Results for 'Catherine Susanne Schnitzer'

965 found
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  1.  11
    “Hot” executive functions are comparable across monolingual and bilingual elementary school children: Results from a study with the Iowa Gambling Task.Susanne Enke, Catherine Gunzenhauser, Verena E. Johann, Julia Karbach & Henrik Saalbach - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Past research found performance differences between monolingual and bilingual children in the domain of executive functions. Furthermore, recent studies have reported advantages in processing efficiency or mental effort in bilingual adults and children. These studies mostly focused on the investigation of “cold” EF tasks. Studies including measures of “hot” EF, i.e., tasks operating in an emotionally significant setting, are limited and hence results are inconclusive. In the present study, we extend previous research by investigating performance in a task of the (...)
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  2. Towards a philosophy of academic publishing.Michael A. Peters, Petar Jandrić, Ruth Irwin, Kirsten Locke, Nesta Devine, Richard Heraud, Andrew Gibbons, Tina Besley, Jayne White, Daniella Forster, Liz Jackson, Elizabeth Grierson, Carl Mika, Georgina Stewart, Marek Tesar, Susanne Brighouse, Sonja Arndt, George Lazaroiu, Ramona Mihaila, Catherine Legg & Leon Benade - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (14):1401-1425.
    This article is concerned with developing a philosophical approach to a number of significant changes to academic publishing, and specifically the global journal knowledge system wrought by a range of new digital technologies that herald the third age of the journal as an electronic, interactive and mixed-media form of scientific communication. The paper emerges from an Editors' Collective, a small New Zealand-based organisation comprised of editors and reviewers of academic journals mostly in the fields of education and philosophy. The paper (...)
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  3. Naturalistic Emotion Decoding From Facial Action Sets.Sylwia Hyniewska, Wataru Sato, Susanne Kaiser & Catherine Pelachaud - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:396924.
    Researchers have theoretically proposed that humans decode other individuals' emotions or elementary cognitive appraisals from particular sets of facial action units (AUs). However, only a few empirical studies have systematically tested the relationships between the decoding of emotions/appraisals and sets of AUs, and the results are mixed. Furthermore, the previous studies relied on facial expressions of actors and no study used spontaneous and dynamic facial expressions in naturalistic settings. We investigated this issue using video recordings of facial expressions filmed unobtrusively (...)
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  4.  94
    Comparing ethical ideologies across cultures.Catherine N. Axinn, M. Elizabeth Blair, Alla Heorhiadi & Sharon V. Thach - 2004 - Journal of Business Ethics 54 (2):103 - 119.
    Using measures developed by Singhapakdi et al. (1996, Journal of Business ethics 15, 1131–1140) the perceived importance of ethics and social responsibility (PRESOR) is measured among MBA students in the United States, Malaysia and Ukraine revealing a stockholder view and two stakeholder views. Relativism and Idealism are also measured. The scores of MBA students are compared among each other and with those of the U.S. managers who were part of the original study. Managers'' scores tend to be significantly higher on (...)
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  5. The diffusion of scientific innovations: A role typology.Catherine Herfeld & Malte Doehne - 2019 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 77:64-80.
    How do scientific innovations spread within and across scientific communities? In this paper, we propose a general account of the diffusion of scientific innovations. This account acknowledges that novel ideas must be elaborated on and conceptually translated before they can be adopted and applied to field-specific problems. We motivate our account by examining an exemplary case of knowledge diffusion, namely, the early spread of theories of rational decision-making. These theories were grounded in a set of novel mathematical tools and concepts (...)
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  6.  74
    Efficacy and Vulnerability: Judith Butler on Reiteration and Resistance.Catherine Mills - 2000 - Australian Feminist Studies 15 (32):265--279.
  7. The one and many faces of cosmopolitanism.Catherine Lu - 2000 - Journal of Political Philosophy 8 (2):244–267.
  8.  15
    Conscience as consciousness: the idea of self-awareness in French philosophical writing from Descartes to Diderot.Catherine Glyn Davies - 1990 - Oxford: Voltaire Foundation.
    The Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment series, previously known as SVEC (Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century), has published over 500 peer-reviewed scholarly volumes since 1955 as part of the Voltaire Foundation at the University of Oxford. International in focus, Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment volumes cover wide-ranging aspects of the eighteenth century and the Enlightenment, from gender studies to political theory, and from economics to visual arts and music, and are published in English or French.
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  9. The Mark of a Good Informant.Catherine Z. Elgin - 2020 - Acta Analytica 35 (3):319-331.
    Edward Craig and Michael Hannon agree that the function of knowledge is to enable us to identify informants whose word we can safely take. This requires that knowers display a publicly recognizable mark. Although this might suffice for information transfer, I argue that the position that emerges promotes testimonial injustice, since the mark of a good informant need not be shared by all who are privy to the facts we seek. I suggest a way the problem might be alleviated.
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  10. Le développement urbain en Syrie du Nord, étude des cas de Séleucie et Apamée de l'Euphrate.Abadie-Reynal Catherine & Gaborit Justine - forthcoming - Topoi.
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  11. Oxford Handbook of Early modern Philosophy.Desmonde Clarke Catherine Wilson (ed.) - 2011 - Oxford University Press.
  12.  13
    G. FOWDEN, Qusayr 'Amra. Art and the Umayyad Elite in Late Antique Syria, Berkeley/Los Angeles, University of California Press, 2004.Catherine Vanderheyde - 2008 - Byzantion 78:538.
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  13.  68
    Thick Concepts in Economics: The Case of Becker and Murphy’s Theory of Rational Addiction.Catherine Herfeld & Charles Djordjevic - 2021 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 51 (4):371-399.
    In this paper, we examine the viability of avoiding value judgments encoded in thick concepts when these concepts are used in economic theories. We focus on what implications the use of such thick concepts might have for the tenability of the fact/value dichotomy in economics. Thick concepts have an evaluative and a descriptive component. Our suggestion is that despite attempts to rid thick concepts of their evaluative component, economists are often not successful. We focus on the strategy of explication to (...)
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  14.  12
    Three-year-olds' comprehension of contrastive and descriptive adjectives: Evidence for contrastive inference.Catherine Davies, Jamie Lingwood, Bissera Ivanova & Sudha Arunachalam - 2021 - Cognition 212 (C):104707.
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  15.  37
    The Specter of Motherhood: Culture and the Production of Gendered Career Aspirations in Science and Engineering.Catherine J. Taylor & Sarah Thébaud - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (3):395-421.
    Why are young women less likely than young men to persist in academic science and engineering? Drawing on 57 in-depth interviews with PhD students and postdoctoral scholars in the United States, we describe how, in academic science and engineering, motherhood is constructed in opposition to professional legitimacy, and as a subject of fear, repudiation, and public controversy. We call this the “specter of motherhood.” This specter disadvantages young women and amplifies anticipatory concerns about combining an academic career with motherhood. By (...)
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  16.  45
    Noun Phrases, Quantifiers, and Generic Names, EJ LOWE Frege and Russell have taught us that indefinite and plural noun phrases in natural language often function as quantifier expressions rather than as referring expressions, despite possessing many syntactical simi-larities with names. But it can be shown that in some of their most im.Catherine Jl Talmage & Mark Mercer - 1991 - Philosophy 66 (257).
  17.  80
    Meaning and triangulation.Catherine J. L. Talmage - 1997 - Linguistics and Philosophy 20 (2):139-145.
  18.  14
    Curating duplicates: operationalizing similiarity in the Smithsonian Institution with Haida rattles, 1880–1926.Catherine A. Nichols - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):341-363.
    In the late nineteenth century, the anthropology curators of the Smithsonian Institution consulted their cataloguing systems and storerooms, assessing specimens in order to determine which could be designated as duplicate specimens and exchanged with museums domestically and abroad. The status of ‘duplicate’ for specimens was contingent on conceptions of similiarity impacted by disciplinary classification praxis, with particular emphasis on object nomenclature and formal attributes. Using rattles from Haida Gwaii collected between 1881 and 1885 by James Swan for the Smithsonian Institution, (...)
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  19.  31
    The loneliness of a long-distance critical realist student: the story of a doctoral writing group.Catherine Hastings, Angela Davenport & Karen Sheppard - 2021 - Journal of Critical Realism 21 (1):65-82.
    As doctoral students from New Zealand and Australia, advised by supervision teams with a diversity of critical realist experience from limited to none, we came independently to the 2018 Critical Re...
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  20. A generic Solution to the Sorites Paradox.Susanne Bobzien - 2024 - Erkenntnis 2024 (Online):1-40.
    ABSTRACT: This paper offers a generic revenge-proof solution to the Sorites paradox that is compatible with several philosophical approaches to vagueness, including epistemicism, supervaluationism, psychological contextualism and intuitionism. The solution is traditional in that it rejects the Sorites conditional and proposes a modally expressed weakened conditional instead. The modalities are defined by the first-order logic QS4M+FIN. (This logic is a modal companion to the intermediate logic QH+KF, which places the solution between intuitionistic and classical logic.) Borderlineness is introduced modally as (...)
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  21.  50
    Teachers Building Dwelling Thinking with Slideware.Catherine A. Adams - 2010 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 10 (1):1-12.
    Teacher-student discourse is increasingly mediated through, by and with information and communication technologies: in-class discussions have found new, textually-rich venues online; chalk and whiteboard lectures are rapidly giving way to PowerPoint presentations. Yet, what does this mean experientially for teachers? This paper reports on a phenomenological study investigating teachers’ lived experiences of PowerPoint in post-secondary classrooms. As teachers become more informed about the affordances of information and communication technology like PowerPoint and consequently take up and use these tools in their (...)
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  22.  63
    Theories of time in ancient philosophy.Catherine Rau - 1953 - Philosophical Review 62 (4):514-525.
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  23. Regarding the earth: Ecological vision in word & deed.Catherine Rigby & Linda Williams - unknown
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  24. Genetic bystanders : familial responsibility and the state's accountability to veterans of nuclear tests.Catherine Trundle - 2017 - In Susanna Trnka & Catherine Trundle (eds.), Competing responsibilities: the politics and ethics of contemporary life. Durham: Duke University Press.
     
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  25. ch. 3. Machiavelli's revolution in thought.Catherine Heidt Zuckert - 2016 - In Timothy Fuller (ed.), Machiavelli's legacy: The Prince after five hundred years. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
     
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  26.  12
    Understanding the Political Spirit: Philosophical Investigations from Socrates to Nietzsche.Catherine H. Zuckert - 1988
  27. Liberal Eugenics, Human Enhancement and the Concept of the Normal.Catherine Mills - 2015 - In Darian Meacham (ed.), Medicine and Society, New Perspectives in Continental Philosophy. Dordrecht: Springer Verlag.
     
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  28. Telling the truth about HIV? Testing and disclosure in a culture of stigma.Catherine Olivier - 2013 - BioéthiqueOnline 2:12.
    HIV stigmatization is one of the most notable barriers to individual testing, seriously impairing global efforts in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Because stigmatization is strongly embedded in local cultural and social habits, humanitarian healthcare workers providing HIV testing, counselling and prevention programs in low and middle income countries have become a serious alternative to local healthcare providers. This case study addresses some of the ethical dilemmas that humanitarian healthcare workers face when confronted with HIV-associated stigma.
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  29. Soul, City and Cosmos after Augustine.Catherine Pickstock - 1999 - In John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock & Graham Ward (eds.), Radical orthodoxy: a new theology. New York: Routledge. pp. 243--277.
     
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  30.  11
    The scientific conscience: reflections on the modern biologist and humanism.Catherine Roberts - 1974 - Fontwell: Centuar Press.
  31.  33
    Evolutionary ethics.Catherine Wilson - 2004 - In Christopher Stephens & Mohan Matthen (eds.), Elsevier Handbook in Philosophy of Biology. Elsevier. pp. 219.
  32.  11
    The Routledge Guidebook to Augustine's Confessions.Catherine Conybeare - 2016 - Routledge.
    Augustine’s _Confessions_ is one of the most significant works of Western culture. Cast as a long, impassioned conversation with God, it is intertwined with passages of life-narrative and with key theological and philosophical insights. It is enduringly popular, and justly so. The Routledge Guidebook to Augustine’s Confessions is an engaging introduction to this spiritually creative and intellectually original work. This guidebook is organized by themes: the importance of language creation and the sensible world memory, time and the self the afterlife (...)
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  33.  47
    Balancing the local and the universal in maintaining ethical access to a genomics biobank.Catherine Heeney & Shona M. Kerr - 2017 - BMC Medical Ethics 18 (1):80.
    Issues of balancing data accessibility with ethical considerations and governance of a genomics research biobank, Generation Scotland, are explored within the evolving policy landscape of the past ten years. During this time data sharing and open data access have become increasingly important topics in biomedical research. Decisions around data access are influenced by local arrangements for governance and practices such as linkage to health records, and the global through policies for biobanking and the sharing of data with large-scale biomedical research (...)
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  34. From Foucault's lectures at the Collège de france to studies of governmentality : an introduction.Ulrich Bröckling, Susanne Krasmann & Thomas Lemke - 2011 - In Ulrich Bröckling, Susanne Krasmann & Thomas Lemke (eds.), Governmentality: current issues and future challenges. New York: Routledge. pp. 1.
  35.  12
    The Construction of the Internal Market.Catherine Barnard - 2015 - In Dennis Patterson (ed.), A Companion to European Union Law and International Law. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 193–204.
    This chapter first outlines the three main phases of the development of the single market, together with the impetus and philosophy underpinning it. The idea behind the original European Economic Community (EEC) Treaty was simple: barriers to free movement of goods, persons, services, and capital would be removed through the use of treaty provisions that prohibited obstacles to free movement. One aspects of the single market have been reformed following the crisis, notably financial services. The legislature is increasingly moving towards (...)
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  36.  5
    One Day on Earth: A Third Eye View.Catherine Lazers Bauer - 1999 - Cosmic Concepts.
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  37.  22
    Après la catastrophe La pensée d'Emil Fackenheim.Catherine Chalier - 1985 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 90 (3):342 - 361.
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  38.  30
    Terrarum Orbi Documentum: Augustine, Camillus, and Learning from History.Catherine Conybeare - 1999 - Augustinian Studies 30 (2):59-74.
  39. Rabbinic Texts and the History of Late-Roman Palestine.Hezser Catherine - 2011
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  40. Topography in the Timaeus: Plato and Augustine on Mankind's Place in the Natural World.Catherine Osborne - 1988 - Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 34:104-111.
    I consider the relation between the shape or structure of the world and the moral position occupied by human beings, and show that a cosmology that places earth at the centre does not give the centre of the universe pride of place but the lowest place, so any reluctance to move the earth from the centre of the universe was not due to thinking that humans must be in the most important position. From Plato on, the surface of the earth (...)
     
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  41. The explanation of consciousness and the interpretation of philosophical texts.Catherine Wilson - 2010 - In Peter K. Machamer & Gereon Wolters (eds.), Interpretation: Ways of Thinking About the Sciences and the Arts. Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
     
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  42.  24
    Philosophies mathématiques.Catherine Paoletti, Yves André, Charles Alunni & Carlos Lobo - 2015 - Revue de Synthèse 136 (1-2):281-298.
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  43. Eine Neubestimmung der Ästhetik. Goodmans epistemische Wende.Catherine Z. Elgin - 2005 - In Nelson Goodman, Jakob Steinbrenner, Oliver R. Scholz & Gerhard Ernst (eds.), Symbole, Systeme, Welten: Studien zur Philosophie Nelson Goodmans. Heidelberg: Synchron.
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  44.  16
    Representation, Comprehension, and Competence.Catherine Elgin - 1984 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 51.
  45.  22
    L'Édit de Nantes et l'indifférence hollandaise.Catherine Secretan - 2005 - Revue de Synthèse 126 (1):15-32.
    La promulgation de l'édit de Nantes, en 1598, a-t-elle connu aux Pays-Bas un écho comparable à celui provoqué par la Révocation de ce même édit, un siècle plus tard? Une première enquête menée à partir de documents directement liés aux événements de l'époque (correspondances d'hommes politiques, pamphlets, actes de synodes, etc.) ne livre aucun témoignage révélateur d'un intérêt néerlandais pour le règlement français du biconfessionnalisme Les hypothèses avancées dans cet article pour expliquer ce silence se fondent sur les déplacements des (...)
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  46.  31
    Genetic screening and selfhood.Catherine Mills - 2008 - Australian Feminist Studies 23 (55):43--55.
  47.  19
    The Role of Dynamic Social Norms in Promoting the Internalization of Sportspersonship Behaviors and Values and Psychological Well-Being in Ice Hockey.Catherine E. Amiot & Frederik Skerlj - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Conducted among parents of young ice hockey players, this field experiment tested if making salient increasingly popular social norms that promote sportspersonship, learning, and having fun in sports, increases parents’ own self-determined endorsement of these behaviors and values, improves their psychological well-being, and impacts on their children’s on-ice behaviors. Hockey parents were randomly assigned to the experimental condition vs. control condition. Parents’ motivations for encouraging their child to learn and to have fun in hockey were then assessed. Score sheets for (...)
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  48. Lorraine Code, Sheila Mullett and Christine Overall, eds., Feminist Perspectives: Philosophical Essays on Method and Morals Reviewed by.Catherine Bray - 1989 - Philosophy in Review 9 (4):142-145.
  49. The Importance of "Mere Conception" in David Hume's Theory of Belief.Catherine Elaine Kemp - 1995 - Dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook
    Belief is a species of mere conception, and is modifiable, rather than bivalent (believing or disbelieving). The attendant-impression theory of transformation of conception into belief expresses the moral dimension of one and the same thing, of which the manner-of-conception (without attendant impression) theory of the transformation refers to the epistemic dimension of that same thing. These two aspects of the transformation of conception into belief point to an ambiguity in Hume's use of the term IDEA: as act and as content. (...)
     
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  50. (1 other version)Liang Shuming and the Populist Alternative in China.Catherine Lynch - 1989 - Dissertation, The University of Wisconsin - Madison
    This study contributes to the definition of populism as a significant current of thought in modern China through a focus on the development of the populist ideas of Liang Shuming . It provides an avenue to understanding a major thinker and social activist of modern China. At the same time, through a comparison with Russian Narodism, it develops populism as a general sociohistorical concept, denoting a constellation of ideas which emerges in a specific historical environment and includes a concern with (...)
     
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