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  1.  41
    When Tongzhi Marry: Experiments of Cooperative Marriage between Lalas and Gay Men in Urban China.StephanieYingyiWang -2019 -Feminist Studies 45 (1):13-35.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 13StephanieYingyiWang When Tongzhi Marry: Experiments of Cooperative Marriage between Lalas and Gay Men in Urban China Ang Lee’s film The Wedding Banquet could be classic introductory material for tongzhi studies and, particularly, for research on cooperative marriage.1 In the film, Wai-Tung, a Taiwanese landlord who lives happily with his American boyfriend Simon (...) in New York, is troubled by his parents’ constant efforts to try and find him a bride. His partner Simon suggests he could arrange a marriage of convenience with WaiTung ’s tenant Wei Wei who is from mainland China and is also in need of a green card to stay in the United States. However, their plan backfires when Wai-Tung’s enthusiastic parents arrive in the United States and plan a big wedding banquet. As the film critic and scholar Chris 1. Tongzhi, literally “same purpose,” is the Chinese term for “comrade.” Since the 1990s, it has been appropriated to replace the more formal tóngxìnglìan (same-sex love) to refer to gay men and lalas (same-sex desiring women) in the Chinese-speaking world. The translation of xinghun as “cooperative marriage” is debatable, as xinghun literally means “pro-forma marriage.” In other works, “contract marriage,” “fake marriage,” or “pro-forma marriage” are used to refer to gay-lala marriage. Informed by Lucetta Kam’s work, I use “cooperative marriage ” to highlight that such marriage is not merely functional without sustenance, but is contingent on the cooperation and negotiation between multiple parties in the relationship, as my findings suggest. See Lucetta Yip Lo Kam, Shanghai Lalas: Female Tongzhi Communities and Politics in Urban China (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2013), 85. winner of the 2018 Feminist Studies Graduate Student award 14StephanieYingyiWang Berry points out, analysis of the film rests not on any individual, but on the Confucian family as “it negotiates the interface with globally hegemonic American culture,” suggesting that there exists an understanding of gayness in the context of the family that is distinct in Chinese culture.2 Berry continues to argue that the moral ambivalence produced by the film is structured by different sets of values: the gay person is not merely concerned about individual identity fulfillment, but he also adjusts his actions to satisfy the family expectation; the parents, especially the father figure, is not merely a patriarch with strict moral provisions and standards, but someone who can allow for implicit negotiation to keep the surface harmony as long as he gets a grandson; the woman is not merely an independent agent freed from social constraints, but a bride who is also attached to emotional comfort and conjugal ideals. Just as The Wedding Banquet tactfully reveals one type of cooperative marriage with its mutual benefits and examines the multilayered complexity of each individual player in the marriage game, this research takes as its subject cooperative marriage between gay men and lalas as an exciting departure to understand queer subjectivities and queer kinship intersected with gender, sexuality, class, and tongzhi politics in urban China.3 Though seemingly monolithic, marriage and family have become contested terrains for tongzhi to negotiate their gender performance, queer desires, and aspirations for better lives. The transnational makings of gayness and rights-based identity politics have contributed to the increasing awareness of a cosmopolitan gay identity and the desiring of alternative life choices of Chinese tongzhi, which lays the very foundation of their motivation to seek ways to cope with the heteronormative family model. Coming out and gay marriage are upheld as primary tropes of identity politics, facilitated by the self-identified tongzhi grassroots groups that emerged during the initiation of AIDS work in 1994 for gay men and at the 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women, which gathered hundreds of lesbians from around the world in Beijing.4 How2. Chris Berry, “Wedding Banquet: A Family (Melodrama) Affair,” in his Chinese Films in Focus: 25 New Takes (London: British Film Institute, 2003), 183. 3. Lala is a slang term in China for same-sex desiring women and includes lesbian, bisexual, and trans women. 4. Katie King, “‘There Are No... (shrink)
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  2.  22
    A fear‐based view of wisdom: The role of leader fear of failure and psychological empowerment.Stephanie T. Solansky,YuanWang &Emmanuel Quansah -2022 -Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 32 (1):154-163.
    Leader wisdom is crucial to effective organizations because it is one of the greatest human capacities. However, understanding what factors impact leader wisdom is still developing. In this paper, we rely on a fear-based view of wisdom and empirically examine through a quantitative study of 249 leaders if one of the primary regulators of human behavior (fear) is positively related to wisdom. We are specifically focused on the role of fear of failure and wisdom. Additionally, because we recognize that fear (...) has a negative connotation and has a tipping point regarding leader effectiveness, we propose that psychological empowerment serves as a coping mechanism for fear and mediates the relationship between fear of failure and wisdom. Through structural equation modeling (SEM), we demonstrate that fear of failure does positively impact leader wisdom and that this relationship is mediated by psychological empowerment. This study contributes to the literature by advancing the fear-based view of wisdom which unites two of the most powerful concepts in human history: fear and wisdom. Although wisdom has a resurgence of interest in business literature, fear is not given much attention. By theoretically and empirically linking fear of failure with wisdom, we shed light on how fear is an important motivating mechanism. The study also contributes to practice by suggesting leaders should fear failure and avoid minimizing fears to be wise. (shrink)
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  3.  35
    Preface.Judith Gardiner &Bibi Obler -2019 -Feminist Studies 45 (1):7-12.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface Within the current context in the United States, we tend to think of “choice” as the leading slogan of the liberal movement to expand women’s reproductive rights, particularly the right to elective abortion. But choice depends on context: on what is available, what is mandated, what is prohibited or discouraged, and what has not yet been imagined. This issue of Feminist Studies expands our thinking about available and (...) potential choices, both individual and social. The issue opens withStephanieYingyiWang’s ethnographic study of companionate marriage in China, in which she describes cooperative marriage partnerships that look heterosexual and appear to fulfill traditional familial expectations, but that facilitate same-sex liaisons and so create new family structures. Other essays in this issue describe the kinds of choices available to those who seek nontraditional or less conventional family and erotic bonds. Leila J. Rupp discusses the “queer dilemmas of desire” that perplex undergraduate queer women in US colleges, and Sonny Nordmarken opens possibilities for new trans epistemologies that disrupt and produce new gender practices, claiming that queer instability provides “infinite possibilities” for individual and social change. More traditional choices and families take differing shapes in other historical and cultural contexts. Carla Pascoe Leahy compares the levels of maternal satisfaction felt by three historical cohorts of Australian women: those of the immediate post-World War II generation, the later generation of the Women’s Liberation Movement, and the current generation. Miriam Kienle examines how two designers, Giorgia Lupi and Stefanie Posavec, decided to explore alternatives to big data by sending each other weekly postcards that quantified their lives according to “small/slow data” points. Other essays and poems emphasize constraint rather than choice about the kinds of identities that take shape within current social structures. Bettina Judd ponders the effects on herself and others of her own rage at racial injustice and of the stereotype of raging black women perpetuated by a society that has chosen not to 8Preface deal with its endemic racism. Similarly, Vivyan Adair’s memoir on the stigmata of growing up in poverty exposes the limitations of individual choice in the context of violence, a theme echoed in the poems by Elisabeth Blair, which dramatize her experiences in an abusive institution for troubled teens. Trysh Travis reviews four books published in 2017 that together, but differently, tackle the difficult situations of the “drug-using woman” and her recovery. Marilyn Strathern and Jade S. Sasser review Adele Clarke and Donna Haraway’s edited volume Making Kin, Not Population : Reconceiving Generations, with responses from multiple authors featured in the book. Finally, a short story by Mary Anna Evans and poetry by Hannah Baker Saltmarsh and Abigail G. H. Manzella voice other individual dilemmas related to choice. We end the issue with a News and Views piece by Sonja Thomas that offers more context on the recent Women’s Wall protest in Kerala, India. In “When Tongzhi Marry: Experiments of Cooperative Marriage between Lalas and Gay Men in Urban China,”StephanieYingyiWang frames cooperative marriage in mainland China between gay men and lalas (same-sex loving women), or tonghzi marriage, as an experiment in queer kinship. Such marriages appear to fulfill traditional roles on the surface, providing women and men who desire same-sex relationships a sanctioned institution—marriage—within which to fulfill these desires. According toWang, these relational strategies are shaped simultaneously by China’s heteronormative policies and by the global circulation of gay rights narratives, “transforming the heteronormative family institution from within.” In this ethnography,Wang describes relationships as varied as those in which married partners are mutually supportive close friends who confide in one another about their same-sex relationships, to others in which subjects suffered from differing expectations between the partners, sometimes with gay husbands expecting deferential behavior from their lala wives, or between the couples and their parents and in-laws.Wang suggests applying a “decolonizing feminist methodology” to go beyond dichotomies of public/private, local/global, and success/failure and thus to better understand tongzhi marriage and critical queer subjectivities at this global juncture.Wang’s article is a co-winner of the 2018 Feminist Studies Award for the... (shrink)
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  4.  32
    Aspects of adaptive reconfiguration in a scalable intrusion tolerant system.Stephanie Bryant &FeiyiWang -2003 -Complexity 9 (2):74-83.
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  5.  179
    Stephanie Bryant and FeiyiWang, Aspects of adaptive reconfiguration in a scalable intrusion tolerant system, Complexity (2004) 9(2)74–83. [REVIEW]Stephanie Bryant &FeiyiWang -2004 -Complexity 9 (4):46-46.
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  6.  20
    Differences in Mood, Optimism, and Risk-Taking Behavior Between American and Chinese College Students.JiaoWang,Ruifeng Cui,Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino,Edmund Fantino &Xiaoming Liu -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Mood and optimism have been demonstrated to influence risk-taking decisions; however, the literature on mood, optimism, and decision-making is mixed and conducted primarily with western samples. This study sought to address this gap in the literature by examining the impact of mood and dispositional optimism on risk-taking and whether these associations differed between undergraduate students from the United States and the People’s Republic of China. Both samples completed a dispositional optimism questionnaire and an autobiographical mood induction task. They were then (...) tasked with choosing to complete the Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices reasoning task on easy, medium, or hard difficulty for hypothetical money. Selecting harder difficulties was interpreted as more risk-taking due to a higher chance of failure. More positive mood and higher dispositional optimism were associated with decreased risk-taking, i.e., selecting easier puzzle difficulties, in the American sample but increased risk-taking decisions, i.e., selecting harder difficulties, in the Chinese sample. These findings suggest that the effect of mood and optimism on decision-making may differ by nationality and/or culture. (shrink)
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  7.  77
    Moral Degradation, Business Ethics, and Corporate Social Responsibility in a Transitional Economy.Qinqin Zheng,Yadong Luo &Stephanie LuWang -2014 -Journal of Business Ethics 120 (3):405-421.
    This article theoretically proposes and empirically verifies an understudied issue in the business ethics and corporate social responsibility literature—how moral degradation in a society influences the relationship between BE or CSR and firm performance. Building on strategic choice theory, we propose that both BE and CSR become more important in enhancing business success when the perceived MD is heightened. Our analysis of 300 firms operating in China statistically confirms our hypotheses: first, under high MD, firms’ engagement in CSR results in (...) higher corporate legitimacy and competitive advantage, and second, their adherence to ethical business codes leads to higher corporate legitimacy. We conclude the article by outlining the implications for both theory and practice. (shrink)
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  8.  46
    Specificity and Engagement: Increasing ELSI’s Relevance to Nano–Scientists.Barry L. Shumpert,Amy K. Wolfe,David J. Bjornstad,StephanieWang &Maria Fernanda Campa -2014 -NanoEthics 8 (2):193-200.
    Scholars studying the ethical, legal, and social issues associated with emerging technologies maintain the importance of considering these issues throughout the research and development cycle, even during the earliest stages of basic research. Embedding these considerations within the scientific process requires communication between ELSI scholars and the community of physical scientists who are conducting that basic research. We posit that this communication can be effective on a broad scale only if it links societal issues directly to characteristics of the emerging (...) technology that are relevant to the physical and natural scientists involved in research and development. In this article, we examine nano-ELSI literature from 2003 to 2010 to discern the degree to which it makes these types of explicit connections. We find that, while the literature identifies a wide range of issues of societal concern, it generally does so in a non-specific manner. It neither links societal issues to particular forms or characteristics of widely divergent nanotechnologies nor to any of the many potential uses to which those nanotechnologies may be put. We believe that these kinds of specificity are essential to those engaged in nano-scale research. We also compare the literature-based findings to observations from interviews we conducted with nanoscientists and conclude that ELSI scholars should add technical- and application-related forms of specificity to their work and their writings to enhance effectiveness and impact in communicating with one important target audience—members of the nanoscale science community. (shrink)
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  9.  63
    Education in and for the Belt and Road Initiative:: The Pedagogy of Collective Writing.Michael A. Peters,Ogunniran Moses Oladele,Benjamin Green,Artem Samilo,Hanfei Lv,Laimeche Amina,YaqianWang,Mou Chunxiao,Jasmin Omary Chunga,Xu Rulin,Tatiana Ianina,Stephanie Hollings,Magdoline Farid Barsoum Yousef,Petar Jandrić,Sean Sturm,Jian Li,Eryong Xue,Liz Jackson &Marek Tesar -2020 -Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (10):1040-1063.
    This paper is an experiment in collective writing conducted in Autumn 2019 at the Faculty of Education at Beijing Normal University. The experiment involves 12 international masters' students readi...
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  10.  42
    Beyond human intentions and emotions.Elsa Juan,Chris Frum,Francesco Bianchi-Demicheli,Yi-WenWang,James W. Lewis &Stephanie Cacioppo -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  11.  31
    Preface.Stephanie Gilmore &Jennifer Nash -2015 -Feminist Studies 41 (2):255-258.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface This issue invites us to consider examples of feminist cultural production that use music, graphic art, and film to resist sexual conventions. Andrea Wood turns our attention to lesbian sex and romance in comics, a genre that has long captivated lay readers and is gaining popularity in academic circles. Rachel Lumsden analyzes Ethel Smyth’s 1913 musical composition “Possession,” an ode to same-sex intimacy displaying a “sonic meld” of (...) passion, desire, and political commitment. Sharmila Lodhia’s account of Nina Paley’s film Sita Sings the Blues considers how a sexually charged anitmated representation of a traditional epic can spur battles over cultural authenticity. Ariane Cruz examines how sexual pleasure presses against racist histories in a study on black women and BDSM. Whether sexuality is policed, as Chloë Taylor explores in her article, or the policing of sexuality is shunned, as Lynn Comella addresses in her review essay, it is clear that the grip of sexual politics on women ’s sexual lives is strong.Wang Zheng’s News and Views piece recounts recent global feminist tactics used to release five young feminists jailed in China, an urgent reminder about how women’s bodies are policed in violent ways. We begin this issue with Chloë Taylor’s essay reflecting on how sexology and psychiatry function to represent female desire in narrow ways. Taylor explores how female sexual dysfunction is constructed in sexology and psychiatric practice and locates this as part of a longer history of rendering selected bodies and sexual practices as deviant. Her analysis is a valuable rejoinder to the ever-expanding grip of psychiatry on the ordering—and disordering—of women’s bodies and sexuality. The line between normal and abnormal is always shifting, but its constant is how it maneuvers and is maneuvered to control female sexual desire. Taylor’s argument moves toward a non-normalizing feminist sexology that can interrogate sexual practice and function without rendering any as “right” or “wrong.” 256Preface Andrea Wood also turns to female sexuality, specifically lesbian sex, love, and romance, in her article on comics as a literary genre. Lesbian romance comics, Wood argues, offer a different discursive lens for “making the invisible visible.” Using queer theory to interrogate romantic depictions of lesbian sex and sexuality, she explores how the visual narrative form of comics allows for a different and politically compelling depiction of lesbian identity and sexual activity. Although lesbian romance and same-sex desire has been an interest of many feminist scholars, few have examined the visual field of lesbian comics—a genre, Wood insists, that demonstrates resistance to what Adrienne Rich identified as “compulsory heterosexuality.” Rachel Lumsden draws our attention to composer Ethel Smyth’s understudied song “Possession.” The song is a rumination on what it means to possess something or someone, and what it means to be possessed ; it is also a song that Smyth dedicated to Emmeline Pankhurst, her political comrade as well as her close friend and muse. Lumsden reads the song as a creative, strategically ambiguous “ode to an intimate female relationship,” a tribute to the respect, affection, and tenderness that Pankhurst and Smyth shared. Rather than reveal the “truth” of Smyth’s relationship with Pankhurst, Lumsden instead invites readers to consider the “sonic meld” of “Possession” as a space through which “themes of desire, activism, eroticism, solidarity, and sacrifice coalesce and congeal ” and as a site through which Smyth narrated her experiences, passions, desires, and political commitments. Sharmila Lodhia engages the controversy surrounding Nina Paley’s re-telling of the Ramayana in her film Sita Sings the Blues, which some critics have deemed “offensive,” “insulting,” and a “desecration of the Ramayana and the Hindu faith.” Lodhia treats Paley’s film—which positions Sita rather than Ram as the story’s protagonist, deploys animation and myriad narrator perspectives, fuses Paley’s own story with Sita’s story, and sets the story to a 1920s blues soundtrack—as a productive “body of critique about the epic’s central teachings on virtue, righteousness, and idealized gender roles.” By situating Paley’s retelling of the Ramayana in the context of numerous and varied Ramayana retellings, Lodhia reveals that Sita Sings the Blues is a “creative... (shrink)
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  12.  317
    The Routledge Handbook of Metaphysical Grounding.Michael J. Raven (ed.) -2020 - New York: Routledge.
    A collection of 37 essays surveying the state of the art on metaphysical ground. -/- Essay authors are: Fatema Amijee, Ricki Bliss, Amanda Bryant, Margaret Cameron, Phil Corkum, Fabrice Correia, Louis deRosset, Scott Dixon, Tom Donaldson, Nina Emery, Kit Fine, Martin Glazier, Kathrin Koslicki, David Mark Kovacs, Stephan Krämer,Stephanie Leary, Stephan Leuenberger, Jon Litland, Marko Malink, Michaela McSweeney, Kevin Mulligan, Alyssa Ney, Asya Passinsky, Francesca Poggiolesi, Kevin Richardson, Stefan Roski, Noel Saenz, Benjamin Schnieder, Erica Shumener, Alexander Skiles, Olla (...) Solomyak, Tuomas Tahko, Naomi Thompson, Kelly Trogdon, JenniferWang, Tobias Wilsch, and Justin Zylstra. (shrink)
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  13.  29
    Possible approaches to the comparative study of William James and traditional Chinese philosophy.Wang Chengbing -2022 -Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (4):328-330.
    In the current era of globalization, to engage in the dialogue and comparative study of Chinese and Western philosophy is not only a general trend but also an academic responsibility that contempor...
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  14.  58
    The origins of probabilistic inference in human infants.Stephanie Denison &Fei Xu -2014 -Cognition 130 (3):335-347.
  15.  71
    Rational variability in children’s causal inferences: The Sampling Hypothesis.Stephanie Denison,Elizabeth Bonawitz,Alison Gopnik &Thomas L. Griffiths -2013 -Cognition 126 (2):285-300.
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  16.  57
    Spiritual Revival and Secularization: An Evaluation of House Churches in China.Wang Yi -2016 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 47 (4):239-254.
    Wang Yi’s article deals with the role of house churches, that is, unregistered churches. In his evaluation of the different branches of house churchesWang Yi touches upon issues of identity and the future of China, and he also harshly criticizes the Chinese party-state, claiming that “China is becoming a tumor in the world.”.
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  17.  12
    I. 2. Les terres cuites votives : analyse du répertoire.Stephanie Huysecom-Haxhi &Belisa Muka -2010 -Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 134 (2):388-391.
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  18.  14
    The Contemporary Significance of the Study of Gorz’s Labor View.Wang Leifeng -2019 -Philosophy Study 9 (7).
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  19.  22
    Apprendre des gestes philosophiques avec les maîtres et les textes ignorants.Stéphanie Péraud-Puigségur -2022 -Rue Descartes 1:148-164.
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  20. Faith and Fate: Western/Eastern Perspectives on Human Realities.KgbinWang -1998 - In Melville Y. Stewart & Chih-kʻang Chang,The Symposium of Chinese-American Philosophy and Religious Studies. San Francisco: International Scholars Publications. pp. 1--195.
     
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  21. German philosophy in china.J.Wang -1989 -Philosophisches Jahrbuch 96 (1):166-172.
     
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  22.  10
    Gen yuan, zhi du he zhi xu: cong Laozi dao Huang Lao = Genyuan, zhidu he zhixu: cong Laozi dao Huang-Lao.ZhongjiangWang -2018 - Beijing: Zhongguo ren min da xue chu ban she.
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  23. Lun li xue: li lun yu shi jian.ChenruiWang -1980 - Taibei: Taiwan xue sheng shu ju.
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  24. Mengzi di ren sheng zhe xue: kang kai ren sheng.YaohuiWang -1994 - Taibei Shi: Yang zhi wen hua shi ye gu fen you xian gong si. Edited by Fan Yang.
     
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  25.  8
    Qing nian shen mei shou ce.XiangfengWang (ed.) -1988 - shenyang: Lianning sheng xin hua shu dian fa xing.
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  26. Self-Programming: Operationalizing Autonomy.P.Wang,E. Nivel &K. R. Thórisson -2009 - In B. Goertzel, P. Hitzler & M. Hutter,Proceedings of the Second Conference on Artificial General Intelligence. Atlantis Press.
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  27.  23
    The Truth of the Fully-Engaged Subject.YongWang -2022 -International Journal of Žižek Studies 16 (1).
    This commentary provides a critique of Žižek’s 2021 article on the catastrophe of the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan with a focus on Zizek’s nostalgic moment of the fully engaged subject. The commentary deploys the actual and possible scenarios of the form of subjectivity in association with the cynical subject and the sadistic superego; and suggests the possibility of an alternative ethical subjectivity.
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  28.  5
    Xin da zhong zhe xue =.WeiguangWang (ed.) -2014 - Beijing: Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she.
  29.  3
    Zhi ye dao de.ZhongqiaoWang (ed.) -1993 - Ha'erbin: Heilongjiang sheng xin hua shu dian fa xing.
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  30.  13
    The Concept of Freedom in Gao Xingjian’s Novel One Man’s Bible.Wang Liying -2014 - In Nikola Chardonnens & Michael Lackner,Polyphony Embodied - Freedom and Fate in Gao Xingjian’s Writings. De Gruyter. pp. 93-98.
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  31. Zhuzi nian pu.Wang Maohong Zhuan &Zhou Chaxian Dian Jiao -2000 - In Changgeng Wu,Zhu Lu xue shu kao bian wu zhong. Jiangxi Sheng Nanchang Shi: Jiangxi gao xiao chu ban she.
     
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  32.  25
    Spontaneous Facial Expressions and Micro-expressions Coding: From Brain to Face.Zizhao Dong,GangWang,Shaoyuan Lu,Jingting Li,Wenjing Yan &Su-JingWang -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Facial expressions are a vital way for humans to show their perceived emotions. It is convenient for detecting and recognizing expressions or micro-expressions by annotating a lot of data in deep learning. However, the study of video-based expressions or micro-expressions requires that coders have professional knowledge and be familiar with action unit coding, leading to considerable difficulties. This paper aims to alleviate this situation. We deconstruct facial muscle movements from the motor cortex and systematically sort out the relationship among facial (...) muscles, AU, and emotion to make more people understand coding from the basic principles: We derived the relationship between AU and emotion based on a data-driven analysis of 5,000 images from the RAF-AU database, along with the experience of professional coders.We discussed the complex facial motor cortical network system that generates facial movement properties, detailing the facial nucleus and the motor system associated with facial expressions.The supporting physiological theory for AU labeling of emotions is obtained by adding facial muscle movements patterns.We present the detailed process of emotion labeling and the detection and recognition of AU.Based on the above research, the video's coding of spontaneous expressions and micro-expressions is concluded and prospected. (shrink)
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  33.  16
    A cooperative–competitive perspective of ownership necessitates an understanding of ownership disagreements.Margaret Echelbarger &Stephanie M. Tully -2023 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e333.
    Boyer's cognitive model of ownership, based on cooperation and competition, underscores the importance of studying disagreements in ownership. We argue that exploring the factors that can lead to different perceptions and experiences of ownership will uniquely inform our understanding of legal, psychological, and perceived ownership beliefs.
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  34.  88
    Value-based modulation of effort and reward anticipation on the motor system.Vassena Eliana,CobbaertStephanie,Andres Michael,Fias Wim &Verguts Tom -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  35.  49
    Experience and decisions.Edmund Fantino &Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino -2003 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (2):160-160.
    Game-theoretic rationality is not generally observed in human behavior. One important reason is that subjects do not perceive the tasks in the same way as the experimenters do. Moreover, the rich history of cooperation that participants bring into the laboratory affects the decisions they make.
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  36.  30
    Fish displaying and infants sucking: The operant side of the social behavior Coin.Edmund Fantino &Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino -2000 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (2):254-255.
    We applaud Domjan et al. for providing an elegant account of Pavlovian feed-forward mechanisms in social behavior that eschews the pitfall of purposivism. However, they seem to imply that they have provided a complete account without provision for operant conditioning. We argue that operant conditioning plays a central role in social behavior, giving examples from fish and infant behavior.
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  37.  31
    Rational analysis and illogical inference.Edmund Fantino &Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino -1991 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (3):494-494.
  38.  36
    Antibiotic resistance and virulence: Understanding the link and its consequences for prophylaxis and therapy.Thomas Guillard,Stéphanie Pons,Damien Roux,Gerald B. Pier &David Skurnik -2016 -Bioessays 38 (7):682-693.
    “Antibiotic resistance is usually associated with a fitness cost” is frequently accepted as common knowledge in the field of infectious diseases. However, with the advances in high‐throughput DNA sequencing that allows for a comprehensive analysis of bacterial pathogenesis at the genome scale, including antibiotic resistance genes, it appears that this paradigm might not be as solid as previously thought. Recent studies indicate that antibiotic resistance is able to enhance bacterial fitness in vivo with a concomitant increase in virulence during infections. (...) As a consequence, strategies to minimize antibiotic resistance turn out to be not as simple as initially believed. Indeed, decreased antibiotic use may not be sufficient to let susceptible strains outcompete the resistant ones. Here, we put in perspective these findings and review alternative approaches, such as preventive and therapeutic anti‐bacterial immunotherapies that have the potential to by‐pass the classic antibiotics. (shrink)
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  39. A Critical Illumination Of Poetic Styles.Wang Keping -2008 -Literature & Aesthetics 18 (2):171-180.
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  40.  15
    Expectation and Reality: International Students' Motivations and Motivational Adjustments to Sustain Academic Journey in Chinese Universities.Yuezu Mao,Hao Ji &RujiaWang -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Considering the increasing influx of international students to Chinese universities in recent decades, it is surprising to find that few empirical research, especially longitudinal ones, have been conducted in exploring the motivation of international students in China. To fill up the existing gap, this study explored and tracked international students' motivations dynamically. Mixed research design, such as surveys, reflective journals, and interviews, was employed in this study. Data were collected from 671 international students and three teachers in three Chinese universities (...) in Zhejiang province, mainland China on a longitudinal basis. The present study found that international students' motivation could be discussed with considerations to the following two different phases: preliminary phase before they come to China and follow-up phase when they are in China. This study found that the integrative understanding of the external pulling force and the self-motivated pushing force plays a vital role in answering international students' motivations to China. International students were driven more by the self-motivated pushing force than the external pulling force in selecting China as their study destinations. Moreover, international students experienced motivational changes when their expectations conflict with reality and their positive motivational adjustments and social interaction were important to the sustainability of their academic journey. Moreover, this study provides implications for the government, universities and international students in the aspects of policymaking, education and application. (shrink)
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  41.  48
    Preferential processing of threatening facial expressions using the repetition blindness paradigm.Loren Mowszowski,Skye McDonald,DanielleWang &Cristina Bornhofen -2012 -Cognition and Emotion 26 (7):1238-1255.
  42.  30
    Children’s performance on set-inclusion and linear-ordering relationships.Stephen E. Newstead,Stephanie Keeble &Kenneth I. Manktelow -1985 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 23 (2):105-108.
  43.  33
    Chronic kidney disease: appropriateness of therapeutic management and associated factors in the AVENIR study.Nathalie Thilly,Stéphanie Boini,Michèle Kessler,Serge Briançon &Luc Frimat -2009 -Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 15 (1):121-128.
  44.  43
    How Competition for Funding Impacts Scientific Practice: Building Pre-fab Houses but no Cathedrals.Stephanie Meirmans -2024 -Science and Engineering Ethics 30 (1):1-19.
    In the research integrity literature, funding plays two different roles: it is thought to elevate questionable research practices (QRPs) due to perverse incentives, and it is a potential actor to incentivize research integrity standards. Recent studies, asking funders, have emphasized the importance of the latter. However, the perspective of active researchers on the impact of competitive research funding on science has not been explored yet. Here, I address this issue by conducting a series of group sessions with researchers in two (...) different countries with different degrees of competition for funding, from three scientific fields (medical sciences, natural sciences, humanities), and in two different career stages (permanent versus temporary employment). Researchers across all groups experienced that competition for funding shapes science, with many unintended negative consequences. Intriguingly, these consequences had little to do with the type of QRPs typically being presented in the research integrity literature. Instead, the researchers pointed out that funding could result in predictable, fashionable, short-sighted, and overpromising science. This was seen as highly problematic: scientists experienced that the ‘projectification’ of science makes it more and more difficult to do any science of real importance: plunging into the unknown or addressing big issues that need a long-term horizon to mature. They also problematized unintended negative effects from collaboration and strategizing. I suggest it may be time to move away from a focus on QRPs in connection with funding, and rather address the real problems. Such a shift may then call for entirely different types of policy actions. (shrink)
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  45. Yan shi xue ji: shi juan.Wang Dai -1894 - [Taipei]: Ming wen shu ju.
     
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  46.  65
    La Philosophie Morale deWang Yang-ming.John K. Shryock &Wang Tch'angtche -1937 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 57 (3):352.
  47.  9
    Controversy and Construction in Contemporary Aesthetics.JieWang,Zheng Shen &Armida De la Garza (eds.) -2023 - Boston: BRILL.
    From classic aesthetic theories to fresh aesthetic methods, this volume is an accessible introduction to the main topics in contemporary aesthetics: the media-technological challenges, transcultural aesthetics and aesthetic methodology.
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  48.  11
    Fa xue fang fa lun =.LimingWang -2012 - Beijing: Zhongguo ren min da xue chu ban she.
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  49. Jen hsiang jen hsing jen sheng.Su-HsinWang -1972
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  50. Jiao shi zhi ye dao de.ShaozheWang -1985 - Guiyang Shi: Guizhou sheng xin hua shu dian fa xing. Edited by Zebin Yu & Qinian Li.
     
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