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Results for 'Nancy Rankin'

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  1.  13
    Taking Parenting Public: The Case for a New Social Movement.Sylvia Ann Hewlett,NancyRankin &Cornel West (eds.) -2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Taking Parenting Public makes a compelling case that parenting has become dangerously undervalued in America today. It calls for a new investment—both personal and public—into the work of raising children and argues that we are all 'stockholders' in the next generation. With a foreword by Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Cornel West, Taking Parenting Public crosses boundaries to bring together thinkers from diverse fields spanning the political spectrum. It features contributions from distinguished experts in economics, political science, public policy, child development, (...) public health, history, and the media. While recent books have focused on working mothers or absent fathers, Taking Parenting Public is the first volume to take a comprehensive look at the common struggles of parents. These essays go beyond the usual chest-beating about busy parents torn between work and family demands to suggest bold solutions. Instead of the typical call for 'parent replacement'—more child care, more after school programs and more mentors—the contributors offer fresh strategies for 'parent replenishment,' ways to put mothers and fathers back into the lives of their children not only as economic providers, but also as emotional and moral providers. (shrink)
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  2.  51
    A Substantive Revision to Firth's Ideal Observer Theory.NancyRankin -2010 -Stance 3 (1):55-61.
    This paper examines Ideal Observer Theory and uses criticisms of it to lay the foundation for a revised theory first suggested by Jonathan Harrison called Ideal Moral Reaction Theory. Harrison’s Ideal Moral Reaction Theory stipulates that the being producing an ideal moral reaction be dispassionate. This paper argues for the opposite: an Ideal Moral Reaction must be performed by a passionate being because it provides motivation for action and places ethical decision-making within human grasp.
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  3.  27
    The social organization of a sedentary life for residents in long‐term care.Kathleen Benjamin,JanetRankin,Nancy Edwards,Jenny Ploeg &Frances Legault -2016 -Nursing Inquiry 23 (2):128-137.
    Worldwide, the literature reports that many residents in long‐term care (LTC) homes are sedentary. In Canada, personal support workers (PSWs) provide most of the direct care in LTC homes and could play a key role in promoting activity for residents. The purpose of this institutional ethnographic study was to uncover the social organization of LTC work and to discover how this organization influenced the physical activity of residents. Data were collected in two LTC homes in Ontario, Canada through participant observations (...) with PSWs and interviews with people within and external to the homes. Findings explicate the links between meals, lifts and transfers, and the LTC standards to reveal that physical activity is considered an add‐on program in the purview of physiotherapists. Some of the LTC standards which are intended to product good outcomes for residents actually disrupt the work of PSWs making it difficult for them to respond to the physical activity needs of residents. This descriptive ethnographic account is an important first step in trying to find a solution to optimize real activities of daily living into life in LTC. (shrink)
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  4.  55
    Book Review Section 2. [REVIEW]E. H. F. Metzgar,Margaret A. Laughlin,Jerome F. Megna,Royal T. Fruehling,Nancy R. King,Mike Szymczuk,F. C. Rankine,Lawanda Aretta Johnson,Joseph A. Browde,B. Cutney,Dorothy Huenecke,H. O. Y. Mary P.,Nicholas D. Colucci Jr &L. David Weller -1982 -Educational Studies 13 (1):86-1193.
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  5.  97
    Faraday to Einstein: constructing meaning in scientific theories.Nancy J. Nersessian -1984 - Hingham, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    PARTI The Philosophical Situation: A Critical Appraisal We must begin with the mistake and find out the truth in it. That is, we must uncover the source of ...
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  6.  36
    Identification of emotional facial expressions among behaviorally inhibited adolescents with lifetime anxiety disorders.Bethany C. Reeb-Sutherland,LelaRankin Williams,Kathryn A. Degnan,Koraly Pérez-Edgar,Andrea Chronis-Tuscano,Ellen Leibenluft,Daniel S. Pine,Seth D. Pollak &Nathan A. Fox -2015 -Cognition and Emotion 29 (2):372-382.
  7.  493
    The feminist standpoint revisited and other essays.Nancy C. M. Hartsock -1998 - Boulder, Colo: Westview Press.
    For over twenty yearsNancy Hartsock has been a powerful voice in the effort to forge a feminism sophisticated and strong enough to make a difference in the real world of powerful political and economic forces. This volume collects her most important writings, offering her current thinking about this period in the development of feminist political economy and presenting an important new paper, “The Feminist Standpoint Revisited.”Central themes recur throughout the volume: in particular, the relationships between theory and activism, (...) between feminism and Marxism, and between postmodernism and politics. Readers will appreciate Hartsock’s account of how so much of her theoretical work grew directly out of the demands of the activist life. The Feminist Standpoint Revisited is an important record and a timely reevaluation of the development of feminist thought, as well as a contribution to current work. It will be a valuable resource for feminist theorists in a wide variety of disciplines. (shrink)
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  8.  65
    Aether/Or: The Creation of Scientific Concepts.Nancy J. Nersessian -1984 -Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 15 (3):175.
  9.  53
    Expertise increases the functional overlap between face and object perception.Thomas J. McKeeff,Rankin W. McGugin,Frank Tong &Isabel Gauthier -2010 -Cognition 117 (3):355-360.
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  10.  49
    Conservatism revisited: Base rates, prior probabilities, and averaging strategies.Nancy Paule Melone &Timothy W. McGuire -1996 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (1):36-37.
    Consistent with Koehler's position, we propose a generalization of the base rate fallacy and earlier conservatism literatures. In studies using both traditional tasks and new tasks based on ecologically valid base rates, our subjects typically underweight individuating information at least as much as they underweight base rates. The implications of cue consistency for averaging heuristics are discussed.
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  11. Meeting Our Standards for Educational Justice: Doing Our Best With the Evidence.Kathryn E. Joyce &Nancy Cartwright -2018 -Theory and Research in Education 16 (1).
    The United States considers educating all students to a threshold of adequate outcomes to be a central goal of educational justice. The No Child Left Behind Act introduced evidence-based policy and accountability protocols to ensure that all students receive an education that enables them to meet adequacy standards. Unfortunately, evidence-based policy has been less effective than expected. This article pinpoints under-examined methodological problems and suggests a more effective way to incorporate educational research findings into local evidence-based policy decisions. It identifies (...) some things educators need to know and do to determine whether available interventions can play the right casual role in their setting to produce desired effects. It examines the value and limits of educational research, especially randomized controlled trials, for this task. (shrink)
     
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  12.  55
    Interdisciplinarities in Action: Cognitive Ethnography of Bioengineering Sciences Research Laboratories.Nancy J. Nersessian -2019 -Perspectives on Science 27 (4):553-581.
    The paper frames interdisciplinary research as creating complex, distributed cognitive-cultural systems. It introduces and elaborates on the method of cognitive ethnography as a primary means for investigating interdisciplinary cognitive and learning practices in situ. The analysis draws from findings of nearly 20 years of investigating such practices in research laboratories in pioneering bioengineering sciences. It examines goals and challenges of two quite different kinds of integrative problem-solving practices: biomedical engineering (hybridization) and integrative systems biology (collaborative interdependence). Practical lessons for facilitating (...) research and learning in these specific fields are discussed and a preliminary set of interdisciplinary epistemic virtues are proposed as candidates for cultivation in interdisciplinary practices of these kinds more widely. (shrink)
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  13. Le déclin de l'écriture, coll. « La philosophie en effet ».François Laruelle,Jean-lucNancy,Sarah Kofman,Jacques Derrida &Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe -1979 -Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 169 (3):364-364.
     
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  14.  20
    Attentional processes and individual differences.Michael Lewis &Nancy Baldini -1979 - In Gordon A. Hale & Michael Lewis,Attention and Cognitive Development. Plenum.. pp. 135--172.
  15.  25
    Moral Turpitude.Jo-Ann Marrs &Nancy M. Alley -2004 -Jona's Healthcare Law, Ethics, and Regulation 6 (2):54-59.
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  16. Life..JohnRankin Rogers -1899 - San Francisco,: Whitaker & Ray Co..
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  17.  59
    Power Day: Addressing the Use and Abuse of Power in Medical Training.Nancy R. Angoff,Laura Duncan,Nichole Roxas &Helena Hansen -2016 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 13 (2):203-213.
    Problem: Medical student mistreatment, as well as patient and staff mistreatment by all levels of medical trainees and faculty, is still prevalent in U.S. clinical training. Largely missing in interventions to reduce mistreatment is acknowledgement of the abuse of power produced by the hierarchical structure in which medicine is practiced. Approach: Beginning in 2001, Yale School of Medicine has held annual “Power Day” workshops for third year medical students and advanced practice nursing students, to define and analyse power dynamics within (...) the medical hierarchy and hidden curriculum using literature, guest speakers, and small groups. During rotations, medical students write narratives about the use of power witnessed in the wards. In response to student and small group leader feedback, workshop organizers have developed additional activities related to examining and changing the use of power in clinical teams. Outcome: Emerging narrative themes included the potential impact of small acts and students feeling “mute” and “complicit” in morally distressing situations. Small groups provided safe spaces for advice, support, and professional identity formation. By 2005, students recognized residents that used power positively with Power Day awards and alumni served as keynote speakers on the use of power in medicine. By 2010, departments including OB/GYN, surgery, psychiatry, and paediatrics, had added weekly team Power Hour discussions. Next Steps: The authors highlight barriers, benefits, and lessons learned. Barriers include the notion of clinical irrelevance and resistance to the word “power” due to perceived accusation of abuse. Benefits include promoting open dialogue about power, fostering inter-professional collaboration, rewarding positive role modelling by residents and faculty, and creating a network of trainee empowerment and leadership. Furthermore, faculty have started to ask that issues of power be addressed in a more transparent way at their level of the hierarchy as well. (shrink)
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  18.  11
    A comparison of the keypeck and treadle-press operants in the pigeon: Fixed-interval schedule of reinforcement.W. Kirk Richardson &Nancy Rainwater -1979 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 14 (5):333-336.
  19. Personhood, autonomy and informed conset.Martin Ajei &Nancy O. Myles -2018 - In Yaw A. Frimpong-Mansoh & Caesar A. Atuire,Bioethics in Africa: Theories and Praxis. Wilmington, Delaware: Vernon Press.
     
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  20. Heroin addicts have higher discount rates for delayed rewards than non-drug-using controls.Kris Kirby,Nancy Petry &Warren Bickel -1999 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 128 (1):78–87.
     
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  21.  1
    Rhetorics and Realities of Access in Community Mental Health Care.Katerina Melino,JanetRankin,Joanne Olson,Jude Spiers &Carla Hilario -2025 -Nursing Inquiry 32 (2):e70014.
    Recent discourse emphasizes the need to integrate social and structural determinants of health—such as poverty, violence, houselessness, and discrimination—into mental health care service design and delivery. This study investigates how psychiatric‐mental health nurse practitioners (PMHNPs) navigate the conflicting demands of an efficiently organized clinic and the realities of patients experiencing chronic mental illness along with structural adversity. Using an institutional ethnographic approach, this research focused on the everyday work practices of nine PMHNPs in outpatient community mental health clinics in a (...) major American city. The findings revealed disjunctures within two powerful discourses related to patient access to care that circulate in mental health settings: (1) “every door is an open door,” and (2) “meeting people where they are.” PMHNPs believe in the values promoted by the rhetoric while also being required to work outside institutional structures to meet real patient needs. By illustrating how the institutional coordination expected to improve health systems overlooks PMHNPs' expert knowledge, we highlight how addressing the “structural determinants of health” in clinical care for people with serious mental illnesses remains an ideological aspiration. We call for a reevaluation of mental health care practices and systemic transformation through the informed, ground‐level interventions of PMHNPs. (shrink)
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  22.  14
    Experiment and Conceptual Change-Kuhn, Cognitive Science, and Conceptual Change-Continuity Through Revolutions: A Frame-Based Account of Conceptual Change During Scientific Revolutions.Nancy Nerssessian,Xiang Chen &Peter Barker -2000 -Philosophy of Science 67 (3):S208-S223.
    In this paper we examine the pattern of conceptual change during scientific revolutions by using methods from cognitive psychology. We show that the changes characteristic of scientific revolutions, especially taxonomic changes, can occur in a continuous manner. Using the frame model of concept representation to capture structural relations within concepts and the direct links between concept and taxonomy, we develop an account of conceptual change in science that more adequately reflects the current understanding that episodes like the Copernican revolution are (...) not always abrupt. When concepts are represented by frames, the transformation from one taxonomy to another can be achieved in a piecemeal fashion not preconditioned by a crisis stage, and a new taxonomy can arise naturally out of the old frame instead of emerging separately from the existing conceptual system. This cognitive mechanism of continuous change demonstrates the constructive roles of anomaly and incommensurability in promoting the progress of science. (shrink)
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  23. historians of science have ignored Descartes' solution to the geometrization problem...[because of] an orthodoxy of misplaced emphasis on Descartes' more “philosophical” texts':'Cartesian Optics and the Geometrization of Nature'.Nancy L. Maull Complains That‘Philosophers -1980 - In Stephen Gaukroger,Descartes: philosophy, mathematics and physics. Totowa, N.J.: Barnes & Noble.
     
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  24. Face to Face with Abidoral.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2010 - In Leonidas Cheliotis,Roots, rites and sites of resistance: the banality of good. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 151.
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  25.  19
    Heidegger et la traduction occidentale.Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback &Jean-LucNancy -2014 -Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 36:Fr.
    On lira ici un dialogue qui ne s’est donné ni règles préliminaires de progression ni aboutissement calculé d’avance, mais qui s’est inventé au fur et à mesure de son avancée. L’intention initiale était d’examiner ce que Heidegger nomme « la traduction occidentale » dans La parole d’Anaximandre : d’une part, que veut dire « traduction » là où l’on se guide sur des « traces » dont la nature même, comme traces, est problématique? D’autre part, comment comprendre le Brauch qui (...) porte la charge finale de cette « traduction »? En arrière-plan surgit la question : quelle est donc l’histoire dont Heidegger se réclame? (shrink)
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  26.  22
    Simulation across representation: The interplay of schemas and simulation-based inference on different levels of abstraction.Malte Schilling,Nancy Chang,Katharina J. Rohlfing &Michael Spranger -2020 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43.
    Language comprehension of action verbs recruits embodied representations in the brain that are assumed to invoke a mental simulation. This extends to abstract concepts, as well. We, therefore, argue that mental simulation works across levels of abstractness and involves higher-level schematic structures that subsume a generic structure of actions and events.
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  27.  11
    In the Company of Others: Perspectives on Community, Family, and Culture.Nancy E. Snow -1996 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Political and public debate recently has centered on issues of community, family and culture. What are the boundaries of community, and why is community important? What constitutes a family, and is it the fundamental unit of a stable society? What difference does feminism make in our lives and in society? How do racial and cultural minorities affect culture as a whole? In the Company of Others brings together new and previously published essays by nine distinguished philosophers, who argue these questions (...) from a variety of perspectives. Presenting traditional and non-traditional approaches, their essays challenge and refine recent thinking on issues of contemporary social and political importance. (shrink)
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  28. Stakeholders' Views of Alternatives to Prospective Informed Consent for Minimal‐Risk Pragmatic Comparative Effectiveness Trials.Danielle Whicher,Nancy Kass &Ruth Faden -2015 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (2):397-409.
    As interest in comparative effectiveness research grows, questions have emerged regarding whether it is ever acceptable to alter informed consent requirements for research when patients are randomly assigned to widely-used therapies. This paper reports on interviews with Institutional Review Board members and researchers and on focus groups with patients from Geisinger and Johns Hopkins health systems. The objective was to elicit participants' views of the acceptability of four different disclosure and authorization models for low-risk pragmatic comparative effectiveness trials of widely-used (...) therapies. Results suggest that although participants valued autonomous choice, many also believed that it was acceptable to streamline information disclosure and to use an opt-out process for eligible individuals who would prefer not to participate. This provides some preliminary evidence that relevant stakeholders find alternatives to traditional informed consent acceptable for low-risk pragmatic comparative effectiveness trials of widely-used therapies as long as a sufficient amount of choice is preserved. (shrink)
     
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  29. Loprivadoy lo público en el pensamiento de Hannah Arendt.Nancy Rocio Taplas Torrado -2005 -Universitas Philosophica 44:71-86.
     
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  30.  16
    Endquote: Sots-art Literature and Soviet Grand Style.Marina Balina,Nancy Condee &Evgeniĭ Aleksandrovich Dobrenko -2000 - Northwestern University Press.
    Sots-art, the mock use of the Soviet ideological clichés of mass culture, originated in Soviet nonconformist art of the early 1970s. An original and provocative guide, Endquote: Sots-Art Literature and Soviet Grand Style examines the conceptual aspect of sots-art, sots-art poetry, and sots-art prose, and discusses where these still-vital intellectual currents may lead.
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  31.  16
    Measuring the Impact of Philosophy.Luc Bovens &Nancy Cartwright -2009 -House of Commons - Select Committee - Science and Technology.
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  32. (1 other version)Natural Particulars: Nature and the Disciplines in Renaissance Europe.Anthony Grafton &Nancy Siraisi -2001 -Journal of the History of Biology 34 (2):418-419.
     
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  33.  51
    Expressive Japanese: A Reference Guide for Sharing Emotion and Empathy.Senko K. Maynard,S.Nancy,Paul R. Goldin,Eun-Joo Lee,Duk-Soo Park,Jaehoon Yeon,J. Marshall Unger,Ho-min Sohn,Heisoon Yang &Precy Espiritu -2013 -Philosophy East and West 63 (2).
  34.  85
    Three Voices/One Message: The Importance of Mimesis for Human Morality.Sally K. Severino &Nancy K. Morrison -2012 -Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 19:139-166.
    Our twenty-first century is a time of turbulence. Some of that turbulence is derived from not fully understanding what makes us moral. This article reassesses human morality in order to identify what nurtures and what distorts our moral nature. Such a reassessment potentially offers hope for a way through the escalating violence in our world that currently threatens to destroy us. This article focuses on three voices: the voice of anthropological philosopher René Girard, whose mimetic theory calls us to wake (...) up about our role in creating violence; the voice of medieval scholastic John Duns Scotus, whose moral theory is enjoying a renaissance in our contemporary world; and the voice of neuroscience with its .. (shrink)
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  35.  82
    Scandalous death.Jean-LucNancy,Marie-Eve Morin &Travis Holloway -2022 -Angelaki 27 (1):8-13.
    Around people who were close to him, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe would sometimes cry out with anger: “Death is a scandal! It is intolerable!” When he died almost fourteen years ago, prematurely and af...
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  36. Childhood and adolescence: Developmental assets.Peter L. Benson &Nancy Leffert -2001 - In Neil J. Smelser & Paul B. Baltes,International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Elsevier. pp. 1690--1697.
     
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  37.  8
    Psychoanalysis, Class and Politics: Encounters in the Clinical Setting.Lynne Layton,Nancy Caro Hollander &Susan Gutwill (eds.) -2006 - Routledge.
    Do political concerns belong in psychodynamic treatment? How do class and politics shape the unconscious? The effects of an increasingly polarized, insecure and threatening world mean that the ideologically enforced split between the political order and personal life is becoming difficult to sustain. This book explores the impact of the social and political domains at the individual level. The contributions included in this volume describe how issues of class and politics, and the intense emotions they engender, emerge in the clinical (...) setting and how psychotherapists can respectfully address them rather than deny their significance. They demonstrate how clinicians need to take into account the complex convergences between psychic and social reality in the clinical setting in order to help their patients understand the anxiety, fear, insecurity and anger caused by the complex relations of class and power. This examination of the psychodynamics of terror and aggression and the unconscious defences employed to deny reality offers powerful insights into the microscopic unconscious ways that ideology is enacted and lived. _Psychoanalysis, Class and Politics_ will be of interest to all mental health professionals interested in improving their understanding of the ideological factors that impede or facilitate critical and engaged citizenship. It has a valuable contribution to make to the psychoanalytic enterprise, as well as to related scholarly and professional disciplines. (shrink)
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  38.  33
    Making Classrooms Culturally Sensitive.Robert C. Morris &Nancy G. Mims -1999 -Education and Culture 16 (1):4.
  39.  13
    Putting Peace Into Practice: Evaluating Policy on Local and Global Levels.Nancy Nyquist Potter (ed.) -2004 - Brill | Rodopi.
    This book examines the role and limits of policies in shaping attitudes and actions toward war, violence, and peace. Authors examine militaristic language and metaphor, effects of media violence on children, humanitarian intervention, sanctions, peacemaking, sex offender treatment programs, nationalism, cosmopolitanism, community, and political forgiveness to identify problem policies and develop better ones.
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  40.  6
    Art's place in education.HenryRankin Poore -1937 - New York,: G. Putnam's Sons.
  41.  6
    Patient-Focused Healing: Integrating Caring and Curing in Health Care.Nancy Moore &Henrietta Komras -1993 - Jossey-Bass.
    Providing a groundbreaking approach to reinventing health care, this book is a practical guide to placing patient healing back at the center of the hospital's mission. Drawing on a wealth of practical experience, the authors show health care professionals how to decrease costs and improve quality by restructuring hospital services around patients and their needs and by utilizing design and architecture to enhance the healing environment. Using the core concepts of systems theory, extensive research, and lessons from pioneering hospitals, they (...) present state-of-the-art health care practices that heal as well as cure. (shrink)
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  42.  18
    Conceptual Change.Nancy J. Nersessian -1998 - In George Graham & William Bechtel,A Companion to Cognitive Science. Blackwell. pp. 157–166.
    Much of the attention of philosophy of science, history of science, and psychology in the twentieth century has focused on the nature of conceptual change. Conceptual change in science has occupied pride of place in these disciplines, as either the subject of inquiry or the source of ideas about the nature of conceptual change in other domains. There have been numerous conceptual changes in the history of science, some more radical than others. One of the most radical was the chemical (...) revolution. In the seventeenth century, chemists believed that the processes of combustion and calcination involved the absorption or release of a substance called phlogiston. On this theory, when an ore is heated with charcoal, it absorbs phlogiston to produce a metal; when a metal is burned, it releases phlogiston and leaves behind a residue, or calx. The concept of phlogiston derived from a quite complex Aristotelian/medieval structure that included three concepts central to chemical theory: sulphur, the principle of inflammability; mercury, the principle of fluidity; and salt, the principle of inertness. All material substances were believed to contain these three principles in the form of earths. The phlogiston theory held that in combustion, the sulphurous earth (phlogiston) returns to the substance from which it escaped during some earlier burning process in its history, and that in calcination the process is reversed. However, chemists also knew that a calx is heavier than the metal from which it was derived. So, the theory implies that phlogiston has a negative weight, or a positive lightness. This did not present a problem, though, because it was compatible with the Aristotelian elements of fire and air (the others being earth and water), which were not attracted towards the center of the earth. The development of the oxygen theory of combustion and calcination by Lavoisier in the late eighteenth century has been called the chemical revolution because it required replacing the whole conceptual structure with, for example, different concepts of substance and element and new concepts of oxygen and caloric. In the new system, it was no longer possible to believe in the existence of substances with negative weight. According to the oxygen theory, oxygen gas is released in combustion and absorbed in calcination. Thus calx is metal (substance) plus oxygen, rather than metal minus phlogiston. The concept of phlogiston was eliminated from the chemical lexicon. The reconceptualization of chemical phenomena that took place in the chemical revolution made possible the atomic theory of matter, which, as we know, posits quite different constituents of material substances from the principles central to the earlier conceptual structure. Just what constitutes conceptual change, how it relates to theory change, and how it relates to changes in belief continues to be a subject of much debate. Clearly, though, as the preceding example demonstrates, the three are significantly interrelated. (shrink)
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  43.  32
    Poststimulus cuing in immediate memory.Nancy S. Anderson -1960 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 60 (4):216.
  44.  13
    Social class and gender:: An empirical evaluation of occupational stratification.Nancy Andes -1992 -Gender and Society 6 (2):231-251.
    The purpose of this article is to investigate how sex segregation, social class, and gender are analytically related to occupational stratification. Recent discussions of women and men in the labor force revolve around whether a sex-segregated model in which sex of the worker affects placement, a pure social class model using classical criteria, or a gendered social class model in which social organizational processes of a gendered social class structure affect positioning in the stratification system. This article addresses the influence (...) that social class and gender have on stratification in the labor market. Data from the 1972-82 General Social Survey on 371 occupations, representing 7,541 male and female workers, are used to formulate a social class scheme based on all workers' characteristics. In comparing the models, the analyses show that an integrated gendered social class perspective is consistent with the empirical differentiation found among women and men in the labor force. (shrink)
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  45.  30
    There may be a “schizophrenic language”.Nancy C. Andreasen -1982 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (4):588-589.
  46.  21
    The recognition, naming, and reconstruction of visual figures as a function of contour redundancy.Nancy S. Anderson &J. Alfred Leonard -1958 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 56 (3):262.
  47.  30
    Women and Medicine in the French Enlightenment: The Debate over Maladies des FemmesLindsay Wilson.Nancy Anderson -1994 -Isis 85 (1):157-158.
  48.  12
    An Inadvertent Breach of Confidentiality.Nancy R. Angoff -1984 -IRB: Ethics & Human Research 6 (3):5.
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  49.  18
    Against special protections for medical students.Nancy R. Angoff -1985 -IRB: Ethics & Human Research 7 (5):9.
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  50.  11
    Interviews and Informed Consent.Nancy R. Angoff -1987 -Hastings Center Report 17 (5):44-44.
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