205 results
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2. Might We Practice What We’ved Preached? Thoughts on the Special Issue Papers.
- Author
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Linney, Jean
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COMMUNITY psychology , *THEORY of knowledge , *ECOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
Commentary on the papers of the special issue identifies and discusses four themes: 1) strategies to bridge the gap between science and practice, 2) sources of community science questions of interest, 3) choice and quality of methods, and 4) epistemology and useful language for community science. The commentary identifies some limitations in the models proposed by the special issue authors, and proposes renewed attention to ecology, context and process in community change initiatives, calling for a common set of community level measures as one strategy to advance a community centered science agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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3. Ambivalent perceptions of the Other: Towards a dual-process sociology of intercultural relations.
- Author
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Høy-Petersen, Nina
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SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology , *GLOBALIZATION , *SELF regulation , *XENOPHOBIA - Abstract
Applying theories from sociology and social psychology concerned with the intersection of culture and cognition to in-depth interviews, this paper empirically explores the Norwegian majority population’s perceptions of cultural diversities using a dual-process (DP) methodological and analytic approach. Globalization has produced a mix of new anxieties, opportunities, and curiosities, leaving most people juggling conflicting objectives of self-preservation and selfrealization, and making cognitive self-regulation and behavioural flexibility valorized skills of contemporary life. Instead of identifying xenophobic and cosmopolitan attitudes at opposite ends of a spectrum, the current paper argues in line with current research and theory in studies of DP cognition that they commonly co-exist, albeit in separate automatic and discursive cognitive systems, within the same individual. As a result, people’s perceptions of cultural and ethnic diversities tend to be ambivalent and contextually malleable – for example, in cases where their deep dispositions appear incompatible with their own self-concept or dominant cultural expectations. Most centrally, the current research proposes concrete strategies to elicit responses from both cognitive systems in the context of interpretive interviews. Secondly, the paper proposes clues that help to identify from which cognitive system interviewees’ conflicting cosmopolitan and xenophobic attitudes originate, thereby enabling researchers to further delineate the specific characteristics of these attitudes, including the mode of cultural learning through which they form, their flexibility or robustness to change, their role in behaviour motivation, and the extent to which they are conscious and controllable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Unpacking school ethnic‐racial socialization: A new conceptual model.
- Author
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Saleem, Farzana T. and Byrd, Christy M.
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SOCIALIZATION , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL values , *SOCIAL influence , *SOCIAL psychology , *SCHOOL environment , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Parents are the earliest transmitters of ethnic‐racial socialization (ERS), but transmitters within the school context become more important as youth move into adolescence. Yet, the current literature has limited frameworks to describe the transmission of ERS in schools. We propose a conceptual model that outlines the transmitters, methods, and content of school ERS as well as how school ERS can influence adolescent outcomes. Although scholars have begun to understand dimensions of school ERS, no frameworks have outlined the process, content, and effects of school ERS. This paper builds upon the burgeoning literature to unpack this process at institutional and individual levels. The paper includes discussion of research and practice implications for utilizing school ERS to address racial disparities and increase healthy school racial climates in K‐12 schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. "Quiet is the New Loud": The Biosociology Debate's Absent Voices.
- Author
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Ariansen, Anja Maria Steinsland
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BIOLOGY -- Social aspects , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOBIOLOGY , *SOCIAL evolution , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
In 2000, a controversial article about hormones and gender roles was published to stimulate debate about whether and how biological knowledge should be integrated in sociological research. Two decades later, this so-called biosociology debate is more relevant than ever, as biological knowledge has become widespread across societies and scientific disciplines. Hence, we as sociologists are regularly confronted with biological explanations that challenge our own explanations. Whether this happens in the scientific arena, the classroom, media, or even at social events, these situations often force us, individually, to take a stance on whether to meet such explanations with dialogue or opposition. One could therefore expect that sociologists have an interest in discussing these issues with their peers, but their lack of participation in the biosociology debate suggests otherwise. This paper explores possible reasons for this absence and how sociologists' views on biosociology are influenced by key agents – sociological associations and journals. Smith's "A Sacred project of American Sociology", and Scott's "A Sociology of Nothing" served as theoretical tools in the paper. A qualitative content analysis of presidential addresses of four sociological associations was conducted. The analyses suggest that sociologist avoid biosociology for widely different reasons, including fear that biosociology legitimizes oppression. This avoidance is probably reinforced by the leftish politization of the sociological discipline and the rightish politization of society. Overcoming obstacles to engagement in biosociology is required to safeguard the scientific integrity of sociology and enable sociologists to provide relevant contributions to research on the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. The Social Structure of Interlocal Cooperation in Metropolitan Areas.
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LeRoux, Kelly M. and Carr, Jered B.
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SOCIAL structure , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL interaction , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
This paper reviews the literature on local government cooperation and finds an over-reliance on environmentally imposed incentives and constraints as explanatory factors. By contrast, there is insufficient treatment of the actions, interactions, and reactions exhibited by the actors who govern local institutions. By conceptualizing local government actors as embedded in a larger social structure, it is possible to see the ways in which these actors, as parts of a whole, might interact to achieve regional objectives. This paper examines the metropolitan social structure of institutional actors, along with the social psychology of organizing, and proposes some specific avenues to a better understanding of how and why cooperation occurs in metropolitan areas. Rather than assume the fortunes of local governments are solely dependent on external initiatives, this view holds that actors help to create the metropolitan environment of which they are a part. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
7. Reasons to care: Personal motivation as a key factor in the practice of the professional foster carer in Romania.
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Neagoe, Alexandru, Neag, Doina Larisa Maria, and Lucheș, Daniel
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PROFESSIONAL practice , *FOSTER home care , *CHILD welfare , *SOCIAL workers , *QUANTITATIVE research , *BURDEN of care - Abstract
Personal motivation is a key factor in the service of foster care, impending both on the welfare of the child and on the satisfaction of the carer. This paper explores the benefits, challenges and dilemmas involved in the job of professional (i.e. state-supported) foster carer in Romania–a country where the issue of child protection has drawn a great deal of international attention over the last thirty years. The principal hypothesis concerns whether the benefits, challenges and dilemmas identified by foster carers are influenced by the factors that led to their taking up this kind of work. Quantitative research was conducted using a questionnaire as the main tool. The paper takes a descriptive, cross-sectional and multifactorial approach. Sampling was carried out by self-selecting method, and the study involved 51 participants. The research project identified a statistically significant variation in the challenges and dilemmas reported by foster carers. Thus, the results of the study show that the majority of the carers indicate a primarily intrinsic motivation for their work. By way of conclusion, it is argued that social workers, operating in collaboration with multidisciplinary teams, can offer carers support in managing more difficult periods in the child–carer relationship, thus enhancing the sustainability of the foster care service. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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8. The Episodic Amnesia of Trauma Studies and the Connection to Conflict Resolution.
- Author
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Zelizer, Craig
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EMOTIONAL trauma , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL sciences , *CONFLICT management - Abstract
Studying the nature of trauma and how it affects individuals, societies, and groups is a complex and challenging undertaking. The majority of research on trauma comes from a psychological approach, although scholars in sociology, social psychology, and anthropology have also begun to explore the issue. In the this paper the author briefly explores the sources and dynamics of trauma as according to several social science disciplines. Then he focuses on the need for conflict resolution theorists and practitioners to address trauma related issues in their work. All too often, conflict resolvers working in deep-rooted conflicts, fail to recognize the severity of trauma that many parties have suffered in the hopes of negotiating a solution to a conflict or rushing to undertake reconciliation. This failure to adequately acknowledge the suffering that parties experience and the effect it has on populations can lead to future conflicts and continued suffering. Moreover the author examines how conflict resolution practitioners can be affected by burnout and secondary trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
9. Identity, Emotion and Reason in the Same-Sex Marriage Debates.
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Conover, Pamela Johnston
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SAME-sex marriage , *IDENTITY politics , *POLITICAL science , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
My paper focuses on how identities, emotions and reason have affected the same-sex marriage debates. I proceed as follows. Drawing on political theory and social psychology, Part I explains how identity politics in general can threaten the democratic nature of political discussion. Part II outlines the specific issues at stake in debates over same-sex marriage. Part III describes my analysis of ‘letters to the editor’ as a form of public discourse and communication. Part IV reports my findings about ‘identity talk’, emotions and reason in the same-sex marriage debate. Here, I identify two distinct lines of reasoning among the opponents of same-sex marriage, one emphasizing sexuality and the other gender. Finally, Part V summarizes the lessons emerging from my empirical analysis about democratic discussion, identity politics and same-sex marriage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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10. The effect of subgroup homogeneity of efficacy on contribution in public good dilemmas.
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Yam, Paton Pak Chun, Ng, Gary Ting Tat, Au, Wing Tung, Tao, Lin, Lu, Su, Leung, Hildie, and Fung, Jane M. Y.
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PUBLIC goods , *HOMOGENEITY , *MEMBERSHIP , *ENDOWMENTS , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
This paper examines how to maximize contribution in public good dilemmas by arranging people into homogeneous or heterogeneous subgroups. Past studies on the effect of homogeneity of efficacy have exclusively manipulated group composition in their experimental designs, which might have imposed a limit on ecological validity because group membership may not be easily changed in reality. In this study, we maintained the same group composition but varied the subgroup composition. We developed a public good dilemmas paradigm in which participants were assigned to one of the four conditions (high- vs. low-efficacy; homogeneous vs. heterogeneous subgroup) to produce their endowments and then to decide how much to contribute. We found that individuals in homogeneous and heterogeneous subgroups produced a similar amount and proportion of contribution, which was due to the two mediating effects that counteracted each other, namely (a) perceived efficacy relative to subgroup and (b) expectation of contribution of other subgroup members. This paper demonstrates both the pros and cons of arranging people into homogeneous and heterogeneous subgroups of efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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11. Let's stay friends! The concept of relational repair among close allies after serious disputes.
- Author
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Eznack, Lucile
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SOCIOLOGY , *FINANCIAL crises , *SOCIAL psychology ,SUEZ Crisis, Egypt, 1956 - Abstract
Relational repair is a key concept to understand the maintenance and evolution of close allies' relationships. Close allies - such as some of the founding members of the Atlantic alliance - sometimes go through disputes that are serious enough to endanger their relationships. Because they attach great value to these ties, they have to find a way to overcome their deterioration, i.e., to achieve relational repair. Yet, little scholarly work has been done on the concept of relational repair among close allies after a serious dispute. This paper contributes to filling this gap by showing how relational repair processes are initiated - from the very start of the disputes - through the actions and interactions of the countries concerned. Applying some of the findings of research in sociology and social-psychology on relational repair among individuals, I show how certain actions or communications can be effective in facilitating relational repair processes among close allies during serious disputes. I illustrate these claims through the analysis and comparison of two cases of serious dispute: the Suez crisis of 1956 and the NATO crisis of 1966. Both crises opposed two close allies, France and the United States, and eventually led to relational repair between them, but they differed as to some of the actions that were undertaken by both countries during the dispute. This in turn led to differences in the evolution of the relational repair processes that took place between them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
12. Predicting Key Events in the Popularity Evolution of Online Information.
- Author
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Hu, Ying, Hu, Changjun, Fu, Shushen, Fang, Mingzhe, and Xu, Wenwen
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METRIC spaces , *ONLINE information services , *MACHINE learning , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *MACHINE theory - Abstract
The popularity of online information generally experiences a rising and falling evolution. This paper considers the “burst”, “peak”, and “fade” key events together as a representative summary of popularity evolution. We propose a novel prediction task—predicting when popularity undergoes these key events. It is of great importance to know when these three key events occur, because doing so helps recommendation systems, online marketing, and containment of rumors. However, it is very challenging to solve this new prediction task due to two issues. First, popularity evolution has high variation and can follow various patterns, so how can we identify “burst”, “peak”, and “fade” in different patterns of popularity evolution? Second, these events usually occur in a very short time, so how can we accurately yet promptly predict them? In this paper we address these two issues. To handle the first one, we use a simple moving average to smooth variation, and then a universal method is presented for different patterns to identify the key events in popularity evolution. To deal with the second one, we extract different types of features that may have an impact on the key events, and then a correlation analysis is conducted in the feature selection step to remove irrelevant and redundant features. The remaining features are used to train a machine learning model. The feature selection step improves prediction accuracy, and in order to emphasize prediction promptness, we design a new evaluation metric which considers both accuracy and promptness to evaluate our prediction task. Experimental and comparative results show the superiority of our prediction solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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13. Economic inequality and the rise of far‐right populism: A social psychological analysis.
- Author
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Jay, Sarah, Batruch, Anatolia, Jetten, Jolanda, McGarty, Craig, and Muldoon, Orla T.
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POLITICAL psychology , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *ETHNIC groups , *GROUP identity , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants , *INCOME , *CULTURAL pluralism , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *TRUST , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *LEADERS - Abstract
It is argued that far‐right (FR) populism in the West is fuelled by inequality. In this paper, we argue that three social psychological processes are central to explaining these phenomena. We suggest that these processes are recursive although we do not specify their temporal order. Drawing on the social identity tradition, we first examine how inequality is linked to reduced social trust and cohesion, which has consequences for both low‐ and high‐income groups. We examine the known effects of perceived threat in amplifying tensions between groups and consolidating identity positions. Second, we argue that national identity consolidation is a particularly likely response to inequality, which, in turn, reduces tolerance of cultural diversity as an associated consequence. Finally, we consider the value of these strengthened national identities to those who harness them effectively to gain political ground. In this way, those who offer FR populist rhetoric aligned with nationalism can blame immigrants, "foreign" powers, and mainstream politics for both the lack of social cohesion and reduced economic circumstances of many. We conclude that FR populist leaders not only tap into the negative social consequences of inequality, their policy positions also fail to address and may even compound the situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Social cognition remediation interventions: A systematic mapping review.
- Author
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Fernández-Sotos, Patricia, Torio, Iosune, Fernández-Caballero, Antonio, Navarro, Elena, González, Pascual, Dompablo, Mónica, and Rodriguez-Jimenez, Roberto
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META-analysis , *SOCIAL perception , *AUTISM spectrum disorders , *THEORY of mind , *SOCIAL science research - Abstract
Background: Impairments in social cognition have been described in several psychiatric and neurological disorders. Given the importance of the relationship between social cognition and functioning and quality of life in these disorders, there is a growing interest in social cognition remediation interventions. The aim of this study was to carry out a systematic mapping review to describe the state of the art in social cognition training and remediation interventions. Methods: Publications from 2006 to 2016 on social cognition interventions were reviewed in four databases: Scopus, PsycINFO, PubMed and Embase. From the initial result set of 3229 publications, a final total of 241 publications were selected. Results: The study revealed an increasing interest in social cognition remediation interventions, especially in the fields of psychiatry and psychology, with a gradual growth in the number of publications. These were frequently published in high impact factor journals and underpinned by robust scientific evidence. Most studies were conducted on schizophrenia, followed by autism spectrum disorders. Theory of mind and emotional processing were the focus of most interventions, whilst a limited number of studies addressed attributional bias and social perception. Targeted interventions in social cognition were the most frequent practice in the selected papers, followed by non-specific treatment interventions and broad-based interventions. Conclusions: Research in social cognition remediation interventions is growing. Further studies are needed on attributional bias and social perception remediation programs, while the comparative efficacy of different interventions also remains unclear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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15. Too cold for warm glow? Christmas-season effects in charitable giving.
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Müller, Stephan and Rau, Holger A.
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CHARITABLE giving , *SUMMER , *RED Cross & Red Crescent , *CAUSATION (Philosophy) , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
This paper analyzes seasonal effects and their potential drivers in charitable giving. We conduct two studies to analyze whether donations to the German Red Cross differ between the Christmas season and summer. In study 1 we find that in the pre-Christmas shopping season prosocial subjects almost donate 50% less compared to prosocials in summer. In study 2 we replicate the low donations in the Christmas season. In an extensive questionnaire we control for several causes of this effect. The data suggest that the higher prosocials’ self-reported stress level, the lower the donations. The higher their relative savings, the lower the giving. Our questionnaire rules out that “donation fatigue” matters. That is, donations do not depend on the number of charitable campaigns subjects are confronted with and their engagement in these activities during Christmas season outside the lab. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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16. Social interaction in augmented reality.
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Miller, Mark Roman, Jun, Hanseul, Herrera, Fernanda, Yu Villa, Jacob, Welch, Greg, and Bailenson, Jeremy N.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *SOCIAL interaction , *AUGMENTED reality , *SOCIAL belonging , *VIRTUAL reality equipment , *TASK performance , *VERBAL behavior - Abstract
There have been decades of research on the usability and educational value of augmented reality. However, less is known about how augmented reality affects social interactions. The current paper presents three studies that test the social psychological effects of augmented reality. Study 1 examined participants’ task performance in the presence of embodied agents and replicated the typical pattern of social facilitation and inhibition. Participants performed a simple task better, but a hard task worse, in the presence of an agent compared to when participants complete the tasks alone. Study 2 examined nonverbal behavior. Participants met an agent sitting in one of two chairs and were asked to choose one of the chairs to sit on. Participants wearing the headset never sat directly on the agent when given the choice of two seats, and while approaching, most of the participants chose the rotation direction to avoid turning their heads away from the agent. A separate group of participants chose a seat after removing the augmented reality headset, and the majority still avoided the seat previously occupied by the agent. Study 3 examined the social costs of using an augmented reality headset with others who are not using a headset. Participants talked in dyads, and augmented reality users reported less social connection to their partner compared to those not using augmented reality. Overall, these studies provide evidence suggesting that task performance, nonverbal behavior, and social connectedness are significantly affected by the presence or absence of virtual content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. "I was hungry and you gave me food": Religiosity and attitudes toward redistribution.
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Arikan, Gizem and Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit
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RELIGIOUS behaviors , *RELIGIOUSNESS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *BELIEF & doubt , *WELFARE state - Abstract
Current literature presents conflicting findings concerning the effect of religiosity on attitudes towards redistribution. This paper attempts to reconcile these findings by arguing that the belief and social behavior dimensions of religiosity affect support for redistribution via different mechanisms, and that these effects are moderated by state welfare generosity. Using multilevel path analysis models on data from the World Values Survey, we show that the effect of the religious belief on attitudes towards redistribution is mediated by competing personal orientations—prosocial values and conservative identification—while the religious social behavior dimension significantly decreases support for redistribution via increased levels of happiness. Lower levels of welfare generosity increase the positive effect of prosocial orientations and weaken the negative effect conservative identification, leading to positive or null indirect effect of religiosity. These findings show the importance of taking into account the multiple dimensions of religiosity and institutional context when studying the relationship between religion and redistribution attitudes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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18. Setting larger session duration goals is associated with greater future physical activity.
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Jennings, Ernestine G., Dunsiger, Shira I., Bock, Beth C., Hartman, Sheri J., Williams, David M., and Marcus, Bess H.
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PHYSICAL activity , *SOCIAL cognitive theory , *SELF-efficacy , *SEDENTARY behavior , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene - Abstract
Many national (US) and International guidelines for physical activity provide guidance that under-active and sedentary adults can begin by accumulating moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in bouts as brief as 10 minutes. This guidance fits well with Goal Setting theory in that goals should be realistic and achievable, and is also consistent with Social Cognitive theory since achieving small goals should boost self-efficacy and thus, encourage continued physical activity. In contrast, Behavioral Economics might suggest that fewer, longer bouts would be more conducive to the adoption of physical activity due to the costs incurred with each separate bout of MVPA. This paper examines patterns of MVPA adoption among a sample of under-active adults from the perspective of goal setting theory and behavioral economics to explore specific strategies to help people who are in the early stages of PA activity adoption. Under-active men and women (N = 225; mean age = 46 ± 10; mean BMI = 28 ± 4.48) who enrolled in a PA intervention participated in a single goal setting session at enrollment. Participants were encouraged to set realistic goals and to increase their activity to meet national recommendations (150 minutes/week of moderate to vigorous physical activity [MVPA]) by the 6-month follow up. This process included identifying a specific frequency goal (days/week) and session duration goal (minutes/day). At baseline, participants reported average weekly MVPA of 14.59 min (± 24), which increased to an average of 140.52 (± 143.55) at 6 months. MVPA goals at baseline averaged 33.24 min/day (± 18.08) and 3.85 days/week (± 1.31). Analyses showed that longer session duration goals set at baseline were associated with more weekly minutes of MVPA at 6 months (b = 1.26, SE = 0.58, t = 2.17, p = 0.03). There was no significant association between goals for number of days per week (frequency) or total minutes of weekly MVPA (minutes x frequency) and MVPA at 6 months. Widely promoted guidelines for uptake of physical activity recommend accumulating physical activity in bouts as short as 10 minutes. This recommendation may ultimately hinder the adoption of physical activity among under-active and sedentary individuals. For the purposes of behavioral adoption of MVPA, more ambitious session duration goals appear to result in higher levels of physical activity participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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19. Social Network Analysis of Sport: Emphasizing Social Structure in Sport Sociology.
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Nixon, Howard L.
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SOCIOLOGY of sports , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL networks , *WOUNDS & injuries , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to focus more attention on the potential value of a structural social network approach for understanding social interaction, relationships, structures, and change in sport. Despite growing interest in this approach in sociology in general, little attention has been paid to it by sport sociologists. Examples of applications to sport are presented concerning the study of pain and injury, small groups and subcultures, organizational relations, coaching burnout and deviance, and managerial recruitment and stacking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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20. Bringing the Social Sciences to Health Policy: An Appreciation of David Mechanic.
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Boyer, Carol A. and Gray, Bradford H.
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POLICY sciences , *AWARDS , *RESEARCH methodology , *OCCUPATIONAL achievement , *HEALTH policy , *SOCIAL psychology , *LABELING theory , *SOCIOLOGY , *HISTORY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
David Mechanic has been a pioneering leader in the social and behavioral sciences of health, health services, and health and mental health policy for more than fifty years. One of David's most distinctive qualities has been his vision in identifying trends and defining new research areas and perspectives in health care policy. His early work on how methods of physician payment by capitation and fee-for-service in England and the United States affected physicians' responses to patients and patient care addressed present challenges and many ongoing studies of payment mechanisms. His papers on rationing of health care established a framework for examining alternative allocation mechanisms and just decision making. Influential papers dealt with risk selection, policy challenges in managed care, reducing racial disparities, trust relationships between patients, doctors, and the public and health institutions, and the predicaments of health reform. Focusing on the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, David explored its opportunities and challenges especially in providing comprehensive and effective behavioral health services. A hallmark of his work has been his redirecting our attention to the most severely ill and those in greatest need. Less visible is the leadership and institution building endeavors and the many honors David has received. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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21. Are You Your Friends’ Friend? Poor Perception of Friendship Ties Limits the Ability to Promote Behavioral Change.
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Almaatouq, Abdullah, Radaelli, Laura, Pentland, Alex, and Shmueli, Erez
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FRIENDSHIP , *BEHAVIOR modification , *PERSUASION (Psychology) , *COLLECTIVE action , *SOCIAL influence - Abstract
Persuasion is at the core of norm creation, emergence of collective action, and solutions to ‘tragedy of the commons’ problems. In this paper, we show that the directionality of friendship ties affect the extent to which individuals can influence the behavior of each other. Moreover, we find that people are typically poor at perceiving the directionality of their friendship ties and that this can significantly limit their ability to engage in cooperative arrangements. This could lead to failures in establishing compatible norms, acting together, finding compromise solutions, and persuading others to act. We then suggest strategies to overcome this limitation by using two topological characteristics of the perceived friendship network. The findings of this paper have significant consequences for designing interventions that seek to harness social influence for collective action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. Think then act or act then think?
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Jędrzejewski, Arkadiusz, Marcjasz, Grzegorz, Nail, Paul R., and Sznajd-Weron, Katarzyna
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SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIETAL reaction , *CONFORMITY , *CONTAGION (Social psychology) , *SOCIAL influence - Abstract
We introduce a new agent-based model of opinion dynamics in which binary opinions of each agent can be measured and described regarding both pre- and post-influence at both of two levels, public and private, vis-à-vis the influence source. The model combines ideas introduced within the q-voter model with noise, proposed by physicists, with the descriptive, four-dimensional model of social response, formulated by social psychologists. We investigate two versions of the same model that differ only by the updating order: an opinion on the public level is updated before an opinion on the private level or vice versa. We show how the results on the macroscopic scale depend on this order. The main finding of this paper is that both models produce the same outcome if one looks only at such a macroscopic variable as the total number of the individuals with positive opinions. However, if also the level of internal harmony (viz., dissonance) is measured, then significant, qualitative differences are seen between these two versions of the model. All results were obtained simultaneously within Monte Carlo simulations and analytical calculations. We discuss the importance of our studies and findings from three points of view: the theory of phase transitions, agent-based modeling of social systems, and social psychology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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23. Reviewer social class influences responses to online evaluations of an organization.
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Horwitz, Suzanne and Kovács, Balázs
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SOCIAL classes , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *SOCIAL influence , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines social class-based differences in influence in online review contexts. We explore four mechanisms for how a review writer’s social class may affect readers’ evaluations of the organization. First, we argue that, via a “contagion” process, organizations reviewed by higher-class individuals will be evaluated more positively than organizations reviewed by lower-class individuals. Second, we expect that higher-class reviewers will be seen as more knowledgeable; thus, their opinions will be more influential in shaping others’ opinions. Third, we expect that reviewers will be seen more influential when they review organizations that match their social class. Fourth, we expect people to be more influenced by those who share their own class background. A large-scale observational study of reviews (N = 1,234,665) from finds support for the contagion, the organization-reviewer social class matching, and the reviewer-participant social matching hypotheses, but disconfirms the hypothesis that higher-class reviewers are always treated as having more expertise. Two experimental studies (N = 354 and N = 638) demonstrate that reviewer class plays a causal role in both a contagion process and in an assumption of higher-class knowledge process, but do not provide evidence for the reviewer-participant social matching hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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24. Blaunet: An R-based graphical user interface package to analyze Blau space.
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Genkin, Michael, Wang, Cheng, Berry, George, and Brashears, Matthew E.
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SOCIAL sciences , *INTEGRATED software , *GRAPHICAL user interfaces , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *ECOLOGICAL niche - Abstract
McPherson’s Blau space and affiliation ecology model is a powerful tool for analyzing the ecological competition among social entities, such as organizations, along a combination of sociodemographic characteristics of their members. In this paper we introduce the R-based Graphical User Interface (GUI) package Blaunet, an integrated set of tools to calculate, visualize, and analyze the statuses of individuals and social entities in Blau space, parameterized by multiple sociodemographic traits as dimensions. The package is able to calculate the Blau statuses at the nodal, dyadic, and meso levels based on three types of information: sociodemographic characteristics, group affiliations (e.g., membership in groups/organizations), and network ties. To facilitate this, Blaunet has the following five main capabilities, it can: 1) identify a list of possible salient dimensions; 2) calculate, plot, and analyze niches for social entities by measuring the social distance along the salient dimensions between individuals affiliated with them; 3) generate Blau bubbles for individuals, thereby allowing the study of interpersonal influence of similar others even with limited or no network information; 4) capture niche dynamics cross-sectionally by calculating the intensity of exploitation from the carrying capacity and the membership rate; and 5) analyze the niche movement longitudinally by estimating the predicted niche movement equations. We illustrate these capabilities of Blaunet with example datasets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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25. Strategy intervention for the evolution of fairness.
- Author
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Zhang, Yanling and Fu, Feng
- Subjects
- *
FAIRNESS , *EVOLUTIONARY models , *ATTENTION , *ALTRUISM , *COMPETITION (Psychology) - Abstract
The ‘irrational’ preference for fairness has attracted increasing attention. Although previous studies have focused on the effects of spitefulness on the evolution of fairness, they did not consider non-monotonic rejections shown in behavioral experiments. In this paper, we introduce a non-monotonic rejection in an evolutionary model of the Ultimatum Game. We propose strategy intervention to study the evolution of fairness in general structured populations. By sequentially adding five strategies into the competition between a fair strategy and a selfish strategy, we arrive at the following conclusions. First, the evolution of fairness is inhibited by altruism, but it is promoted by spitefulness. Second, the non-monotonic rejection helps fairness overcome selfishness. Particularly for group-structured populations, we analytically investigate how fairness, selfishness, altruism, and spitefulness are affected by population size, mutation, and migration in the competition among seven strategies. Our results may provide important insights into understanding the evolutionary origin of fairness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Putting a premium on altruism: A social discounting experiment with South African university students.
- Author
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Booysen, Frederik, Guvuriro, Sevias, Munro, Alistair, Moloi, Tshepo, and Campher, Celeste
- Subjects
- *
ALTRUISM , *MENTAL health of college students , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL services , *HEALTH programs - Abstract
This paper reports on a social discounting experiment conducted with university students in South Africa. In line with other social discounting task experiments, participants identify target individuals at different degrees of intimacy in their social network and then make 10 choices involving sums of money for themselves or their targets. For an altruism premium to exist, senders’ donations to recipients should be positive, statistically and economically significant, and independent of relationship closeness. We hypothesize that in addition to the altruism premium for kin documented in the literature, there may be other premia for family in general and for partners and friends. We find that, apart from the “kinship” premium, there is a sizeable “intimacy” premium, which together translates into a substantial “family” premium. The study also finds a “friendship premium”, as is documented in various experiments. The closeness of relationships among family and kin, especially close kin, has a significant and large effect on altruism. The results also attest to the importance of the extended family in regards to the “kinship” premium on altruism. These various premiums on altruism emphasise the importance of the supportive role of various social systems. Nevertheless, altruism within families and among close kin might also be enhanced by building more cohesive and stronger families using developmental social welfare programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Mention effect in information diffusion on a micro-blogging network.
- Author
-
Bao, Peng, Shen, Hua-Wei, Huang, Junming, and Chen, Haiqiang
- Subjects
- *
MICROBLOGS , *INFORMATION sharing , *SOCIAL media , *SOCIAL structure , *MACHINE learning - Abstract
Micro-blogging systems have become one of the most important ways for information sharing. Network structure and users’ interactions such as forwarding behaviors have aroused considerable research attention, while mention, as a key feature in micro-blogging platforms which can improve the visibility of a message and direct it to a particular user beyond the underlying social structure, is seldom studied in previous works. In this paper, we empirically study the mention effect in information diffusion, using the dataset from a population-scale social media website. We find that users with high number of followers would receive much more mentions than others. We further investigate the effect of mention in information diffusion by examining the response probability with respect to the number of mentions in a message and observe a saturation at around 5 mentions. Furthermore, we find that the response probability is the highest when a reciprocal followship exists between users, and one is more likely to receive a target user’s response if they have similar social status. To illustrate these findings, we propose the response prediction task and formulate it as a binary classification problem. Extensive evaluation demonstrates the effectiveness of discovered factors. Our results have consequences for the understanding of human dynamics on the social network, and potential implications for viral marketing and public opinion monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. We will make you like our research: The development of a susceptibility-to-persuasion scale.
- Author
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Modic, David, Anderson, Ross, and Palomäki, Jussi
- Subjects
- *
PERSUASION (Psychology) , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *SOCIAL psychology , *COMPUTER crimes , *HUMAN behavior - Abstract
Psychological and other persuasive mechanisms across diverse contexts are well researched, with many studies of the effectiveness of specific persuasive techniques on distinct types of human behaviour. In the present paper, our specific interest lies in the development of a generalized modular psychometric tool to measure individuals’ susceptibility to persuasion. The scale is constructed using items from previously developed and validated particulate scales established in the domains of social psychology and behavioural economics. In the first study we establish the Susceptibility to Persuasion–II (StP-II) scale, containing 54 items, 10 subscales and further 6 sub-sub scales. In Study 2 we establish the scale’s construct validity and reconfirm its reliability. We present a valid and reliable modular psychometric tool that measures general susceptibility to persuasive techniques. Since its inception, we have successfully implemented the StP-II scale to measure susceptibility to persuasion of IT security officers, the role of psychology of persuasion in cybercrime victims and general persuadability levels of Facebook users; these manuscripts are in preparation. We argue that the StP-II scale shows promise in measuring individual differences in susceptibility to persuasion, and is applicable across diverse contexts such as Internet security and cybercrime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The more the merrier? Increasing group size may be detrimental to decision-making performance in nominal groups.
- Author
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Amir, Ofra, Amir, Dor, Shahar, Yuval, Hart, Yuval, and Gal, Kobi
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *GROUP decision making , *COGNITIVE science , *COMPUTATIONAL complexity - Abstract
Demonstrability—the extent to which group members can recognize a correct solution to a problem—has a significant effect on group performance. However, the interplay between group size, demonstrability and performance is not well understood. This paper addresses these gaps by studying the joint effect of two factors—the difficulty of solving a problem and the difficulty of verifying the correctness of a solution—on the ability of groups of varying sizes to converge to correct solutions. Our empirical investigations use problem instances from different computational complexity classes, NP-Complete (NPC) and PSPACE-complete (PSC), that exhibit similar solution difficulty but differ in verification difficulty. Our study focuses on nominal groups to isolate the effect of problem complexity on performance. We show that NPC problems have higher demonstrability than PSC problems: participants were significantly more likely to recognize correct and incorrect solutions for NPC problems than for PSC problems. We further show that increasing the group size can actually decrease group performance for some problems of low demonstrability. We analytically derive the boundary that distinguishes these problems from others for which group performance monotonically improves with group size. These findings increase our understanding of the mechanisms that underlie group problem-solving processes, and can inform the design of systems and processes that would better facilitate collective decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. "Head for the Hills!" or This Hard Land? Estimating the Direct and Indirect Effects of Rough Terrain on Civil Conflict Onset.
- Author
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Hendrix, Cullen S.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL conflict , *ECONOMICS , *POLITICAL science , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
I estimate both the tactical and indirect-economical and political-effects of rough terrain on civil conflict onset. Rough terrain is significant more for its effects on state capacity rather than the tactical considerations of insurgents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
31. Gender on the Brain: A Case Study of Science Communication in the New Media Environment.
- Author
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O’Connor, Cliodhna and Joffe, Helene
- Subjects
- *
NEUROSCIENCES , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *GENDER inequality , *MASS media - Abstract
Neuroscience research on sex difference is currently a controversial field, frequently accused of purveying a ‘neurosexism’ that functions to naturalise gender inequalities. However, there has been little empirical investigation of how information about neurobiological sex difference is interpreted within wider society. This paper presents a case study that tracks the journey of one high-profile study of neurobiological sex differences from its scientific publication through various layers of the public domain. A content analysis was performed to ascertain how the study was represented in five domains of communication: the original scientific article, a press release, the traditional news media, online reader comments and blog entries. Analysis suggested that scientific research on sex difference offers an opportunity to rehearse abiding cultural understandings of gender. In both scientific and popular contexts, traditional gender stereotypes were projected onto the novel scientific information, which was harnessed to demonstrate the factual truth and normative legitimacy of these beliefs. Though strains of misogyny were evident within the readers’ comments, most discussion of the study took pains to portray the sexes’ unique abilities as equal and ‘complementary’. However, this content often resembled a form of benevolent sexism, in which praise of women’s social-emotional skills compensated for their relegation from more esteemed trait-domains, such as rationality and productivity. The paper suggests that embedding these stereotype patterns in neuroscience may intensify their rhetorical potency by lending them the epistemic authority of science. It argues that the neuroscience of sex difference does not merely reflect, but can actively shape the gender norms of contemporary society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Linguistic Traces of a Scientific Fraud: The Case of Diederik Stapel.
- Author
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Markowitz, David M. and Hancock, Jeffrey T.
- Subjects
- *
FRAUD in science , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *LINGUISTICS , *PUBLICATIONS , *AUTHORSHIP collaboration - Abstract
When scientists report false data, does their writing style reflect their deception? In this study, we investigated the linguistic patterns of fraudulent (N = 24; 170,008 words) and genuine publications (N = 25; 189,705 words) first-authored by social psychologist Diederik Stapel. The analysis revealed that Stapel's fraudulent papers contained linguistic changes in science-related discourse dimensions, including more terms pertaining to methods, investigation, and certainty than his genuine papers. His writing style also matched patterns in other deceptive language, including fewer adjectives in fraudulent publications relative to genuine publications. Using differences in language dimensions we were able to classify Stapel's publications with above chance accuracy. Beyond these discourse dimensions, Stapel included fewer co-authors when reporting fake data than genuine data, although other evidentiary claims (e.g., number of references and experiments) did not differ across the two article types. This research supports recent findings that language cues vary systematically with deception, and that deception can be revealed in fraudulent scientific discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Perceptions of Rule-Breaking Related to Marine Ecosystem Health.
- Author
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Slater, Matthew J., Mgaya, Yunus D., and Stead, Selina M.
- Subjects
- *
MARINE biology , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *MARINE resources conservation , *COASTAL ecology , *AQUATIC sciences , *POPULATION biology - Abstract
Finding effective solutions to manage marine resources is high on political and conservation agendas worldwide. This is made more urgent by the rate of increase in the human population and concomitant resource pressures in coastal areas. This paper links empirical socio-economic data about perceptions of marine resource health to the breaking of marine management rules, using fisheries as a case study. The relationship between perceived rule-breaking (non-compliance with regulations controlling fishing) and perceived health of inshore marine environments was investigated through face-to-face interviews with 299 heads of households in three Tanzanian coastal communities in November and December 2011. Awareness of rules controlling fishing activity was high among all respondents. Fishers were able to describe more specific rules controlling fishing practices than non-fishers (t = 3.5, df = 297, p<0.01). Perceived breaking of fishing regulations was reported by nearly half of all respondents, saying “some” (32% of responses) or “most” (15% of responses) people break fishing rules. Ordinal regression modelling revealed a significant linkage (z = −3.44, p<0.001) in the relationship between respondents' perceptions of deteriorating marine health and their perception of increased rule-breaking. In this paper, inferences from an empirical study are used to identify and argue the potential for using perceptions of ecosystem health and level of rule-breaking as a means to guide management measures. When considering different management options (e.g. Marine Protected Areas), policy makers are advised to take account of and utilise likely egoistic or altruistic decision-making factors used by fishers to determine their marine activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Examining the Social Porosity of Environmental Features on Neighborhood Sociability and Attachment.
- Author
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Hipp, John R., Corcoran, Jonathan, Wickes, Rebecca, and Li, Tiebei
- Subjects
- *
SOCIABILITY , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL cohesion , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys - Abstract
The local neighborhood forms an integral part of our lives. It provides the context through which social networks are nurtured and the foundation from which a sense of attachment and cohesion with fellow residents can be established. Whereas much of the previous research has examined the role of social and demographic characteristic in relation to the level of neighboring and cohesion, this paper explores whether particular environmental features in the neighborhood affect social porosity. We define social porosity as the degree to which social ties flow over the surface of a neighborhood. The focus of our paper is to examine the extent to which a neighborhood's environmental features impede the level of social porosity present among residents. To do this, we integrate data from the census, topographic databases and a 2010 survey of 4,351 residents from 146 neighborhoods in Australia. The study introduces the concepts of wedges and social holes. The presence of two sources of wedges is measured: rivers and highways. The presence of two sources of social holes is measured: parks and industrial areas. Borrowing from the geography literature, several measures are constructed to capture how these features collectively carve up the physical environment of neighborhoods. We then consider how this influences residents' neighboring behavior, their level of attachment to the neighborhood and their sense of neighborhood cohesion. We find that the distance of a neighborhood to one form of social hole–industrial areas–has a particularly strong negative effect on all three dependent variables. The presence of the other form of social hole–parks–has a weaker negative effect. Neighborhood wedges also impact social interaction. Both the length of a river and the number of highway fragments in a neighborhood has a consistent negative effect on neighboring, attachment and cohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Social networks, market transactions, and reputation as a central resource. The Mercado del Mar, a fish market in central Mexico.
- Author
-
Pedroza-Gutiérrez, Carmen and Hernández, Juan M.
- Subjects
- *
FISH industry , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL capital , *DISTRIBUTORS (Commerce) ,VERTICAL distribution of fish - Abstract
Fish consumption in Mexico is considered low (around 12 kg per person per year) and non-homogeneously distributed across the country. One of the reasons for this situation is the scarcity of wholesale selling sites. In this context, the Mercado del Mar (MM), located in Guadalajara city, Jalisco, is the second biggest wholesale fish market in Mexico, with a distribution of about 500 tons per day and a variety of about 350 different species of fish. In this paper, we argue that MM has accumulated social capital, which is formed from two main resources: buyer and seller relationships, and reputation. Specifically, the MM manages a broad and intensive interaction among business actors and the already achieved reputation allows the MM to adapt to market changes. To validate our hypotheses, an empirical study was conducted in 2015 by means of interviews to fish wholesalers in the MM and a sample of their suppliers and buyers. For simplicity we have only considered fresh water fish. We have followed snow-ball sampling as the survey strategy. Results show that the MM has responded to fish market dynamics organizing a complex network of buyers and suppliers whose relationships can be explained in the form of strong and weak ties. At the same time, reputation has been the central resource to build this social capital and also gives place to market transactions. Additionally, the strategic position of Guadalajara city and the well-connected routes have facilitated fish bulking and distribution in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Travelling concepts and crossing paths: a conceptual history of identity.
- Author
-
Giorgi, Liana
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *COGNITIVE development , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology - Abstract
The concept of identity is ubiquitous in public discourse even though its meaning is often imprecise or nebulous – it is maybe because of this that its contents can be taken for granted. One speaks of individual, personal, group, social, collective and political identity; of identity formation, crisis, diffusion, conflict and politics; a multiple identity may be pathological or a component of an integrated identity; culture and ideology but also knowledge and experience supposedly enrich identity; identity may be rigid or open to development and growth – and so on. Against this background the present paper explores the argumentative uses of the concept of identity in psychoanalysis and in social psychology and sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The construction of British national identity among British South Asians.
- Author
-
Jaspal, Rusi and Cinnirella, Marco
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH national character , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOUTH Asians , *COGNITION -- Social aspects , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper explores the social psychological aspects of British national identification among British South Asians, which constitutes the largest ethnic minority group in Britain. Identity process theory can elucidate the social and psychological ‘functions’ of Britishness for social actors, offering a holistic account of national identification within this population. The paper provides a discussion of nationhood and the construction of national identity, temporal factors in national identification, its cognitive and affective aspects, the psychological ‘functionality’ of Britishness, and its social representations. It is argued that a civic, instrumental conception of Britishness might facilitate access to this identity among British South Asians. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The construction of ethnic identity: Insights from identity process theory.
- Author
-
Jaspal, Rusi and Cinnirella, Marco
- Subjects
- *
ETHNICITY , *SOCIAL sciences , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *INTERGROUP relations , *INTERGROUP communication , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
Ethnicity has received much empirical and theoretical attention in the social sciences. Yet, it has scarcely been explored in terms of its relationship with the motivational principles of identity. Here it is argued that there is much heuristic and predictive value in applying identity process theory (IPT), a socio-psychological model of identity threat, to the substantive literature on ethnicity. The paper explores the potential psychological benefits of ethnic identification. Key theoretical strands from anthropology and sociology, such as the 'relational self in ethnic identification, are discussed in relation to IPT. The intergroup dimension of ethnic identification is explored through the discussion of ethnic 'boundaries'. Finally, the paper discusses the construct of 'hybridization' in relation to social psychology. This paper attempts to reconcile psychological and sociological perspectives on ethnic identification, advocating a multi-methodological approach. Key theoretical points are outlined in the form of testable hypotheses which are open to empirical exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Feeling of the Absurd: Towards an Integrative Theory of Sense-Making.
- Author
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Proulx, Travis
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *THREAT (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents the author's views on several research papers related to social psychology. The author states that a paper by K. Van den Bos published within the issue has attempted to address many of issues retaled to social psychology and broaden the understanding of threat-compensation processes beyond the scope of other threat-compensation theoretical perspectives. The author states that Van den Bos's intuition to begin with existentialist theory is a good one.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Psychology, sociology and interaction: disciplinary allegiance or analytic quality? -- a response to Housley and Fitzgerald.
- Author
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Edwards D, Hepburns A, and Potter J
- Subjects
- *
DISCURSIVE psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *SYMBOLIC interactionism , *ETHNOMETHODOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
The article presents the authors' comments on a paper by Housley and Fitzgerald about discursive psychology (DP). In order to understand the intellectual place of DP, the authors suggest taking the kinds of fragmentary focus on psychological matters found in the work of Harvey Sacks. The authors present their response to the paper's claim that DP suffers from theoretical amnesia with respect to the analysis of accounts and motives and that that amnesia is confronted by re-emphasizing the sociological canon of interactionism, phenomenology and ethnomethodology. They say that the problem with the paper is that it is organized around disciplinary allegiance and sacred texts rather than around the specific arguments and analytic developments.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Jester and the Shadow of God: Nasir al-Din Shah and His Fools.
- Author
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Martin, Vanessa
- Subjects
- *
FOOLS & jesters , *COURTS & courtiers , *ROYAL favorites , *COLLECTIVE memory , *WIT & humor , *COLLECTIVE representation , *SOCIAL perception , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper will discuss the role of the jesters at the court of Nasr al-Din Shah, with more particular reference to Karim Shire'i, whose humor gained a lasting place in popular memory. It will look at the jesters in the context of their essential role, to remind the king that he was human. This poses a number of questions with regard to who the jester was and how he carried out his function. First, there is the question of the relationship between the Shah and jester, the degree to which it could become personal and why. Second, the paper will look at the jester's identity and the way it is defined by his relationship with the Shah. Third, it will consider the jester's relationship with the court as a whole and his function within a strictly related hierarchical environment. All of these required that the jester constantly maintain a delicate and sometimes dangerous balance, which could only be carried out by one who inherently possessed a particular kind of wit. Consideration will be given as to what the jester represented both to the court and to the public, specifically with reference to the widely held concept of the wise fool, and its religious implications. This relates to the issue of 'innocence,' ('the mad have cast upon their tongues words from the unseen') whether natural or assumed and its purpose in allowing freedom to the jester to draw the ruler's attention to unpalatable truths. Further points to explore are the relationship between the jester and chaos in an ordered environment and how far the jester pressed the boundaries, or even exerted political influence, and how far his function was in fact conservative and destined to help preserve the existing order. Last, the paper will look at the origins of the court jesters as far as they are known and consider their implications for the rise of these individuals. It will attempt to establish if each was characterized by a particular kind of buffoonery by comparing and contrasting them. In particular, the jokes attributed to Karim Shire'i will be discussed both in terms of how far it is possible to identify him as their author with any certainty and how far they may be considered as constituting a genre of humor. Finally, the legacy of this humor within the popular memory will be assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Social Psychology (1955-1975): An Alternative View.
- Author
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Duncan, David C.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
The article focuses on the divergent views on social psychology. In a paper by G.D. Richards, he emphasized that a rewritten history of social psychology include a historical account of the influence of early thinkers by providing important moments in the history of social psychology. In a paper by Peter Lunt, he discussed two alternative histories which include social psychology as part of psychology's history and social psychology as a separate area of study.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A social representation is not a quiet thing: Exploring the critical potential of social representations theory.
- Author
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Howarth, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *COLLECTIVE representation , *CRITICAL theory , *SOCIAL order , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
Following Moscovici (1972), this paper addresses the questions: What is the aim of research within a social representations perspective? Is it to support or to criticize the social order? Is it to consolidate or transform it? After a brief overview of social representations theory, I argue that while the theory appears to have the conceptual tools to begin this critical task, there are serious criticisms and points of underdevelopment that need addressing. In order for social representations theory to develop into a rigorously critical theory there are three controversial issues that require clarification. These are (a) the relationship between psychological processes and social practices, (b) the reification and legitimization of different knowledge systems, and (c) agency and resistance in the co-construction of self-identity. After discussing each issue in turn, with illustrations from research on racializing representations, I conclude the paper with a discussion of the role of representations in the ideological construction and contestation of reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Embodiment below discourse: The internalized domination of the masculine perspective
- Author
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Uhlmann, Allon J. and Uhlmann, Jennifer R.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIAL psychology , *WOMEN'S rights , *FEMINISM - Abstract
Synopsis: This paper focuses on the embodied experience of gender. It draws upon Bourdieu''s sociology of practice, cognitive sciences, and feminist phenomenology to highlight instances of non-discursive, cultural conditioning of embodied experience. Specifically, the paper focuses on the internalization by both men and women of the masculine perspective. It does so by discussing regular patterns of word ordering in English, comportment and motility, and orientation to the body. These patterns are cultural in that they are acquired through social interaction. They are non-discursive, though, in that they are not encoded in any system of representations and are not generally transmitted through discourse. Rather, they are infra-discursive, in that they exist below discourse. It emerges that, in general, the prototypical perspective adopted by male and female European social agents is distinctly more masculine than feminine. However, in restricted contexts, such as parenthood, this prototypicality is inverted. In this, we see how internalized structures match the broad overarching social structures. In the course of the discussion, we seek to further develop and contextualize some further analyses, such as Iris Young''s phenomenology of corporeal experience and Cooper and Ross''s analysis of word ordering. We ultimately hope to demonstrate the critical analytical importance of the embodied reality which is clearly culturally variable, yet not, strictly speaking, discursively constituted. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Beyond toleration: privacy, citizenship and sexual minorities in England and Wales.
- Author
-
McGhee, Derek
- Subjects
- *
BISEXUAL people , *PRIVACY , *SOCIAL psychology , *CITIZENSHIP , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper examines two significant moments in sexual minority citizenship in England and Wales in relation to one of the Marshallian sets of rights, namely, civil or legal rights, focusing specifically on the Sex Offences legislation and policing practices. The first moment that will be examined here is the process whereby homosexual acts were decriminalized in the 1950s and 1960s: here special attention will be paid to the recommendations made by the Wolfenden Committee. The second moment is one we are currently experiencing, which is associated with the inclusive policing of sexual minority communities (especially lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities) under the provisions of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998 and in the review of Sex Offences, especially in the consultation paper (Home Office 2000) and White Paper (Home Office 2002) associated with this review. Privacy and toleration dominate the first moment, at the same time it shall be demonstrated that privacy is also central to the British Sexual Citizenship literatures that have emerged in sociology in the post Wolfenden context. However, as the title suggests, the second moment under examination points to the emergence of a rather more extensive sexual minority citizenship beyond the boundaries of ‘homosexual privacy’ (which British Sexual Citizenship Studies is not currently engaging with) and perhaps even beyond the boundaries of toleration through ever more ‘inclusive’ policing strategies and through the review of sex offences in which many discriminatory laws are being ‘de-homosexualized’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Contextualising experiences of depression in women from South Asian communities: a discursive approach.
- Author
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Burr J and Chapman T
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *MENTAL depression , *SOCIAL medicine , *DEPRESSION in women , *SOCIOLOGY , *WOMEN'S health - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present an interpretation of the accounts of depression provided by women from South Asian communities. The paper presents the findings from a qualitative study, conducted in the UK, which explored women from South Asian communities and their experiences of depression. It is argued here, through examples of women's accounts of their experiences, that depression is 'embodied', that is, grounded in the materiality of the body which is also immersed in subjective experiences and in the social context of women's lives.Qualitative data were collected from four focus groups and ten individual interviews with women. The analysis involved a discursive approach.Analysis revealed how women made strategic choices in how they presented their symptoms as legitimate and for gaining access to what they perceived to be appropriate healthcare. This is not to argue that this is a culturally specific phenomenon but one which is a feature of all healthcare negotiations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Religion, Rationality, and Experience: A Response to the New Rational Choice Theory of Religion.
- Author
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Jerolmack, Colin and Porpora, Douglas
- Subjects
- *
RATIONAL choice theory , *RELIGIOUS psychology , *REASON , *RELIGIOUS experience , *EGOISM , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper is a critical response to the newest version of the rational choice theory of religion (RCTR). In comparison with previous critiques, this paper takes aim at RCTR's foundational assumption of psychological egoism and argues that the thesis of psychological egoism is untenable. Without that thesis, the normative aspects of religious commitment cannot be reduced validly to instrumental reason. On neither conceptual nor empirical grounds therefore can religion or religious commitment be defined comprehensively in terms of exchange theory. With the failure of psychological egoism as a point of departure, the paper articulates an alternative theory of religion, one based on the epistemic rationality grounded in religious experience and religious emotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Editorial Introduction: Theory and Method in Symbolic Interactionism.
- Author
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Manning, Philip and Maines, David R.
- Subjects
- *
SYMBOLIC interactionism , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *THEORY , *PERIODICALS - Abstract
This special issue of the journal "Symbolic Interaction" focuses on theory and method in symbolic interactionism. Quality papers were received from several countries and they have provided theoretical commentary and technical information with which to solve methodological problems. In some cases, the authors of the papers were asked to reduce the length of their articles significantly so that eleven articles were included. These articles have been organized under various issues that are common to all social research but are of special interest to interactionists.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Social Psychology and Virtue Ethics.
- Author
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Miller, Christian
- Subjects
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SOCIAL psychology , *HUMAN ecology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *COLLECTIVE behavior - Abstract
Several philosophers have recently claimed to have discovered a new and rather significant problem with virtue ethics. According to them, virtue ethics generates certain expectations about the behavior of human beings which are subject to empirical testing. But when the relevant experimental work is done in social psychology, the results fall remarkably short of meeting those expectations. So, these philosophers think, despite its recent success, virtue ethics has far less to offer to contemporary ethical theory than might have been initially thought. I argue that there are plausible ways in which virtue ethicists can resist arguments based on empirical work in social psychology. In the first three sections of the paper, I reconstruct the line of reasoning being used against virtue ethics by looking at the recent work of Gilbert Harman and John Doris. The remainder of the paper is then devoted both to responding to their challenge as well as to briefly sketching a positive account of character trait possession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Toward a Taxonomy of Copresence.
- Author
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Zhao, Shanyang
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *TAXONOMY , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL psychology , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
This paper contributes to the presence literature by explicating the meanings and subtypes of copresence. Copresence is defined here as consisting of two dimensions: copresence as mode of being with others, and copresence as sense of being with others. Mode of copresence refers to the physical conditions that structure human interaction. Six such conditions are delineated. Sense of copresence, on the other hand, refers to the subjective experience of being with others that an individual acquires in interaction. The main argument of this paper is that mode of copresence affects sense of copresence, and knowledge of how the former affects the latter will benefit copresence design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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