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Results for 'Peter Jan Fredriksson'

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  1.  23
    Stress Levels Escalate When Repeatedly Performing Tasks Involving Threats.Johan Bertilsson,Diederick C. Niehorster,Peter JanFredriksson,Mats Dahl,Simon Granér,OlaFredriksson,Johan Magnus Mårtensson,Måns Magnusson,Per-Anders Fransson &Marcus Nyström -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  2.  17
    Redelijke argumenten: een onderzoek naar normen voor kritische lezers.Peter Jan Schellens -1985 - Cinnaminson, U.S.A.: Foris Publications.
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  3.  41
    Pictorial signs and the language of film.Jan Marie Lambert Peters (ed.) -1981 - Amsterdam: Rodopi.
    PREFACE The semiotic approach to pictorial or audiovisual communication has been the special concern of a number of ...
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  4.  14
    The Ethics of Insider Trading Revisited.Peter-jan Engelen &Luc Liedekerke -2007 -Journal of Business Ethics 74 (4):497-507.
    Following Manne (1966, Insider Trading and the Stock Market (New York, Free Press)) we introduce a distinction between insider trading and market manipulation on the one hand and corporate insiders versus misappropriators on the other hand. This gives rise to four types of alleged inside transactions. We argue that the literature on insider trading has often targeted inside transactions type II, III and IV but that these arguments do not necessarily hold for type I transactions. We look for consequentionalist as (...) well as non-consequentionalist arguments against type I transactions and demonstrate that these are hard to find. Throughout the article we refer extensively to the economic literature on insider trading in order to overcome a relative divide between the economic, legal, and philosophical discussion on insider trading. (shrink)
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  5.  15
    The Science Timewave Zero.Peter Jan Kosmály -2013 -Creative and Knowledge Society 3 (1):49-64.
    Purpose of this article is to discuss concrete illusions, delusions and solutions within the use of scientific metaphor as an image or symbol with epistemic and educational value. In three analyzes there will be demonstrated, how by operating with the word “science” there is actually created a “world of science” and related operating system or media reality which include also revolutionary or evolutionary thoughts opposing with previous symbolic system. Therefore the scientific metaphor can be also discussed within media research, media (...) education and epistemic approach to reception of media reality as an educational tool. There is proposed that related media education, for example experience-based, includes system and epistemic or reviewing reception skills within the humane understanding ability and ability to create media realities or systems. The unifying methodologicalapproach will be that from media anthropology; a concept of re-analyzing the relationship between man and media, where media are tools for improving humane abilities.. The scientific aim of this article is to support concepts and theories dealing with media according to this Marshall McLuhan´s understanding and thereby support media anthropological approach. Also the aim is to support within organic reception the method of epistemological anarchism, because the anything goes principle is an epistemological translation tool for development of reviewing and reception skills by copying the communication strategy of media system. Also findings of three analyzes provided here support the claim, that evolution of symbols and other media utilizes the anything goes principle. Among conclusions there are other author´s findings discussed, which highlight the research of virtual and multisensory environment and its use in treatment of learning or media reception defects. (shrink)
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  6.  12
    Set Size of Information in Long-Term Memory Similarly Modulates Retrieval Dynamics in Young and Older Adults.Jan O. Peters,Tineke K. Steiger,Alexandra Sobczak &Nico Bunzeck -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Our ability to rapidly distinguish new from already stored information is important for behavior and decision making, but the underlying processes remain unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that contextual cues lead to a preselection of information and, therefore, faster recognition. Specifically, on the basis of previous modeling work, we hypothesized that recognition time depends on the amount of relevant content stored in long-term memory, i.e., set size, and we explored possible age-related changes of this relationship in older humans. In (...) our paradigm, subjects learned by heart four different word lists written in different colors. On the day of testing, a color cue indicated with a probability of 50% that a subsequent word might be from the corresponding list or from a list of new words. The old/new status of the word had to be distinguished via button press. As a main finding, we can show in a sample of n = 49 subjects, including 26 younger and 23 older humans, that response times increased linearly and logarithmically as a function of set size in both age groups. Conversely, corrected hit rates decreased as a function of set size with no statistically significant differences between both age groups. As such, our findings provide empirical evidence that contextual information can lead to a preselection of relevant information stored in long-term memory to promote efficient recognition, possibly by cyclical top-down and bottom-up processing. (shrink)
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  7. Semiotiek van het beeld: in het bijzonder van de film.Jan Marie Lambert Peters -1978 - Leuven: Centrum voor Communicatiewetenschappen Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.
     
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  8.  68
    Argumentation Schemes in Persuasive Brochures.Peter Jan Schellens &Menno de Jong -2004 -Argumentation 18 (3):295-323.
    Many public information documents attempt to persuade the recipients that they should engage in or refrain from specific behaviour. This is based on the assumption that the recipient will decide about his or her behaviour on the basis of the information given and a rational evaluation of the pros and cons. An analysis of 20 public information brochures shows that the argumentation in persuasive brochures is often not marked as such. Argumentation is presented as factual information, and in many instances (...) the task of making argumentational links and drawing conclusions is left to the reader. However, since the information offered does follow familiar argumentational schemes, readers can, in principle, reconstruct the argument. All the brochures make use of pragmatic argumentation (argumentation from consequences),i. e.,they formulate at least certain benefits of the desirable behaviour or disadvantages of the undesirable behaviour. In addition, they make regular use of argumentation from cause to effect and argumentation from example. Argumentation from rules and argumentation from authority are less frequently used. This empirical analysis of the use of argumentation schemes is a solid base for interesting and rich hypotheses about the cognitive processing of persuasive brochures. Central processing requires the reader to be able to reconstruct argumentation from informational texts and to identify and evaluate various types of argumentation. (shrink)
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  9.  32
    Laypeople’s Evaluation of Arguments: Are Criteria for Argument Quality Scheme-Specific?Peter Jan Schellens,Ester Šorm,Rian Timmers &Hans Hoeken -2017 -Argumentation 31 (4):681-703.
    Can argumentation schemes play a part in the critical processing of argumentation by lay people? In a qualitative study, participants were invited to come up with strong and weak arguments for a given claim and were subsequently interviewed for why they thought the strong argument was stronger than the weak one. Next, they were presented with a list of arguments and asked to rank these arguments from strongest to weakest, upon which they were asked to motivate their judgments in an (...) interview. In order to assess whether lay people apply argument scheme specific criteria when performing these tasks, five different argumentation schemes were included in this study: argumentation from authority, from example, from analogy, from cause to effect, and from consequences. Laypeople’s use of criteria for argument quality was inferred from interview protocols. The results revealed that participants combined general criteria from informal logic and scheme-specific criteria. The results supported the conventional validity of the pragma-dialectical argument scheme rule in a strong sense and provided a more fine-grained view of central processing in the Elaboration Likelihood Model. (shrink)
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  10.  143
    The Ethics of Insider Trading Revisited.Peter-Jan Engelen &Luc Van Liedekerke -2007 -Journal of Business Ethics 74 (4):497 - 507.
    Following Manne (1966, Insider Trading and the Stock Market (New York, Free Press)) we introduce a distinction between insider trading and market manipulation on the one hand and corporate insiders versus misappropriators on the other hand. This gives rise to four types of alleged inside transactions. We argue that the literature on insider trading has often targeted inside transactions type II, III and IV but that these arguments do not necessarily hold for type I transactions. We look for consequentionalist as (...) well as non-consequentionalist arguments against type I transactions and demonstrate that these are hard to find. Throughout the article we refer extensively to the economic literature on insider trading in order to overcome a relative divide between the economic, legal, and philosophical discussion on insider trading. (shrink)
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  11.  19
    Tri hita karana: the spirit of Bali.Jan Hendrik Peters -2013 - Jakarta: Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia. Edited by Wisnu Wardana.
    """This book neither wants to make an accusation, nor impose things that are impossible to carry out. It merely wants to make the Balinese and tourists aware of what is happening in this paradise on earth and about the positive infl uence they can have in preserving the culture of the beautiful island of Bali. Tri Hita Karana, the spirit of Bali originated from the rich Balinese-Hindu philosophy. Tri Hita Karana means three causes of happiness: balanced and harmonious relationships of (...) humans with God; of humans with fellow human beings; and of humans with the surrounding nature. Respect and togetherness are essential values in this philosophy. The Hindu doctrine of tat tvam asi, “I am you and you are me”, teaches us that all things are connected. Humans who do not respect God, fellow humans and nature are not respecting themselves, and this will eventually lead to self-destruction. Respect and togetherness will lead to harmony and happiness. Since the Balinese are already living according to the age-old philosophy of Tri Hita Karana, they can contribute to a sustainable environment for their children. The past and the present cannot be separated from each other; the present is born out of the past. Our actions to create a sustainable environment today matter, or in Gandhi’s words: the future depends on what we do today. The authors, Jan Hendrik Peters, a former professor of service studies and Wisnu Wardana, chief-editor of Bali Travel Newspaper, are deeply concerned about the negative infl uences of mass tourism and want to plead for a sustainable future for Bali, by writing this book. “We really do need this book on Bali to make the Balinese people and the international tourists familiar with the essence of Hinduism. If the Balinese follow the philosophy of Tri Hita Karana as a guide in their personal life and business, it means that Bali will be the Island of the Gods forever.” - Ida Pedanda Subali Tianyar, Hindu high priest, Chairman of the Council of Hindu Priests in Indonesia.""". (shrink)
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  12.  43
    When do Firms Invest in Corporate Social Responsibility? A Real Option Framework.Danny Cassimon,Peter-Jan Engelen &Luc Van Liedekerke -2016 -Journal of Business Ethics 137 (1):15-29.
    In this paper, the process for firms to decide whether or not to invest in corporate social responsibility is treated from a real option perspective. We extend the Husted framework with an important extra parameter that allows us to understand the timing of CSR investment and explain why some companies drag their feet over CSR investments. Our model explicitly allows for the impact of the opportunity cost of delaying the CSR investment decision, providing firms with tools to determine the optimal (...) moment of exercising the CSR investment option. We illustrate our timing model through a case study and analyze governmental support strategies for CSR from a real options perspective. (shrink)
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  13.  40
    Continuity and discontinuity in memory for threat.Michael Hock,Jan H. Peters &Heinz Walter Krohne -2017 -Cognition and Emotion 31 (7):1303-1317.
    Using a paradigm that allows a quasi-continuous tracking of memory performance over time, two experiments were designed to test the hypotheses that persons with a cognitively avoidant style of coping with threat manifest a dissociation between short-term and long-term retrieval of aversive information and persons with a vigilant coping style recall aversive information particularly well after long retention intervals, provided they are free to think about aversive events. Study 1 showed that avoiders manifest a poor memory for aversive pictures after (...) long retention intervals only. Study 2 replicated this finding. In addition, manipulation of the cognitive load during the retention interval influenced vigilants’ recall of aversive information in the predicted way. Results indicate that processes occurring during the retention interval are essential for individual difference in memory for aversive information and require similar attention as encoding, appraisal, and retrieval processes. (shrink)
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  14.  29
    When do Firms Invest in Corporate Social Responsibility? A Real Option Framework.Luc Liedekerke,Peter-Jan Engelen &Danny Cassimon -2016 -Journal of Business Ethics 137 (1):15-29.
    In this paper, the process for firms to decide whether or not to invest in corporate social responsibility is treated from a real option perspective. We extend the Husted framework with an important extra parameter that allows us to understand the timing of CSR investment and explain why some companies drag their feet over CSR investments. Our model explicitly allows for the impact of the opportunity cost of delaying the CSR investment decision, providing firms with tools to determine the optimal (...) moment of exercising the CSR investment option. We illustrate our timing model through a case study and analyze governmental support strategies for CSR from a real options perspective. (shrink)
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  15.  22
    The Role of the Human Entorhinal Cortex in a Representational Account of Memory.Heidrun Schultz,Tobias Sommer &Jan Peters -2015 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  16.  6
    Beyond perception: correspondences with Tim Ingold's work.Caroline Gatt,Laurens Loovers &JanPeter (eds.) -2025 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book showcases the way a range of scholars have engaged with Tim Ingold's opus since the publication of his ground-breaking The Perception of the Environment in 2000. Ingold's work has become key for a variety of disciplines ranging from anthropology, archaeology, and human geography to art, architecture, design and studies of material and visual culture. As set out in The Perception of the Environment and subsequent publications, Ingold proposed an understanding of the world that placed sentient, remembering and imagining (...) organisms, or inhabitants, some of them human, at the heart of an extensive field of socio-ecological relations. In this work, Ingold develops broad-ranging analyses of personhood, knowledge and skills, among many other topics. This volume sets out to synthesize critical scholarship drawing on Ingold's work, to lay out its principles, methods and results, and to demonstrate its contribution to reshaping both contemporary anthropology and wider intellectual terrains. By bringing together chapters from a variety of scholars, all critically furthering Ingold's proposals, the book advances a paradigm change occurring in various academic disciplines from 'fixist' to 'emergence' onto/epistemologies. (shrink)
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  17.  67
    Arguing about desirable consequences: What constitutes a convincing argument?Hans Hoeken,Rian Timmers &Peter Jan Schellens -2012 -Thinking and Reasoning 18 (3):394 - 416.
    Argument quality has consistently been shown to have strong and lasting persuasive effects. The question is what criteria people use to distinguish strong from weak arguments and how these criteria relate to the ones proposed in normative argumentation theory. In an experiment 235 participants without training in argumentation theory rated the acceptance of 30 claims about the desirability of a consequence that were supported by either an argument from analogy, from authority, or from consequences. The supporting arguments were systematically manipulated (...) to violate argument type specific criteria. Participants proved sensitive to the violation of most, but not all, argument type specific criteria. From a normative perspective these findings suggest that people act in a fairly adequate way. These findings also enable a more precise description of what people may do when critically appraising arguments, which has important implications for the use of argument quality as a methodological tool in persuasion research. (shrink)
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  18.  46
    09341 Summary--Cognition, Control and Learning for Robot Manipulation in Human Environments}.Michael Beetz,Oliver Brock,Gordon Cheng &Jan Peters -unknown
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  19.  47
    Arguing about the likelihood of consequences: Laypeople's criteria to distinguish strong arguments from weak ones.Hans Hoeken,Ester Šorm &Peter Jan Schellens -2014 -Thinking and Reasoning 20 (1):77-98.
    High-quality arguments have strong and lasting persuasive effects, suggesting that people can distinguish high- from low-quality arguments. However, we know little of what norms people employ to make that distinction. Some studies have shown that, in evaluating arguments from consequences, people are more sensitive to differences with respect to the desirability of these consequences than to differences in the likelihood that these consequences will occur. This raises the question of whether people lack the criteria to distinguish high-quality from low-quality arguments (...) in support of such claims. In an experiment, 196 participants without any training in argument theory rated their acceptance of 30 claims about the likelihood that a certain outcome would result from a certain action. These claims were supported by an argument from authority, or from cause to effect, or from example. Arguments were systematically manipulated to violate nine specific criteria. For seven out of the nine criteria violation decreased acceptance of the claim supported. These findings show that people can use argument type specific criteria to distinguish high- from low-quality arguments. (shrink)
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  20.  22
    Finding Irony: An Introduction of the Verbal Irony Procedure (VIP).Christian Burgers,Margot van Mulken &Peter Jan Schellens -2011 -Metaphor and Symbol 26 (3):186-205.
    This article introduces the Verbal Irony Procedure (VIP), a first systematic method for identifying irony in natural discourse. The first section discusses previous operationalizations of irony and demonstrates that these are not explicit about which criteria were used to separate irony from non-irony. The second section argues why irony can be defined as an “utterance with a literal evaluation that is implicitly contrary to its intended evaluation.” This section also explains why ironic utterances can be placed on an evaluation scale. (...) In the third section, clauses are proposed as a good unit of analysis when looking at irony in natural discourse. The different steps of the VIP are then introduced in the fourth section and subsequently applied in a sample analysis of a natural text in the fifth section. The sixth section discusses a reliability analysis of the VIP protocol. The article ends with an outlook on how future research on verbal irony might benefit from applying the VIP. (shrink)
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  21.  34
    09341 Abstracts Collection--Cognition, Control and Learning for Robot Manipulation in Human Environments}.Michael Beetz,Oliver Brock,Gordon Cheng &Jan Peters -unknown
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  22.  16
    Model-based contextual policy search for data-efficient generalization of robot skills.Andras Kupcsik,MarcPeter Deisenroth,Jan Peters,Ai Poh Loh,Prahlad Vadakkepat &Gerhard Neumann -2017 -Artificial Intelligence 247 (C):415-439.
  23.  11
    Anticipatory action selection for human–robot table tennis.Zhikun Wang,Abdeslam Boularias,Katharina Mülling,Bernhard Schölkopf &Jan Peters -2017 -Artificial Intelligence 247 (C):399-414.
  24.  27
    Wissen und Verantwortung: Festschrift für Jan P. Beckmann.JanPeter Beckmann,Thomas Keutner,Roman Oeffner &Hajo Schmidt (eds.) -2005 - Freiburg: Alber.
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  25.  14
    9 Modelle in der Trainingswissenschaft.Jan-Peter Brückner -2015 - In Ivor Nissen & Bernhard Thalheim,Wissenschaft Und Kunst der Modellierung: Kieler Zugang Zur Definition, Nutzung Und Zukunft. De Gruyter. pp. 159-174.
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  26.  40
    Good Listeners, Wise Crowds, and Parasitic Experts.Jan-Willem Romeijn,Tom Sterkenburg &Peter Grünwald -2012 -Analyse & Kritik 34 (2):399-408.
    This article comments on the article of Thorn and Schurz in this volume and focuses on, what we call, the problem of parasitic experts. We discuss that both meta- induction and crowd wisdom can be understood as pertaining to absolute reliability rather than comparative optimality, and we suggest that the involvement of reliability will provide a handle on this problem.
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  27.  59
    Reversibility and Nuclear Energy Production Technologies: A Framework and Three Cases.JanPeter Bergen -2016 -Ethics, Policy and Environment 19 (1):37-59.
    Recent events have put the acceptability of the risks of nuclear energy production technologies under the spotlight. A focus on risks, however, could lead to the neglect of other aspects of NEPT, such as their irreversibility. I argue that awareness of the socio-historical development of NEPT is helpful for understanding their irreversibility. To this end, I conceptualize NEPT development as a process of structuration in which material, institutional and discursive elements are produced and/or reproduced by purposive social actors. This conceptualization (...) is used to structure an analysis of how irreversibility arose in the first decades of NEPT development in India, France and the USA, and how some NEPT have been reversed or partially reversed. Lastly, two general conditions for reversible NEPT are formulated based on this analysis. (shrink)
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  28.  34
    Phenotypic Plasticity in Animals Exposed to Osmotic Stress – Is it Always Adaptive?Jan-Peter Hildebrandt,Amanda A. Wiesenthal &Christian Müller -2018 -Bioessays 40 (11):1800069.
    Hyperplasia and hypertrophy are elements of phenotypic plasticity adjusting organ size and function. Because they are costly, we assume that they are beneficial. In this review, the authors discuss examples of tissue and organ systems that respond with plastic changes to osmotic stress to raise awareness that we do not always have sufficient experimental evidence to conclude that such processes provide fitness advantages. Changes in hydranth architecture in the hydroid Cordylophora caspia or variations in size in the anal papillae of (...) insect larvae upon changes in medium salinity may be adaptive or not. The restructuring of salt glands in ducklings upon salt‐loading is an example of phenotypic plasticity which indeed seems beneficial. As the genomes of model species are recently sequenced and the animals are easy to rear, these species are suitable study objects to investigate the biological significance of phenotypic plasticity and to study potential epigenetic and other mechanisms underlying phenotypic changes. (shrink)
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  29. Speaking of education's technologically mediated character(s).JanPeter Bergen -2025 - In Markus Bohlmann & Patrizia Breil,Postphenomenology and technologies within educational settings. Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  30.  11
    Thomas von Aquin im philosophischen Gespräch.JanPeter Beckmann (ed.) -1975 - München: Alber.
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  31.  17
    InFoRM (Indicate-Follow-Replay-Me): A novel method to measure perceptual multistability dynamics using continuous data tracking and validated estimates of visual introspection.Jan Skerswetat &Peter J. Bex -2023 -Consciousness and Cognition 107 (C):103437.
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  32.  85
    To-Do Is to Be: Foucault, Levinas, and Technologically Mediated Subjectivation.JanPeter Bergen &Peter-Paul Verbeek -2021 -Philosophy and Technology 34 (2):325-348.
    The theory of technological mediation aims to take technological artifacts seriously, recognizing the constitutive role they play in how we experience the world, act in it, and how we are constituted as (moral) subjects. Its quest for a compatible ethics has led it to Foucault’s “care of the self,” i.e., a transformation of the self by oneself through self-discipline. In this regard, technologies have been interpreted as power structures to which one can relate through Foucaultian “technologies of the self” or (...) ascetic practices. However, this leaves unexplored how concrete technologies can actuallysupportthe process of self-care. This paper explores this possibility by examining one such technology: a gamified To-Do list app. Doing so, it first shows that despite the apparent straightforwardness of gamification, confrontation and shame play an important role in how the app motivates me to do better. Second, inspired by Ihde’s schema of human-technology relations, it presents different ways in which the app may confront me with myself. Subsequently, it accounts for the motivation and shame that this technologically mediated confrontation with myself invokes through a Levinasian account of ethical subjectivity. In so doing, it also shows how Levinas’ phenomenology implies a responsibility for self-care and how nonhuman, technological others may still call me to responsibility. It concludes with a reflection on the role of gamification in technologically mediated subjectivation and some implications for design. (shrink)
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  33.  28
    Psychological Distress in a Sample of Inpatients With Mixed Cancer—A Cross-Sectional Study of Routine Clinical Data.Luisa Peters,Jan Brederecke,Anke Franzke,Martina de Zwaan &Tanja Zimmermann -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    BackgroundThe diagnosis and treatment of cancer are associated with psychological distress that often leads to a significant reduction in emotional and physical well-being and quality of life. Early detection of psychological distress is therefore important. This study aims to assess the psychological distress of inpatient cancer patients using routine clinical data. Furthermore, variables and problems most strongly associated with psychological distress should be identified.Materials and MethodsN = 1,869 inpatients were investigated using the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer and problem (...) checklist to assess distress as well as multiple possible problem areas. Visceral oncological cancer was the most common tumor diagnosis, followed by skin cancer and urological cancer.Results65.9% of the sample experienced high levels of distress. Female sex, stage 4 of disease, and visceral and head and neck cancer emerged as risk factors for high distress. A younger age was significantly correlated with higher distress. The most frequently self-reported problems were fears, worry, and fatigue. Patients with all 3 of these problems had 24 times higher risk [odds ratio = 23.9] for high levels of distress than patients without these problems. Women reported significantly more practical, emotional, and physical problems than men. Younger and middle-aged patients reported increased levels of practical, family, and emotional problems compared with older patients.DiscussionAlmost two-thirds of the sample reported high levels of distress. The most frequently reported problem areas were emotional and physical problems. These results can help to identify patients with high risk for psychological distress and, therefore, be used to optimize psychosocial and psycho-oncological care for patients with cancer. (shrink)
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  34.  14
    The sweet spot between predictability and surprise: musical groove in brain, body, and social interactions.Jan Stupacher,Tomas Edward Matthews,Victor Pando-Naude,Olivia Foster Vander Elst &Peter Vuust -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Groove—defined as the pleasurable urge to move to a rhythm—depends on a fine-tuned interplay between predictability arising from repetitive rhythmic patterns, and surprise arising from rhythmic deviations, for example in the form of syncopation. The perfect balance between predictability and surprise is commonly found in rhythmic patterns with a moderate level of rhythmic complexity and represents the sweet spot of the groove experience. In contrast, rhythms with low or high complexity are usually associated with a weaker experience of groove because (...) they are too boring to be engaging or too complex to be interpreted, respectively. Consequently, the relationship between rhythmic complexity and groove experience can be described by an inverted U-shaped function. We interpret this inverted U shape in light of the theory of predictive processing and provide perspectives on how rhythmic complexity and groove can help us to understand the underlying neural mechanisms linking temporal predictions, movement, and reward. A better understanding of these mechanisms can guide future approaches to improve treatments for patients with motor impairments, such as Parkinson’s disease, and to investigate prosocial aspects of interpersonal interactions that feature music, such as dancing. Finally, we present some open questions and ideas for future research. (shrink)
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  35.  28
    Dislocation acceleration.Peter P. Gillis &Jan Kratochvil -1970 -Philosophical Magazine 21 (170):425-432.
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  36.  31
    Variation in the conduct and the quality of self‐evaluations: a multi‐level path analysis.Jan Vanhoof,Sven De Maeyer &Peter Van Petegem -2011 -Educational Studies 37 (3):277-287.
    While self?evaluation leads to valuable results in some schools, it appears that in other schools this is true only to a lesser extent or not at all. This raises the question of how differences in the results of self?evaluations can be explained. This study looks at to what extent the results of self?evaluation are determined by the way in which self?evaluation is conducted, by characteristics relating to the general functioning of the school and by the support which schools enjoy. One (...) thousand seven hundred and eighty?six school principals and team members from 96 schools (primary and secondary) were surveyed by means of a written questionnaire. The data collected were then analysed using multi?level structural equation modelling. The results provide strong empirical evidence that ?attitude with regard to self?evaluation?, ?self?evaluation as a policy action? and ?self?evaluation as an act of research? are powerful predictors of the quality of self?evaluations. (shrink)
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  37.  274
    A sociological approach to self and identity.Jan E. Stets &Peter J. Burke -2003 - In Mark R. Leary & June Price Tangney,Handbook of Self and Identity. Guilford Press. pp. 128--152.
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  38.  38
    Reversible Experiments: Putting Geological Disposal to the Test.JanPeter Bergen -2016 -Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (3):707-733.
    Conceiving of nuclear energy as a social experiment gives rise to the question of what to do when the experiment is no longer responsible or desirable. To be able to appropriately respond to such a situation, the nuclear energy technology in question should be reversible, i.e. it must be possible to stop its further development and implementation in society, and it must be possible to undo its undesirable consequences. This paper explores these two conditions by applying them to geological disposal (...) of high-level radioactive waste. Despite the fact that considerations of reversibility and retrievability have received increased attention in GD, the analysis in this paper concludes that GD cannot be considered reversible. Firstly, it would be difficult to stop its further development and implementation, since its historical development has led to a point where GD is significantly locked-in. Secondly, the strategy it employs for undoing undesirable consequences is less-than-ideal: it relies on containment of severely radiotoxic waste rather than attempting to eliminate this waste or its radioactivity. And while it may currently be technologically impossible to turn high-level waste into benign substances, GD’s containment strategy makes it difficult to eliminate this waste’s radioactivity when the possibility would arise. In all, GD should be critically reconsidered if the inclusion of reversibility considerations in radioactive waste management has indeed become as important as is sometimes claimed. (shrink)
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  39. In the Scope of Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science (Vol II).Peter Gardenfors,Katarzyna Kijania-Placek &Jan Wolenski (eds.) -2002 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  40.  19
    Appropriations and Contestations of the Islamic Nomenclature in Muslim North India.Jan-Peter Hartung -2017 -Contributions to the History of Concepts 12 (2):76-110.
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  41. Der normative Druck des Faktischen (Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie (ARSP): Beihefte; Neue Folge, 156).Peter Wiersbinski,Martin Weichold,Jan Marschelke,Falk Hamann,Matthias Kopp &Dennis-Kenji Kipker (eds.) -2019
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  42.  12
    From pronouncing to implementing business sustainability norms in the South - the UN Global Compact and World Bank Group engagement.JanPeter Wogart -2015 -International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics 10 (3/4):264.
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  43. De Veritate: Austro-Polish Contributions to the Theory of Truth from Brentano to Tarski.Peter M. Simons &Jan Wolenski -1988 - In Klemens Szaniawski,The Vienna Circle and the Lvov-Warsaw School. Dordrecht, Netherland: Dordrecht.
  44.  37
    Government Communication as a Normative Practice.Peter Jansen,Jan Van Der Stoep &Henk Jochemsen -2017 -Philosophia Reformata 82 (2):121-145.
    The network society is generally challenging for today's communication practitioners because they are no longer the sole entities responsible for communication processes. This is a major change for many of them. In this paper, it will be contended that the normative practice model as developed within reformational philosophy is beneficial for clarifying the structure of communication practices. Based on this model, we argue that government communication should not be considered as primarily an activity that focuses on societal legitimation of policy; (...) rather, it focuses on clarifying the meaning of the actions of the government. If the government can convincingly answer the question about the reason for their actions, societal legitimation will subsequently follow. Hence, it is argued that government communication is primarily linguistically qualified. (shrink)
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  45.  108
    On the principle of the excluded middle.Jan Łukasiewicz,Jan Woleński &Peter Simons -1987 -History and Philosophy of Logic 8 (1):67-69.
    The brief article of 1910 which is translated here is, as the prefatory note explains, significant for understanding both the way in which ?ukasiewicz came to many-valued logic and the influences under which he stood at the time.
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  46.  29
    Postscript: Split spatial attention? The data remain difficult to interpret.Bert Jans,Judith C. Peters &Peter De Weerd -2010 -Psychological Review 117 (2):682-684.
  47. Structure, Sign and Function.Jan Mukarovsky,John Burbank &Peter Steiner (eds.) -1978 - New Haven: Yale U. P.. Translated by John Burbank & Peter Steiner.
    This book is the second half of a project begun to make available to the English reader a substantial selection of Jan Mukarovsky's critical writings. Th first volume, The Word And Verbal Art (New Haven, 1977). comprised essays devoted to literature. The present volume contains sixteen of essays on aesthetics and arts other than literature.
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  48. In the Scope of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science.Peter Gärdenfors,Jan Wolenski &Katarzyna Kijania-Placek (eds.) -2002 - Springer.
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  49.  31
    Visual spatial attention to multiple locations at once: The jury is still out.Bert Jans,Judith C. Peters &Peter De Weerd -2010 -Psychological Review 117 (2):637-682.
  50.  36
    Responsible Innovation in light of Levinas: rethinking the relation between responsibility and innovation.JanPeter Bergen -2017 -Journal of Responsible Innovation 4 (3):354-370.
    To date, much of the work on Responsible Innovation (RI) has focused on the ‘responsible’ part of RI. This has left the ‘innovation’ part in need of conceptual innovation of its own. If such conceptual innovation is to contribute to a coherent conception of RI, however, it is crucial to better understand the relation between responsibility and innovation first. This paper elucidates this relation by locating responsibility and innovation within Emmanuel Levinas’ phenomenology. It structures his work into three ‘stages’, each (...) described in terms of their leading experience and objectivation regime. This analysis identifies a need for constant innovation of political and technological systems, originating from and motivated by our responsibility to others. It also shows the relation between responsibility and innovation to be threefold: foundational, ethical and structural. These insights could help RI to avoid some pitfalls of ‘regular’ innovation, and provide moral grounding for important aspects of RI. (shrink)
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