Results for 'Daniel T. Larose'

981 found
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  1.  17
    Constrained Statistical Decisions in Evolving Environments.Elijah Gaioni, Dipak K. Dey & Daniel T. Larose - 2009 - Journal of Intelligent Systems 18 (3):171-192.
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  2.  24
    The Premotor theory of attention: time to move on?Daniel T. Smith & Thomas Schenk - 2012 - Neuropsychologia 50 (6):1104-14.
    Spatial attention and eye-movements are tightly coupled, but the precise nature of this coupling is controversial. The influential but controversial Premotor theory of attention makes four specific predictions about the relationship between motor preparation and spatial attention. Firstly, spatial attention and motor preparation use the same neural substrates. Secondly, spatial attention is functionally equivalent to planning goal directed actions such as eye-movements (i.e. planning an action is both necessary and sufficient for a shift of spatial attention). Thirdly, planning a goal (...)
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  3.  24
    Rorty, Dewey, and truth.Daniel T. Primozic - 1989 - Southwest Philosophical Studies 11.
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  4.  5
    A Difference in Degree, Not Kind: Moral Stress, Distress, and Injury.Daniel T. Kim, Wayne Shelton & Bharat Ranganathan - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (12):57-59.
    Moral distress is complex and has received varied definitions, and its distinctiveness is consequently often unclear when placed alongside related concepts like moral injury or moral stress. Buchbi...
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  5.  31
    The Influence of Parental Control and Parent-Child Relational Qualities on Adolescent Internet Addiction: A 3-Year Longitudinal Study in Hong Kong.Daniel T. L. Shek, Xiaoqin Zhu & Cecilia M. S. Ma - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:355298.
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  6. The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Consumption and Consumer Studies.Daniel T. Cook & J. Michael Ryan (eds.) - 2015 - Wiley-Blackwell.
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  7. Memory for centrally attended changing objects in an incidental real-world change detection paradigm.Daniel T. Levin, Daniel J. Simons, Bonnie L. Angelone & Christopher Chabris - 2002 - British Journal of Psychology 93:289-302.
  8. A new perspective for evaluating innovative science programs.Daniel T. Hickey & Steven J. Zuiker - 2003 - Science Education 87 (4):539-563.
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  9. The unity of the virtues in Plato's protagoras and laches.Daniel T. Devereux - 1992 - Philosophical Review 101 (4):765-789.
    Plato's "laches" is an investigation into the nature of courage with the intention of demonstrating the difficulty of singling out one virtue, namely courage, and defining it separately from the other cardinal virtues such as bravery, wisdom, justice, temperance, and piety. As the dialogue proceeds it becomes evident that socrates not only relates courage with the battlefield, but also with other spheres of life. Of special interest is his reference of being courageous regarding desires and pleasures where an overlap of (...)
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  10.  22
    The Incomplete Tyranny of Dynamic Stimuli: Gaze Similarity Predicts Response Similarity in Screen‐Captured Instructional Videos.Daniel T. Levin, Jorge A. Salas, Anna M. Wright, Adrianne E. Seiffert, Kelly E. Carter & Joshua W. Little - 2021 - Cognitive Science 45 (6):e12984.
    Although eye tracking has been used extensively to assess cognitions for static stimuli, recent research suggests that the link between gaze and cognition may be more tenuous for dynamic stimuli such as videos. Part of the difficulty in convincingly linking gaze with cognition is that in dynamic stimuli, gaze position is strongly influenced by exogenous cues such as object motion. However, tests of the gaze‐cognition link in dynamic stimuli have been done on only a limited range of stimuli often characterized (...)
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  11. Nature and Teaching in Plato's "Meno".Daniel T. Devereux - 1978 - Phronesis 23 (2):118 - 126.
  12. Patterned by Grace: How Liturgy Shapes Us.Daniel T. Benedict - 2007
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  13.  66
    False predictions about the detectability of visual changes: The role of beliefs about attention, memory, and the continuity of attended objects in causing change blindness blindness.Daniel T. Levin, Sarah B. Drivdahl, Nausheen Momen & Melissa R. Beck - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (4):507-527.
    Recently, a number of experiments have emphasized the degree to which subjects fail to detect large changes in visual scenes. This finding, referred to as “change blindness,” is often considered surprising because many people have the intuition that such changes should be easy to detect. Levin, Momen, Drivdahl, and Simons documented this intuition by showing that the majority of subjects believe they would notice changes that are actually very rarely detected. Thus subjects exhibit a metacognitive error we refer to as (...)
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  14.  12
    Introduction: perspectives on the ancient philosophy of sport.Daniel T. Durbin - 2020 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 47 (3):327-329.
    This brief article introduces the special section on the ancient philosophy of sport. The article introduces the various papers, explains the background of the project and thanks the appropriate pa...
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  15.  23
    Corporate Beneficence and COVID-19.Daniel T. Ostas & Gastón de los Reyes - 2021 - Journal of Human Values 27 (1):15-26.
    This article explores the motives underlying corporate responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The analysis begins with Thomas Dunfee’s Statement of Minimum Moral Obligation (SMMO), which specifies, more precisely than any other contribution to the business ethics canon, the level of corporate beneficence required during a pandemic. The analysis then turns to Milton Friedman’s neoliberal understanding of human nature, critically contrasting it with the notion of stoic virtue that informs the works of Adam Smith. Friedman contends that beneficence should play no (...)
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  16.  62
    Change blindness blindness as visual metacognition.Daniel T. Levin - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (5-6):111-30.
    Many experiments have demonstrated that people fail to detect seemingly large visual changes in their environment. Despite these failures, most people confidently predict that they would see changes that are actually almost impossible to see. Therefore, in at least some situations visual experience is demonstrably not what people think it is. This paper describes a line of research suggesting that overconfidence about change detection reflects a deeper metacognitive error founded on beliefs about attention and the role of meaning as a (...)
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  17.  6
    Moral Distress and the Intrapsychic Hazards of Medical Practice.Daniel T. Kim - 2024 - In Bharat Ranganathan & Caroline Anglim (eds.), Religion and Social Criticism: Tradition, Method, and Values. Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 139-162.
    In this chapter, I will consider Miller’s reading of Augustine on the emotions that should arise in a person who, in pursuing justifiable ends, causes morally undesirable eventualities. Drawing on Miller’s article “Augustine, Moral Luck, and the Ethics of Regret and Shame,” I focus on the concept of what he calls “intrapsychic luck” and argue that it offers a new, further humanizing insight into discourses on moral distress in modern medicine. Moral distress, which was first coined in the nursing literature (...)
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  18.  25
    The Impact of Positive Youth Development Attributes and Life Satisfaction on Academic Well-Being: A Longitudinal Mediation Study.Daniel T. L. Shek & Wenyu Chai - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  19.  4
    Concerning Vatican Council II.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):174-206.
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  20.  10
    Experience of the Spirit.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):430-456.
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  21.  7
    Faith and Ministry.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):514-540.
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  22.  6
    Writings of 1965-1967, 1.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):253-275.
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  23.  61
    Aristotle on the Perfect Life.Daniel T. Devereux - 1997 - Philosophical Review 106 (3):475.
    Aristotle on the Perfect Life may be viewed as part of such a detailed study. In this book, Kenny discusses a series of topics relating to the central Aristotelian concept of the supreme good, and compares the treatment of these topics in the two treatises. He devotes separate discussions to the notions of finality, perfection, and self-sufficiency as attributes of the supreme good. He also considers the way in which friendship and good fortune relate to happiness. A theme which recurs (...)
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  24.  26
    Is the True Self God at Alcibiades 133c?Daniel T. Sheffler - 2022 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 17 (2):178-189.
    Throughout the Platonic tradition, one encounters the idea that the true self of each person is, at bottom, numerically identical to a singular reality and hence that the distinction between one person’s true self and another’s is either illusory or derivative in some way. I label this idea the Strong Identity Thesis. While several passages might be cited to locate this thesis in the Platonic dialogues themselves, the striking culmination of the First Alcibiades is especially suggestive. In this paper, however, (...)
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  25. Inherence and Primary Substance in Aristotle’s Categories.Daniel T. Devereux - 1992 - Ancient Philosophy 12 (1):113-131.
  26.  54
    What Is It Like to Be Someone Else?Daniel T. Linger - 2010 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 38 (2):205-229.
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  27.  22
    Has Culture Theory Lost Its Minds?Daniel T. Linger - 1994 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 22 (3):284-315.
  28. Particular and Universal in Aristotle's Conception of Practical Knowledge.Daniel T. Devereux - 1986 - Review of Metaphysics 39 (3):483 - 504.
    ARISTOTLE thought his predecessors in general, and Plato in particular, made a serious mistake in failing to mark the boundaries separating the different sciences and branches of philosophical inquiry. All of them failed to grasp the fundamental distinction between practical and theoretical knowledge. Ethics and politics, the prime examples of practical knowledge, differ from such theoretical sciences as metaphysics and physics not only in their aims but in their methods and subject matter as well. Indeed, Aristotle thinks the differences are (...)
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  29.  20
    Infinite combinatorics plain and simple.Dániel T. Soukup & Lajos Soukup - 2018 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 83 (3):1247-1281.
    We explore a general method based on trees of elementary submodels in order to present highly simplified proofs to numerous results in infinite combinatorics. While countable elementary submodels have been employed in such settings already, we significantly broaden this framework by developing the corresponding technique for countably closed models of size continuum. The applications range from various theorems on paradoxical decompositions of the plane, to coloring sparse set systems, results on graph chromatic number and constructions from point-set topology. Our main (...)
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  30.  53
    Ethics of contract pricing.Daniel T. Ostas - 1992 - Journal of Business Ethics 11 (2):137 - 145.
    This study explores the legal and ethical issues associated with contract pricing. In particular, it focuses on a set of legal precedents which have addressed the enforceability of allegedly unfair contract prices. Traditionally, the common law has emphasized the consent of the parties. If the parties consented to a given price; it is presumptively fair and enforceable. The cases reviewed in this study, however, seem to draw upon alternative moral conceptions of fairness not normally associated with the common law. The (...)
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  31.  24
    Divus Dionysius: Authority, Self, and Society in John Colet's Reading of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy.Daniel T. Lochman - 2007 - Journal of the History of Ideas 68 (1):1-34.
    As a reader of Dionysius the Areopagite’s Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, John Colet encountered a theology, liturgy, and social framework that seemed absent from the rites and doctrines of the Tudor church. Dionysius’s orderly ecclesia embodied a social perfection that Colet idealized as a Christian "republic." He reacted to ecclesiastical lapses from this model by writing with passionate indignation and, in public venues, by pronouncing bold challenges to clerical misbehavior. Writing for a small audience and adhering to an increasingly doubted authority, Colet (...)
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  32.  10
    Concern for the Church.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):541-559.
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  33.  7
    Jesus, Man, and the Church.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):457-480.
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  34.  12
    Theology, Anthropology, Christology.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):364-383.
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  35.  22
    Economic Recession Affects Gambling Participation But Not Problematic Gambling: Results from a Population-Based Follow-up Study.Daniel T. Olason, Tobias Hayer, Gerhard Meyer & Tim Brosowski - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  36. Later Writings.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):129-173.
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  37.  20
    Clinician Moral Distress: Toward an Ethics of Agent‐Regret.Daniel T. Kim, Wayne Shelton & Megan K. Applewhite - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (6):40-53.
    Moral distress names a widely discussed and concerning clinician experience. Yet the precise nature of the distress and the appropriate practical response to it remain unclear. Clinicians speak of their moral distress in terms of guilt, regret, anger, or other distressing emotions, and they often invoke them interchangeably. But these emotions are distinct, and they are not all equally fitting in the same circumstances. This indicates a problematic ambiguity in the moral distress concept that obscures its distinctiveness, its relevant circumstances, (...)
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  38. Change blindness blindness: The metacognitive error of overestimating change-detection ability.Daniel T. Levin, Nausheen Momen, Sarah B. Drivdahl & Daniel J. Simons - 2000 - Visual Cognition 7 (1):397-412.
  39.  99
    Further Theology of the Spiritual Life 1.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):207-231.
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  40.  80
    Science and Christian Faith.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):560-592.
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  41.  19
    Reciprocal Relationships Between Moral Competence and Externalizing Behavior in Junior Secondary Students: A Longitudinal Study in Hong Kong.Daniel T. L. Shek & Xiaoqin Zhu - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:428801.
    Defining moral competence using a virtue approach, this longitudinal study examined the prospective relationships between moral competence and externalizing behavior indexed by delinquency and intention to engage in problem behavior in a large and representative sample of Hong Kong Chinese adolescents. Starting from the 2009–2010 academic year, Grade 7 students in 28 randomly selected secondary schools in Hong Kong were invited to join a longitudinal study, which surveyed participating students annually during the high school years. The current study used data (...)
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  42.  55
    Final Writings.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):616-638.
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  43. No pause for a brief disruption: Failures of visual awareness during ongoing events.Daniel T. Levin & D. Alexander Varakin - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (2):363-372.
    Past research has repeatedly documented the close relationship between visual attention and awareness. Most recently, research exploring change blindness, inattentional blindness, repetition blindness, and the attentional blink has converged on the conclusion that attention to one aspect of a scene or event may lead to a highly circumscribed awareness of only the specific information attended, while other information, even that which is spatially or temporally nearby can go completely unnoticed. In the present report, we extend these observations to the dynamic (...)
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  44.  67
    Protagoras on courage and knowledge: "Protagoras" 351 a–b.Daniel T. Devereux - 1975 - Apeiron 9 (2):37-39.
  45.  54
    Concepts about agency constrain beliefs about visual experience.Daniel T. Levin - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2):875-888.
    Recent research exploring phenomena such as change blindness, inattentional blindness, attentional blink and repetition blindness has revealed a number of counterintuitive ways in which apparently salient visual stimuli often go unnoticed. In fact, large majorities of subjects sometimes predict that they would detect visual changes that actually are rarely noticed, suggesting that people have strong beliefs about visual experience that are demonstrably incorrect. However, for other kinds of visual metacognition, such as picture memory, people underpredict performance. This paper describes two (...)
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  46.  36
    Optimistic metacognitive judgments predict poor performance in relatively complex visual tasks.Daniel T. Levin, Gautam Biswas, Joeseph S. Lappin, Marian Rushdy & Adriane E. Seiffert - 2019 - Consciousness and Cognition 74 (C):102781.
  47.  8
    More Recent Writings.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):96-128.
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  48.  23
    Law abidance leadership education for university students in Hong Kong: Post-lecture evaluation.Daniel T. L. Shek, Diya Dou, Xiaoqin Zhu & Xiang Li - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Law abidance is very important for effective leaders. Without law abidance, abuse of power and corruption would easily happen, which would eventually erode organizational health. To promote law abidance leadership in university students in Hong Kong, we developed a law abidance leadership program with 3 h of face-to-face lecture and 7 h of self-study of materials disturbed to students. To understand students’ perception of the 3-h lecture, we conducted a post-lecture evaluation study using a 26-item measure. Results showed that the (...)
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  49.  7
    God and Revelation.Daniel T. Pekarske - 2002 - Philosophy and Theology 14 (1-2):481-513.
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  50.  57
    Socrates' first city in the "republic".Daniel T. Devereux - 1979 - Apeiron 13 (1):36 - 40.
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