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Results for 'Deborah M. James'

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  1.  21
    Communication Skills and Communicative Autonomy of Prelinguistic Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children: Application of a Video Feedback Intervention.Meghana Wadnerkar Kamble,Christa Lam-Cassettari &Deborah M.James -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11:543882.
    Background and Aim Evidence on the efficacy of parenting interventions to support communication development in deaf and hard-of-hearing children is emerging. In previous research, we showed that parental participation in a video feedback–based intervention enhanced parental self-esteem and emotional availability to their deaf and hard-of-hearing children. This paper investigates the impact of the intervention on the development of the children’s prelingual communication skills and autonomy. Evidence on the efficacy of parenting interventions to support communication development is warranted. Methods Sixteen hearing (...) parents with a prelingual deaf and hard-of-hearing child ( M age = 2.05 years, SD = 1.77) were recruited by self-selection from pediatric audiological services and randomly stratified into intervention-first and waiting-list groups. Families completed three sessions of Video Interaction Guidance in their homes. Designed for maximal inclusion, the sample comprised children with complex developmental and social needs. The primary inclusion criterion was the child’s prelingual status ( Results A Mann–Whitney U test indicated no significant difference between the two groups. The groups were collated, and a Wilcoxon signed-rank test with time (pre-/post-intervention) as a repeating variable was run. A significant increase in children’s communicative autonomy ( Z = −3.517, p d = 0.62) and decrease in children’s no-responses ( Z = −3.111, p d = 0.55) were seen. There was no significant difference in the overall number of turn-taking between the parent and child, indicating differences in the quality of the parent–child interactions, not the quantity. Conclusion This study adds to the emerging evidence for parenting interventions with deaf and hard-of-hearing children. We hypothesize that the video feedback intervention with its focus on emotional availability created space for the children to show increased communicative autonomy during parent–child interactions. Communicative autonomy is a long-term predictor of communication and linguistic development in deaf and hard-of-hearing children, and its conceptual underpinning makes it a good early measure of relational agency. Results can inform wider interventions that focus on the quantity of the parent–child communication. (shrink)
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  2.  30
    The influence of prescriptive and subjective phrase markers on retrieval latencies.Michael L. Hillinger,Carlton T.James,Deborah L. Zell &Laura M. Prato -1976 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 8 (5):353-355.
  3.  49
    The Representational Necropolitics of Black Women in Zombie Dystopia Video Games.Eric AndrewJames -2021 -Feminist Studies 47 (1):147-174.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 47, no. 1. © 2021 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 147 Eric AndrewJames The Representational Necropolitics of Black Women in Zombie Dystopia Video Games Though Stuart Hall defends popular representation as an important terrain of political struggle, he also argues that images of difference are dominated by “racialized regimes of representation” manifest in stereotypes and invisibilities.1 These ensure that marginal identities are reduced, essentialized, and rendered (...) other. One of the most powerful tools for this form of silencing in the popular representation repertoire is the notion of an established genre. In US popular culture, creators and critics alike often position people who experience multiple layers of oppression as constitutively outside the expectations of existing genres. Their absence is attributable not simply to creator racism but also to that genre’s relationships to intersecting categories of difference and domination, such as race and gender. Beginning with the preponderance of representational violence in popular media, this article draws from existing work by feminists of color in order to model a critique of US representational precarity. To illustrate the political tensions in popular US culture, I stage my intervention into a medium whose industry has had particularly fraught struggles with representation: video gaming. There, I focus specifically on 1. Stuart Hall, “The Spectacle of the Other,” in Discourse Theory and Practice: A Reader, ed. Margaret Wetherell, Stephanie Taylor, and Simeon J. Yates. (London: Sage, 2001), 325–44. 148 Eric AndrewJames recent attempts to represent Black women, whom the gaming industry has held up as emblematic of difference and diversity. 2 These attempts are marred by predictable disasters and pitfalls. In particular, I discuss how the representational politics of Black women in popular zombie dystopia games repeats a similar violence as the previous silencing of Black women in these spaces. The gaming industry’s struggles with representation in the wake of Gamergate are demonstrative of broader tensions in Black women’s representation in popular media. Thus, while I am focused on video games, I also intend this analysis to reflect on feminist studies of the relationship between genre and representation. I advance existing scholarship on video game representations of Blackness by theorizing violence enacted at the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in game genres. Specifically, I position this intervention as a point of departure from TreaAndrea M. Russworm’s chapter in Gaming Representation: “Dystopian Blackness and the Limits of Racial Empathy in The Walking Dead and The Last of Us.”3 This chapter provides a compelling critique of the relationship between the dystopian game genre and Black representation, highlighting the lack of self-reflexivity in mass-market representations of Blackness. Expanding this project by taking another look at her objects of study—The Last of Us (2013– 2014) and Telltale’s The Walking Dead (2012)—I argue that taking Black women’s multiple jeopardy as foundational to the zombie dystopia genre offers a deeper look at the grammars of representational violence. My use of multiple jeopardy refers toDeborah K. King’s theorization of how multiple layers of oppression exponentially multiply individual disadvantages. As King describes, “The modifier ‘multiple’ refers not only to several, simultaneous oppressions but to the multiplicative 2. AnnaMaria Jackson-Phelps, “Representation Matters: Positive Portrayals of Black Women in Video Games,” Medium, February 28, 2017, https:// medium.com/legendary-women/representation-matters-positive-portrayals -of-black-women-in-video-games-c96cf9f66fdf; Jef Rouner, “Would You Believe There Have Been Only 14 Playable Black Women in Gaming?” Houston Press, June 5, 2015, https://www.houstonpress.com/arts/would-you-believethere -have-been-only-14-playable-black-women-in-gaming-7484017. 3. TreaAndrea M. Russworm, “Dystopian Blackness and the Limits of Racial Empathy in The Walking Dead and The Last of Us,” Gaming Representation: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Video Games, ed. Jennifer Malkowski and TreaAndrea M. Russworm (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017), 109–28. Eric AndrewJames 149 relationships among them as well.”4 These layers of oppression are often contradictory and may leave no avenues for action; the expectations placed on one for their race become impossible to fulfill because of the contradictory expectations placed on them for their gender or sexuality. This multiple jeopardy thus introduces... (shrink)
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  4.  13
    Everyone's friend? The case of Williams syndrome.Deborah M. Riby,Vicki Bruce &Ali Jawaid -2011 - In Barbara Oakley, Ariel Knafo, Guruprasad Madhavan & David Sloan Wilson,Pathological Altruism. Oxford University Press. pp. 116.
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  5.  17
    10 What We Don't Know about the Evolution of Cooperation in.Deborah M. Gordon -2013 - In Kim Sterelny, Richard Joyce, Brett Calcott & Ben Fraser,Cooperation and its Evolution. MIT Press. pp. 195.
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  6. What We Don’t Know about the Evolution of Cooperation in Animals.Deborah M. Gordon -2013 - In Kim Sterelny, Richard Joyce, Brett Calcott & Ben Fraser,Cooperation and its Evolution. MIT Press.
  7.  12
    Towards defining the Christian development organisation.Deborah M. Hancox -2019 -HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-10.
    Around the world, there exist many organisations who claim a Christian motivation and whose work falls within the scope of the development sector. These organisations are distinctly different from local congregations, and whilst development as a field of theological study is becoming increasingly well-defined and established, there has been limited theological research and reflection on these organisations. Much about them remains unstudied and unclear, raising questions about their purpose, legitimacy and theological contribution. This in turn hampers a responsive and responsible (...) engagement with them within the academy. Contributing to this oversight is the absence of an appropriate, commonly shared name and definition around which research and discourse can occur. This article reviews names and definitions currently being used and then proposes the name ‘Christian developmental organisation’. It provides a rich definition, considering the CDO’s organisational, societal, purpose, activity and faith dimensions. In addition, the history dimension brings an understanding of the origins and formation of the CDO whilst the relationship dimension positions the CDO within a web of relational dynamics. It is hoped that the name and definition offered in this article will promote research and engagement with the CDO as well as aid their self-understanding. (shrink)
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  8.  27
    Funds for Retarded Citizens.Deborah M. Sanders -1975 -Hastings Center Report 5 (5):4-4.
  9.  85
    Wittgenstein and Ant-watching.Deborah M. Gordon -1992 -Biology and Philosophy 7 (1):13-25.
    Research in animal behavior begins by identifying what animals are doing. In the course of observation, the observer comes to see animals as performing a particular activity. How does this process work? How cn we be certain that behavior is identified correctly? Wittgenstein offers an approach to these questions. looking at the uses of certainly rather than attempting to find rules that guarantee it. Here two stages in research are distinguished: first, watching animals, and second, reporting the results to other (...) scientists. Certainly about what animals are doing, has different uses at each stage. (shrink)
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  10.  17
    Strategic affinities: Historiography and epistemology in contemporary feminist knowledge politics.Deborah M. Withers -2015 -European Journal of Women's Studies 22 (2):129-142.
    This article presents a conceptual approach to feminist history that focuses on the strategies activists use in different temporal and spatial locations. The argument builds on recent insights within feminist theory and historiography that reveal an intimate relationship between historiography and epistemology in knowledge politics. This article, however, probes the limitations of this relationship by focusing on how current historiographical methods exclude or dilute the actions and events of history through representation and citation. By examining the work of Jamaican theatre (...) collective Sistren, and Bristol agit-prop group Sistershow, the article presents two ways to rethink temporality that makes those histories resistant to representation. This article argues for a more careful historiography that can do justice to the action of different historical temporalities. In the process, it opens emergent spaces and temporal challenges for feminist knowledge politics. (shrink)
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  11.  26
    The organization of work in social insect colonies.Deborah M. Gordon -2002 -Complexity 8 (1):43-46.
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  12.  42
    13 Discrimination.Deborah M. Figart -2009 - In Jan Peil & Irene van Staveren,Handbook of economics and ethics. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. pp. 91.
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  13. An Examination of Eric Gill's Philosophy of Art.M.James Therese Kelly -1962 - Dissertation, University of Notre Dame
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  14.  24
    Feminism, Digital Culture and the Politics of Transmission: Theory, Practice and Cultural Heritage.Deborah M. Withers -2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Devises a theoretical framework to think through the politics of transmission within feminism. It draws upon and develops the work of Bernard Stiegler to create a theoretical apparatus that can analyze the politics of transmission within digital culture.
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  15.  18
    Kate Bush, The Red Shoes, The Line, the Cross and the Curve and the Uses of Symbolic Transformation.Deborah M. Withers -2010 -Feminist Theology 19 (1):7-19.
    In Kate Bush’s 1993 album, The Red Shoes, and her film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, she engages with the symbolism of The Red Shoes fairytale as first depicted in Hans Christian Andersen’s 1845 fairy tale and later developed by the Powell and Pressburger film of the same name. In Bush’s versions of the tale she attempts to find a space of agency for the main female protagonist in a plot structure over-determined by patriarchal narrative and symbolic logic. (...) I will argue that it is through her own use of mystical symbolism — the Line, the Cross and the Curve — mediated through the deployment of ritual magick and kabbalistic ritual — that she breaks the ‘spell’ of the red shoes story where the main female character can escape the gender specific ‘curse’ of the red shoes. (shrink)
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  16.  18
    What is Your Essentialism is My Immanent Flesh!: The Ontological Politics of Feminist Epistemology.Deborah M. Withers -2010 -European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (3):231-247.
    This article examines one of the main epistemological frameworks that feminist theory has used for the past 30 years: essentialism and anti-essentialism. It explores what is at stake by continuing to use such perspectives within the late days of the early 21st century, and how it is linked to a performance of critical sophistication which has specific political consequences. Instead of seeing the body as essentialist, the author draws on two examples — popular musician Kate Bush and ontological ideas about (...) the Goddess — to present the body as immanent flesh. This has implications for thinking through different forms of relational and critical perspectives circulating in the current climate, and the author argues that the recent introduction of affect and the increasing interest in haptic knowledges is part of the immanent flesh’s potential for transforming knowledge and the wider world. (shrink)
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  17.  40
    Retention and transfer of morse code reception skill by novices: part-whole training.Deborah M. Clawson,Alice F. Healy,K. Anders Ericsson &Lyle E. Bourne -2001 -Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 7 (2):129.
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  18. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell, eds., Feminism as a Critique. [REVIEW]Deborah M. Rosen -1990 -Philosophy in Review 10 (1):3-5.
  19. Kindling.Deborah M. Saucier &Michael E. Corcoran -2003 - In L. Nadel,Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Nature Publishing Group.
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  20.  10
    Writing to Survive: How Teachers and Teens Negotiate the Effects of Abuse, Violence, and Disaster.Deborah M. Alvarez -2011 - R&L Education.
    This book brings research-based attention to the problem of increasing violence, abuse and disruption from natural disasters has upon adolescent learning and teacher practice.
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  21.  240
    The Foundations of Causal Decision Theory.James M. Joyce -1999 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book defends the view that any adequate account of rational decision making must take a decision maker's beliefs about causal relations into account. The early chapters of the book introduce the non-specialist to the rudiments of expected utility theory. The major technical advance offered by the book is a 'representation theorem' that shows that both causal decision theory and its main rival, Richard Jeffrey's logic of decision, are both instances of a more general conditional decision theory. The book solves (...) a long-standing problem for Jeffrey's theory by showing for the first time how to obtain a unique utility and probability representation for preferences and judgements of comparative likelihood. The book also contains a major new discussion of what it means to suppose that some event occurs or that some proposition is true. The most complete and robust defence of causal decision theory available. (shrink)
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  22.  107
    The Clinical Ethics Credentialing Project: Preliminary Notes from a Pilot Project to Establish Quality Measures for Ethics Consultation. [REVIEW]Deborah M. Swiderski,Katharine M. Ettinger,Mayris Webber &Nancy N. Dubler -2010 -HEC Forum 22 (1):65-72.
    The Clinical Ethics Credentialing Project (CECP) was intiated in 2007 in response to the lack of uniform standards for both the training of clinical ethics consultants, and for evaluating their work as consultants. CECP participants, all practicing clinical ethics consultants, met monthly to apply a standard evaluation instrument, the QI tool , to their consultation notes. This paper describes, from a qualitative perspective, how participants grappled with applying standards to their work. Although the process was marked by resistance and disagreement, (...) it was also noteworthy for the sustained engagement by participants over the year of the project, and a high level of acceptance by its conclusion. (shrink)
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  23.  59
    Collaboration in the museum of vertebrate zoology.James R. Griesemer &Elihu M. Gerson -1993 -Journal of the History of Biology 26 (2):185-203.
  24.  8
    Individualism: The Cultural Logic of Modernity.Nancy Armstrong,Deborah Cook,James Cruise,Lisa Eck,Megan Heffernan,David Jenemann,Nigel Joseph,Tom McCall,Lucy McNeece,JoAnne Myers,Julie Orlemanski,Jonathon Penny,Dale Shin,Vivasvan Soni,Frederick Turner &Philip Weinstein (eds.) -2011 - Lexington Books.
    Individualism: The Cultural Logic of Modernity is an edited collection of sixteen essays on the idea of the modern sovereign individual in the western cultural tradition. Reconsidering the eighteenth-century realist novel, twentieth-century modernism, and underappreciated topics on individualism and literature, this volume provocatively revises and enriches our understanding of individualism as the generative premise of modernity itself.
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  25.  17
    Book Review: Anna G. Jónasdóttir and Kathleen B. Jones (eds) The Political Interests of Gender Revisited: Redoing Theory and Research with a Feminist Face. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2009. 310 pp. (incl. index). ISBN 978—0—7190—7625— 1, £14.99 (pbk). [REVIEW]Deborah M. Withers -2011 -Feminist Theory 12 (1):102-103.
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  26.  293
    Accuracy and Coherence: Prospects for an Alethic Epistemology of Partial Belief.James M. Joyce -2009 - In Franz Huber & Christoph Schmidt-Petri,Degrees of belief. London: Springer. pp. 263-297.
  27.  815
    How Degrees of Belief Reflect Evidence.James M. Joyce -2005 -Philosophical Perspectives 19 (1):153-179.
  28.  72
    Conscious visual abilities in a patient with early bilateral occipital damage.Deborah Giaschi,James E. Jan,Bruce Bjornson,Simon Au Young,Matthew Tata,Christopher J. Lyons,William V. Good &Peter K. H. Wong -2003 -Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology 45 (11):772-781.
  29.  75
    Of mice and men and low unit cost.James R. Griesemer &Elihu M. Gerson -2006 -Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 37 (2):363-372.
  30.  16
    Age-related differences and similarities in dual-task interference.Alan A. Hartley &Deborah M. Little -1999 -Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 128 (4):416.
  31.  25
    The rural crisis: A response to martin strange. [REVIEW]Deborah M. Markley -1985 -Agriculture and Human Values 2 (4):14-15.
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  32.  39
    Motivating meta-awareness of mind wandering: A way to catch the mind in flight?Claire M. Zedelius,James M. Broadway &Jonathan W. Schooler -2015 -Consciousness and Cognition 36:44-53.
  33.  39
    Beyond All Reasonable Doubt? Epistemological Problems of the Learning Organisation.Deborah Blackman,James Connelly &Steven Henderson -2005 -Philosophy of Management 5 (3):103-121.
    The extensive literature on the Learning Organisation proposes that a competitive advantage can be achieved through the systematised generation and application of knowledge. Consequently, much of the debate concerns the processes, routines and organisational features that a firm should adopt to learn more, and faster, than its competitors. Less attention is given to understanding the nature of the knowledge that is created by these Learning Organisations. We hold that the topic is more important than its current weight in the literature (...) because the performance claims of the models proposed critically depend upon the newly acquired knowledge replacing ignorance or knowledge with less utility. In this paper we explore the nature of knowledge that Learning Organisation theory seeks to create by articulating implicit epistemological assumptions found within the literature. We show that the capacities of each epistemology to help an organisation reject falsehood and make greater use of its knowledge are critically undermined by these very routines. The paper concludes by highlighting the importance of a sceptical epistemology and outlines a process that would strengthen doubting behaviour. (shrink)
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  34.  67
    Learning from the Past: Collingwood and the Idea of Organisational History.Deborah Blackman &James Connelly -2001 -Philosophy of Management 1 (2):43-54.
    Through a consideration of the views of R.G. Collingwood on historical knowledge and conceptual change, this paper addresses organisational issues such as history, culture and memory. It then subjects the idea of ‘learning histories’ to critical scrutiny. It concludes that, because of their potential to become framing mental models, they may be in danger of failing to achieve the purposes for which they are used.
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  35.  159
    Levi on causal decision theory and the possibility of predicting one's own actions.James M. Joyce -2002 -Philosophical Studies 110 (1):69 - 102.
    Isaac Levi has long criticized causal decisiontheory on the grounds that it requiresdeliberating agents to make predictions abouttheir own actions. A rational agent cannot, heclaims, see herself as free to choose an actwhile simultaneously making a prediction abouther likelihood of performing it. Levi is wrongon both points. First, nothing in causaldecision theory forces agents to makepredictions about their own acts. Second,Levi's arguments for the ``deliberation crowdsout prediction thesis'' rely on a flawed modelof the measurement of belief. Moreover, theability of agents (...) to adopt beliefs about theirown acts during deliberation is essentialto any plausible account of human agency andfreedom. Though these beliefs play no part inthe rationalization of actions, they arerequired to account for the causalgenesis of behavior. To explain the causes ofactions we must recognize that (a) an agentcannot see herself as entirely free in thematter of A unless she believes herdecision to perform A will cause A,and (b) she cannot come to a deliberatedecision about A unless she adoptsbeliefs about her decisions. FollowingElizabeth Anscombe and David Velleman, I arguethat an agent's beliefs about her own decisionsare self-fulfilling, and that this can beused to explain away the seeming paradoxicalfeatures of act probabilities. (shrink)
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  36.  235
    Arif Ahmed: Evidence, Decision and Causality.James M. Joyce -2016 -Journal of Philosophy 113 (4):224-232.
  37.  18
    Book review: Why Stories Matter: The Political Grammar of Western Feminist Theory. [REVIEW]Deborah M. Withers -2012 -European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (2):253-256.
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  38.  311
    Are Newcomb problems really decisions?James M. Joyce -2006 -Synthese 156 (3):537-562.
    Richard Jeffrey long held that decision theory should be formulated without recourse to explicitly causal notions. Newcomb problems stand out as putative counterexamples to this ‘evidential’ decision theory. Jeffrey initially sought to defuse Newcomb problems via recourse to the doctrine of ratificationism, but later came to see this as problematic. We will see that Jeffrey’s worries about ratificationism were not compelling, but that valid ratificationist arguments implicitly presuppose causal decision theory. In later work, Jeffrey argued that Newcomb problems are not (...) decisions at all because agents who face them possess so much evidence about correlations between their actions and states of the world that they are unable to regard their deliberate choices as causes of outcomes, and so cannot see themselves as making free choices. Jeffrey’s reasoning goes wrong because it fails to recognize that an agent’s beliefs about her immediately available acts are so closely tied to the immediate causes of these actions that she can create evidence that outweighs any antecedent correlations between acts and states. Once we recognize that deliberating agents are free to believe what they want about their own actions, it will be clear that Newcomb problems are indeed counterexamples to evidential decision theory. (shrink)
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  39.  71
    IRB Decision-Making with Imperfect Knowledge: A Framework for Evidence-Based Research Ethics Review.Emily E. Anderson &James M. DuBois -2012 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):951-969.
    Institutional Review Board decisions hinge on the availability and interpretation of information. This is demonstrated by the following well-known historical example. In 2001, 24-year-old Ellen Roche died from respiratory distress and organ failure as a result of her participation in a study at Johns Hopkins Asthma and Allergy Center. The non-therapeutic physiological study, “Mechanisms of Deep Inspiration-Induced Airway Relaxation,” was designed to examine airway hyperresponsiveness in healthy individuals in order to better understand the pathophysiology of asthma. Participants inhaled hexamethonium, a (...) chemical ganglionic blocker that was not FDA-approved for use as specified in the experimental protocol. Risks of inhaling hexamethonium, including lung damage, had been reported in the 1950s and ‘60s. An investigation conducted after Roche's death determined that the study's principal investigator had failed to adequately search the medical literature; the protocol submitted for IRB review cited articles indexed in online literature databases that went back only as far as the 1970s. (shrink)
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  40.  30
    Rosamond McKitterick, History and Memory in the Carolingian World. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Pp. xvi, 337. $70 (cloth); $27.99 (paper). [REVIEW]Deborah M. Deliyannis -2006 -Speculum 81 (4):1228-1230.
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  41.  81
    The value of truth: a reply to Howson.James M. Joyce -2015 -Analysis 75 (3):413-424.
    Colin Howson has recently argued that accuracy arguments for probabilism fail because they assume a privileged ‘coding’ in which TRUE is assigned the value 1 and FALSE is assigned the value 0. I explain why this is wrong by first showing that Howson’s objections are based on a misconception about the way in which degrees of confidence are measured, and then reformulating the accuracy argument in a way that manifestly does not depend on the coding of truth-values. Along the way, (...) I will explain how to formulate the laws of probability and rational expectation in a scale-invariant way, and how to properly understand the values of the credence functions that we use to represent rational degrees of confidence. (shrink)
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  42.  234
    Accuracy and the Imps.James M. Joyce &Brian Weatherson -2019 -Logos and Episteme 10 (3):263-282.
    Recently several authors have argued that accuracy-first epistemology ends up licensing problematic epistemic bribes. They charge that it is better, given the accuracy-first approach, to deliberately form one false belief if this will lead to forming many other true beliefs. We argue that this is not a consequence of the accuracy-first view. If one forms one false belief and a number of other true beliefs, then one is committed to many other false propositions, e.g., the conjunction of that false belief (...) with any of the true beliefs. Once we properly account for all the falsehoods that are adopted by the person who takes the bribe, it turns out that the bribe does not increase accuracy. (shrink)
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  43. Ideology. ByJames M. Decker.M. Harmanmaa -2005 -The European Legacy 10 (7):757.
     
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  44. From soul to self.M.James C. Crabbe (ed.) -1999 - New York: Routledge.
    From Soul to Self takes us on a fascinating journey through philosophy, theology, religious studies and physiological sciences. The contributors explore the relationship between a variety of ideas that have arisen in philosophy, religion and science, each idea seeking to explain why we think we are somehow unique and distinct.
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  45.  26
    Legal “Tug-of-Wars” During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Public Health v. Economic Prosperity.James G. Hodge,Sarah Wetter,Emily Carey,Elyse Pendergrass,Claudia M. Reeves &Hanna Reinke -2020 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (3):603-607.
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  46.  82
    Large cardinal structures below ℵω.Arthur W. Apter &James M. Henle -1986 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (3):591 - 603.
  47. Meeting of the Aristotelian Society held at Senate House, University of London, on 5 March 2007 at 4: 15 pm.James M. Joyce -2007 -Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 107 (Part 2):187.
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  48.  74
    Remarks on Richard Pettigrew'sAccuracy and the Laws of Credence.James M. Joyce -2018 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 96 (3):755-762.
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  49.  56
    The complexities of complex span: explaining individual differences in working memory in children and adults.Donna M. Bayliss,Christopher Jarrold,Deborah M. Gunn &Alan D. Baddeley -2003 -Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 132 (1):71.
  50. Through Action Identification.Daniel M. Wegner &James Frederick -unknown
    Social relations are vitally dependent on shared understanding of one another's actions. To initiate any sort of relationship, and to maintain a relationship once initiated, the partners to the relationship must com-.
     
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