been conceptualized as a process of finding something in one's self (introspection) that has resonance with one's experience of the other. This paper, inspired by advances in queer studies, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the Black American theater, identifies the limitations of this understanding. By putting Kohut's ideas about empathy in dialogue with French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard, Black American playwrights Jeremy O. Harris, Michael R. Jackson, and James Ijames, and the author's own clinical experience, a queered empathy is theorized that relies less on self-reference and more on passibility. The theoretical and clinical implications of this shift are explored, and the possibilities for a queered Psychology of the Self that contain a heightened possibility for responsiveness to marginalized experience are suggested. The hope of this paper is that the reader, from a multidisciplinary perspective, will be inspired to imagine a psychoanalysis and Self Psychology for all that has the potential to flourish for generations to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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84. Some Aspects Regarding the Psychology of the Surgical Patient.
- Author
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VOICU, Dragoş, POPAZU, Constantin, STAN, Dorina, and BURLEA, Ştefan Lucian
- Abstract
The need for a medical consultation always generates an unpleasant sensation, which becomes more accentuated, when the doctor is a surgeon. The surgeon is next to the dentist, gynecologist and psychiatrist, the doctor to whom the patient turns with the greatest fear. The operative indication and the discussion of therapeutic perspectives can trigger a psycho-emotional imbalance, leading to tomophobia. In fact, it is a complex psychological reaction, including odynophobia (fear of pain), dysmorphophobia (fear of postoperative bodily sequelae), hypnophobia (fear of anesthetic sleep, from which one could not wake up), trypanophobia (fear of injections, needles, scalpel), pantophobia (fear of everything that happens around, in this case, in the hospital environment) and above all, thanatophobia (fear of death). Therefore, it can be stated that the surgical intervention is a test of the psychoaffective capacity. The paper presents the authors' experience in 20 years (2002-2021), related to the psychological management of surgical patients, subjected to medium or large-scale surgical interventions (75% performed in emergency mode), in 958 patients. Mental stress can have consequences, both on the reactivity of the surgical patient and on his postoperative evolution. In the time crunch and in the absence of a psychologist, available to offer specific advice on medical objectives, the management of perioperative anxiety rests with the surgeon and the nursing staff. The paper discusses and underlines some elements related to the psychology of the surgical patient and insists on the importance and role of the psychologist, in the prophylaxis and treatment of what can be called operative disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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85. INVISIBLES: PROBLEMÁTICAS DE SALUDENFERMEDAD-ATENCIÓN DE PERSONAS BISEXUALES Y SU ABORDAJE EN LA PROFESIÓN PSICOLÓGICA.
- Author
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Olvera Muñoz, Omar Alejandro and Jarillo Soto, Edgar Carlos
- Subjects
- *
BISEXUAL people , *MEDICAL care , *SOCIAL medicine , *HUMAN sexuality , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In Mexico, there is a lack in academic research about bisexual Health-Disease-Attention process. This paper analyzes the main problems about health-disease for bisexual people with a Social Medicine and a Collective Health approach. In order to do this analysis, this paper offers a systematization of research's discoveries related to the Health-Disease-Attention process in bisexual people. Problems on health-disease for bisexual people include worse mental health conditions in comparison to gay and lesbian people. As psychologists have few contextualized knowledge about bisexual health-disease situations, then they cannot adequately respond to bisexual people needs. Bisexual Health-Disease-Attention process is an historical and social product where the lack of visibility and the negative valuation functions as mechanisms to regulate people's sexuality, which can be reproduced in Health-Attention places, such as Mental Health ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. THE USE OF ANIMAL CHARACTERS IN THE STORIES OF PANCHATANTRA: THE CHILD PSYCHOANALYTICAL PERSPECTIVE.
- Author
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Lamsal, Alok
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL criticism , *CHILD development , *AGE & intelligence , *PSYCHOANALYSIS - Abstract
This paper has the prospect of clearing the idea about the use of animal characters in the stories of Panchatantra and how they are useful to develop the intelligence and cognition of a child's mind. With the help of different theoretical concepts, the paper hypothesizes that telling stories for children is worthy enough to shape a child's mind, that eventually makes them creative and imaginative. This paper has the limitation of not having a specific conclusion of the hypothesis, since it doesn't deepen enough to prove through psychological and quantitative testing. The study's inferences are developed through the discussion and argument of different scholars. The basis to substantiate the hypothesis is a book by Bruno Bettelheim (The Uses of Enchantment: The meaning and importance of Fairy Tales), Jack Zipes (The Irresistible Fairy Tale: The Cultural and Social History of a Genre) and again Jack Zipes (Fairy Tales and The Art of The Subversion). My inclination towards the positive side of the stories can be imbibed through the theoretical perspective of different writers and thinkers. The psychoanalytic theory of Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan and Carl G. Jung and Anna Freud. For my reading we have chosen Arthur W. Ryder's English translated version of Panchatantra. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
87. What we owe patients when fear undermines autonomy: Concretized emotions and the incapacity to deliberate.
- Author
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Halpern, Jodi
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of medical errors , *THOUGHT & thinking , *PATIENT autonomy , *PATIENT decision making , *CAPACITY (Law) , *FEAR , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PATIENT-centered care , *THEORY , *PHILOSOPHY of medicine , *ANXIETY , *EMOTIONS , *BIOETHICS - Abstract
Fear and anxiety can interfere profoundly with a person's ability to deliberate. Patients sometimes face critical medical decisions while subject to intense emotions which involve catastrophic (or wishful) convictions about the future. Medical teams, and even psychiatrists and bioethicists, lack a model for what to do in such cases. Philosophical accounts of autonomy and the clinical criteria for decision‐making capacity derived from them fail to address cases in which emotions do not merely skew judgment but rather block decision‐making capacity itself. This paper provides an account of when emotions undermine a person's freedom to deliberate, which is the basis of the capacity for autonomy. People subject to what I call 'concretized emotions' meet the cognitive criteria for decision‐making capacity. Yet their emotions dictate their views of reality and prevent them from meeting the basic conditions for deliberation. To deliberate one needs to be able to think through alternatives, and this thinking through alternatives needs to be responsive to evidence. With concretized fear, both the ability to think through alternatives and the ability to respond cognitively to evidence is undermined. The person can engage in apparent deliberation, but her thought processes regarding the feared matter are characterized by the rigid view that things are just as they seem from her emotional view. This paper develops a theoretical and clinical model for a more appropriate and nuanced approach to acting responsibly toward patients subject to intense fear and related emotional states that block their decision‐making capacity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. The Medium in the Sociology of Niklas Luhmann: From Children to Human Beings.
- Author
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Morgner, Christian
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN beings , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *UNPUBLISHED materials , *MODERN society , *SOCIOLOGY , *EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
In this paper, Christian Morgner provides a critical reading of Niklas Luhmann's thinking as ignoring human beings or even as antihumanist. Here, he presents an alternative view that centers on Luhmann's idea of the child or human being as a medium. To explain Luhmann's use of these ideas to conceptualize the child and the consequences for research, Morgner refers to the translation of Luhmann's paper "The Child as the Medium of Education" and to as yet unpublished material from his famous card‐box reference system. Drawing on these materials, Morgner can more clearly illuminate Luhmann's novel perspective and how it could inform further theoretical development, supported by new analysis of existing research in other fields, including developmental psychology, education, philosophy, and sociology. He concludes that, far from neglecting the human, Luhmann's theory takes human being very seriously and acknowledges its key role as a form‐giving medium in addressing the challenges faced by contemporary society. This renewed perspective should be of particular interest to educational theorists, enabling them to more freely apply his ideas in various settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. Supporting self-determination among internationally educated nurses: a discussion.
- Author
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Randall, Paige S. and De Gagne, Jennie C.
- Subjects
- *
RACISM , *WELL-being , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL support , *NURSING , *SELF-perception , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *FOREIGN nurses , *SOCIAL isolation , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *THEORY , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *NURSES , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PATIENT safety - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the global nursing shortage. As the shortage worsens, reliance on internationally educated nurses is expected to increase, presenting challenges and opportunities for health care systems and nurse leaders worldwide. While internationally educated nurses bring cultural and ethnic diversity to domestic workforces, they face significant hurdles in successfully integrating due to racism, discrimination, and isolation, which can have a negative impact on their self-determination. The challenges encountered by internationally educated nurses can not only affect their self-determination, but they can also pose risks to patient safety. Objectives: This purpose of this paper was to examine the extant literature to describe the experiences of internationally educated nurses through the lens of Ryan and Deci's Self-Determination Theory. Another aim was to offer nurse managers and administrators strategies for supporting internationally educated nurses within their health care facilities. Design: Discussion Paper. Conclusions: Health care organizations should allocate time and resources to facilitate the professional transition of internationally educated nurses, promoting their psychological well-being and self-determination by fostering autonomy, competence, and relatedness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. Effects of a self‐determination theory‐based physical activity programme for postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis: A randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Yun, Hye‐Won, Kim, Chun‐Ja, Ahn, Jeong‐Ah, and Schlenk, Elizabeth A.
- Subjects
- *
RHEUMATOID arthritis treatment , *GRIP strength , *WALKING speed , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *EXERCISE tests , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *COUNSELING , *SOCIAL support , *PATIENT autonomy , *PHOTON absorptiometry , *MUSCLE contraction , *ANALYSIS of variance , *SELF-perception , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *FISHER exact test , *MANN Whitney U Test , *SARCOPENIA , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TAI chi , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *T-test (Statistics) , *THEORY , *EXERCISE , *RHEUMATOID arthritis , *POSTMENOPAUSE , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHI-squared test , *REPEATED measures design , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing , *HEALTH behavior , *STATISTICAL sampling , *BONE density , *DATA analysis software , *PATIENT compliance , *WOMEN'S health , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *EVIDENCE-based nursing - Abstract
Aims: The study aimed to develop and evaluate the effects of a self‐determination theory‐based, nurse‐led, physical activity programme for postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis. Methods: Between December 2019 and April 2020, this randomized controlled trial recruited 62 postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis from a university‐affiliated hospital in South Korea. The intervention group participated in a self‐determination theory‐based, nurse‐led, physical activity programme that consisted of Tai Chi‐based physical activity, a supportive psychosocial strategy, and interactive counselling for 16 weeks, and the control group continued to undergo their usual care. Results: There were statistically significant group‐by‐time interactions in physical activity and perceived sarcopenia, which favoured the intervention group. Additionally, the intervention group showed significant improvements in the perceived therapeutic efficacy of physical activity, grip strength, walking speed, disease activity score, and health‐related quality of life. Conclusions: The programme developed in this study can be an effective and feasible approach for postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis in improving physical activity, selected osteosarcopenic outcomes, and health‐related quality of life. Further research is required to investigate the long‐term effects of this theory‐based programme for postmenopausal women in diverse settings. Summary statement: What is already known about this topic? Tai Chi‐based physical activity has been known to be a component of self‐management for rheumatoid arthritis. What this paper adds? It highlights the efficacy of a theory‐based, nurse‐led, physical activity programme to improve the quality of life of postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis.The evidenced‐based programme could be transferred to postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis in clinical settings. The implications of this paper: The self‐determination theory‐based, nurse‐led, physical activity programme can improve physical and psychosocial outcomes in postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis.Importantly, this nurse‐led and theory‐based programme is expected to be applicable to postmenopausal women with rheumatoid arthritis in clinical settings, including both hospitals and communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. PLATO ON CORRECTING PHILOSOPHICAL CORRUPTION.
- Author
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Heckel, Marta
- Subjects
- *
CORRUPTION , *SOUL , *MYTH , *ARGUMENT , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Plato's Republic VII suggests that if we ask someone to philosophize when they are too young, they can become corrupted (537e–539d). Republic VII also suggests that to avoid this corruption, we must not expose youth to argument (539a–b). This is not a reasonable option outside of Kallipolis, so a question arises: does Plato describe how to correct corruption if we do not manage to prevent it? This paper shows that a parallel between this passage from Republic VII and a passage from Laws X suggests that he does. Laws X describes an impious man who is corrupted in the same way as the youth exposed to philosophy prematurely in Republic VII. While we leave the youth to his corruption in Republic , the impious man is helped to overcome his corruption in Laws with a refutation followed by a myth (also called a charm). This paper analyses these steps in terms of Plato's psychology, showing that both corruption and correction require a destabilization of the soul, which in these passages is brought about through refutation. This destabilization allows for a reconfiguration, which, with something that can restabilize the soul (for example with myth), can be a reconfiguration for the better. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. The Necessity to Recognize Processes of Radicalization from a Socio-cultural Perspective.
- Author
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Benevento, Ayşenur
- Subjects
- *
RADICALISM , *VIOLENCE , *HUMAN beings , *MINORITIES ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
The current paper investigates Psychoanalytic, Cognitive, Behaviorist, and Socio-cultural theories and critiques how they have (or might have) contributed to the study of radicalization. The paper asserts two arguments that lack emphasis in the current radicalization research: 1) radicalization refers to a process, and does not always refer to violent behavior; 2) radicalization research needs to pay tribute to socio-cultural, political, and historical context while designing research and discussing findings. These two points are essential to extend the concept of radicalization and to be sensitive to different research contexts and populations. Currently, the conceptualization of radicalization appears to be generalized to violent action among minority groups (mainly Muslims) in limited contexts (mostly Western countries). The article claims that Psychology can better contribute to this diverse field of interest with its well-established theoretical contributions to the understanding of human beings and its compassion to seek differences amongst people across different contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. The Relationship between Money and Cooperation: Evidence from Economics and Psychology.
- Author
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Pagliarani, Stefano
- Subjects
- *
INCENTIVE (Psychology) , *INTRINSIC motivation , *COOPERATION , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MONETARY incentives , *FIELD research - Abstract
This paper addresses the non-linear effect that money has on cooperative behavior. In economic theory, money is assumed to have a positive effect on cooperation, by providing incentives to agents. The evidence from field experiments indicates instead that small positive incentives can be detrimental to cooperation, crowding out intrinsic motivation, while larger incentives crowd it back in. The same happens, in the opposite direction, with negative incentives. By reviewing the existing qualitative evidence from economics and psychology, the paper proposes a possible mechanism that can lead to this non-linear effect, based on the methodology and the experimental results from economics and psychology. Money increases mutual benefits but decreases altruism, having a negative effect on cooperation when introduced in lesser amounts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Developmental data science: How machine learning can advance theory formation in Developmental Psychology.
- Author
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Van Lissa, Caspar J.
- Subjects
- *
DATA science , *RESEARCH , *LEARNING theories in education , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *MACHINE learning , *PSYCHOLOGY , *THEORY - Abstract
Theories are the vehicle of cumulative knowledge acquisition. At this time, however, many (developmental) psychological theories are insufficiently precise to derive testable hypotheses. This limits the advancement of our principled understanding of development. This problem cannot be resolved by improving the way deductive (confirmatory) research is conducted (e.g., through preregistration and replication), because theory formation requires inductive (exploratory) research. This paper argues that machine learning can help advance theory formation in (developmental) psychology, because it enables rigorous exploration of patterns in data. The paper discusses specific advantages of machine learning, explains core methodological concepts, introduces relevant methods, and describes how data‐driven insights are consolidated into theory. Machine learning automates exploration, and incorporates checks and balances to ensure generalizable results. It can assist in phenomenon detection and offers a more holistic understanding of the phenomena associated with an outcome or process of interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Two Jungs. Apropos a paper by Mark Saban.
- Author
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Giegerich, Wolfgang
- Subjects
- *
PERSONAL equation , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Jung's idea of the 'personal equation' amounts to the reflection that theoretical differences between the psychologies that people teach are rooted in their personalities, in other words, that they are due to the psychology each one 'has'. This concept also applies to different interpretations of Jung's work. The serious difficulties that Mark Saban has with my psychology are a case in point. Recourse to the concept of the personal equation reveals that Saban has his Jung and I have mine. With his insistence on his Talmudic methodological principle of dream interpretation, that 'the dream is its own interpretation', according to Saban Jung means nothing but a rejection of Freudian free association. My Jung goes far beyond that. Jung understands this methodological principle above all in terms of what he calls 'circumambulation'. The main part of this paper is devoted to an elucidation of what circumambulation involves as a mode of dream interpretation. The paper concludes with the distinction Jung himself introduced between two types of reading of his work, either as 'paper' and 'dead nostrums' or as 'fire and wind', and pleads for a reconstruction of Jung's psychology as a whole in terms of his most advanced, deepest insights, instead of a dogmatic reading mainly based on the early Jung, a reading for which his later revolutionary insights are at best negligible embellishments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. Position paper: Universal psychology under threat? A reflection on how systems changes are impacting on communities, services and applied psychology.
- Author
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Rouf, Khadj
- Subjects
- *
APPLIED psychology , *SOCIAL justice , *WELFARE state , *EQUALITY , *AUSTERITY , *VALUES (Ethics) , *PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This is a polemical paper rather than a 'scientific' paper. It focusses on how systemic changes to public services are impacting on children, families and communities. It is argued that the implementation of neoliberal ideology is rolling back the welfare state, undermining the social justice principles on which it was founded, having profound effects on the fabric of society and potentially making public services less effective in meeting the needs of vulnerable people. Psychologists have skills in working systemically and with individuals to alleviate suffering and improve life chances. It is argued that current policy of shrinking the welfare state and privatising public services is creating conditions which will increase social exclusion and have detrimental impacts on the health and well-being of many people. Economic and political policy has not been the usual territory of psychologists and there may be nervousness about straying out of our 'neutral' positions. However, it is proposed that psychology, in fostering universal psychology initiatives for the benefit of all, cannot afford to be apolitical as the values underlying our work are now under attack. It is suggested that we now need to act as a profession to challenge social injustice and lobby for social change. It is possible to do this without aligning to one political party, but from a values-based position. However, it is acknowledged that this is a complex position to maintain, given that some political movements are more aligned to neoliberal ideology than others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Parenting in youth sport: A position paper on parenting expertise.
- Author
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Harwood, Chris G. and Knight, Camilla J.
- Subjects
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SPORTS events , *ABILITY , *ADOLESCENCE , *CHILD development , *EMOTIONS , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *INTELLECT , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PARENTING , *ROLE models , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *SPORTS , *SPORTS psychology , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL support , *SPORTS participation , *ATHLETIC associations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives In line with the aims of this special issue, the purpose of this paper is to forward a position on the concept of sport parenting expertise through the presentation of six key postulates. Design Literature review and position statement. Method By adopting methods associated with an academic position paper, a statement is presented that we believe encapsulates sport parenting expertise. Six key postulates of parenting expertise, formulated from critically reviewing and interpreting relevant literature, are then presented. Results We propose that sport parenting expertise is dependent on the degree to which parents demonstrate a range of competencies; namely that parents, (a) select appropriate sporting opportunities and provide necessary types of support, (b) understand and apply appropriate parenting styles, (c) manage the emotional demands of competitions, (d) foster healthy relationships with significant others, (e) manage organizational and developmental demands associated with sport participation, and, (f) adapt their involvement to different stages of their child's athletic career. Conclusion Expertise in sport parenting requires parents to develop knowledge and utilize a range of intrapersonal, interpersonal, and organizational skills in order to support their child, manage themselves, and operate effectively in the wider youth sport environment. Recommendations for applied researchers to further investigate these postulates and substantiate the components of sport parenting expertise are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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98. ‘This is real now because it’s a piece of paper’: texts, disability, and LGBTQ parents.
- Author
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Gibson, Margaret F.
- Subjects
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PARENTS of children with disabilities , *GAY parents , *SERVICES for people with disabilities , *MEDICAL care , *DOCUMENTATION , *PARENTS , *HUMAN services , *ADOPTION , *BIRTH certificates , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL records , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *LGBTQ+ people , *SOCIAL attitudes , *PARENT attitudes , *ATTITUDES toward sex , *PSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities - Abstract
What role do texts play in LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) parents’ experiences of disability service systems? In interviews with 15 LGBTQ parents of disabled children in Toronto, Canada, participants selected documents to be used as a focus for discussion. Parents considered how LGBTQ identity and other intersectional identities influenced their experiences of institutional texts including adoption certificates, intake forms, and assessments. Findings suggest that documentation practices can operate as forms of systemic gatekeeping. LGBTQ identity was sometimes very significant in parents’ accounts, and sometimes less central than other aspects of their families' identities and experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. "Paper or Plastic?": How We Pay Influences Post-Transaction Connection.
- Author
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SHAH, AVNI M., EISENKRAFT, NOAH, BETTMAN, JAMES R., and CHARTRAND, TANYA L.
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CONSUMER attitudes , *CONSUMER psychology , *PAYMENT , *BRAND loyalty , *CONSUMER culture , *CONSUMER preferences , *EMOTIONS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Does the way that individuals pay for a good or service influence the amount of connection they feel after the purchase has occurred? Employing a multi-method approach across four studies, individuals who pay using a relatively more painful form of payment (e.g., cash or check) increase their post-transaction connection to the product they purchased and/or the organization their purchase supports in comparison to those who pay with less painful forms of payment (e.g., debit or credit card). Specifically, individuals who pay with more painful forms of payment increase their emotional attachment to a product, decrease their commitment to nonchosen alternatives, are more likely to publicly signal their commitment to an organization, and are more likely to make a repeat transaction. Moreover, the form of payment influences post-transaction connection even when the objective monetary cost remains constant and when the psychological cost is indirect (i.e., donating someone else's money). Increasing the psychological pain of payment appears to have beneficial consequences with respect to increasing downstream product and brand connection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Does Assessment Type Matter? A Measurement Invariance Analysis of Online and Paper and Pencil Assessment of the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE).
- Author
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Vleeschouwer, Marloes, Schubart, Chris D., Henquet, Cecile, Myin-Germeys, Inez, van Gastel, Willemijn A., Hillegers, Manon H. J., van Os, Jim J., Boks, Marco P. M., and Derks, Eske M.
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PSYCHIC ability , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *COMMUNITY life research , *FACTOR structure , *STATISTICAL sampling , *MATHEMATICAL symmetry - Abstract
Background: The psychometric properties of an online test are not necessarily identical to its paper and pencil original. The aim of this study is to test whether the factor structure of the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE) is measurement invariant with respect to online vs. paper and pencil assessment. Method: The factor structure of CAPE items assessed by paper and pencil (N = 796) was compared with the factor structure of CAPE items assessed by the Internet (N = 21,590) using formal tests for Measurement Invariance (MI). The effect size was calculated by estimating the Signed Item Difference in the Sample (SIDS) index and the Signed Test Difference in the Sample (STDS) for a hypothetical subject who scores 2 standard deviations above average on the latent dimensions. Results: The more restricted Metric Invariance model showed a significantly worse fit compared to the less restricted Configural Invariance model (χ2(23) = 152.75, p<0.001). However, the SIDS indices appear to be small, with an average of −0.11. A STDS of −4.80 indicates that Internet sample members who score 2 standard deviations above average would be expected to score 4.80 points lower on the CAPE total scale (ranging from 42 to 114 points) than would members of the Paper sample with the same latent trait score. Conclusions: Our findings did not support measurement invariance with respect to assessment method. Because of the small effect sizes, the measurement differences between the online assessed CAPE and its paper and pencil original can be neglected without major consequences for research purposes. However, a person with a high vulnerability for psychotic symptoms would score 4.80 points lower on the total scale if the CAPE is assessed online compared to paper and pencil assessment. Therefore, for clinical purposes, one should be cautious with online assessment of the CAPE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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