Results for 'Kylie Hesketh'

104 found
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  1.  16
    Epidemiology of Obesity in Children and Adolescents in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Region.Kylie Hesketh, Karen Campbell & Rachael Taylor - 2011 - In Luis A. Moreno, Iris Pigeot & Wolfgang Ahrens, Epidemiology of Obesity in Children and Adolescents: Prevalence and Etiology. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 111--125.
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  2.  77
    Synaesthesia is associated with enhanced, self-rated visual imagery.Kylie J. Barnett & Fiona N. Newell - 2008 - Consciousness and Cognition 17 (3):1032-1039.
    Although the condition known as synaesthesia is currently undergoing a scientific resurgence, to date the literature has largely focused on the heterogeneous nature of synaesthesia across individuals. In order to provide a better understanding of synaesthesia, however, general characteristics need to be investigated. Synaesthetic experiences are often described as occurring ‘internally’ or in the ‘mind’s eye’, which is remarkably similar to how we would describe our experience of visual mental imagery. We assessed the role of visual imagery in synaesthesia by (...)
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  3. Ethical Leadership as a Balance Between Opposing Neural Networks.Kylie C. Rochford, Anthony I. Jack, Richard E. Boyatzis & Shannon E. French - 2017 - Journal of Business Ethics 144 (4):755-770.
    In this article, we explore the implications of opposing domains theory for developing ethical leaders. Opposing domains theory highlights a neurological tension between analytic reasoning and socioemotional reasoning. Specifically, when we engage in analytic reasoning, we suppress our ability to engage in socioemotional reasoning and vice versa. In this article, we bring together the domains of neuroscience, psychology, and ethics, to inform our theorizing around ethical leadership. We propose that a key issue for ethical leadership is achieving a healthy balance (...)
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  4.  74
    An empirical investigation of the ethics position questionnaire in the people's republic of china.Kylie Redfern - 2004 - Journal of Business Ethics 50 (3):199-210.
    While many studies have investigated the ethical perceptions, ideologies and value systems of the Chinese, few studies have focused on mainland China, and even fewer have examined regional differences within China. This study examines the factor structure of Forsyth's (1980) Ethics Position Questionnaire in a sample of managers from the PRC. According to Forsyth, individual differences in Relativism and Idealism influence judgements of moral issues (Forsyth, 1980). In a sample of 115 managers, results show that two similar constructs to those (...)
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  5. Indigenous family violence & the nter intervention: Public policy vs evidence.Kylie Cripps - 2008 - Nexus 20 (3):18.
     
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  6.  74
    Familial patterns and the origins of individual differences in synaesthesia.Kylie J. Barnett, Ciara Finucane, Julian E. Asher, Gary Bargary, Aiden P. Corvin, Fiona N. Newell & Kevin J. Mitchell - 2008 - Cognition 106 (2):871-893.
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  7.  20
    Reward Responsiveness and Inhibition Traits Differentially Predict Economic Biases in Gain and Loss Contexts.Kylie N. Fernandez & Nichole R. Lighthall - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  8.  12
    A comment on diffusion in sodium.R. V. Hesketh - 1971 - Philosophical Magazine 24 (191):1233-1237.
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  9. Evolution, ethics, and the metaphysical society, 1869-1875.Ian Hesketh - 2019 - In Catherine Marshall, Bernard V. Lightman & Richard England, The Metaphysical Society (1869-1880): intellectual life in mid-Victorian England. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
     
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  10. Imagining the Darwinian revolution: historical narratives of evolution from the nineteenth century to the present.Ian Hesketh (ed.) - 2022 - Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  11.  12
    The loop size distribution in neutron irradiated copper.R. V. Hesketh - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (87):487-491.
  12.  32
    The mechanisms of irradiation creep in graphite.R. V. Hesketh - 1965 - Philosophical Magazine 11 (113):917-927.
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  13.  22
    The thermal annealing of heavy ion damage in copper.R. V. Hesketh & G. K. Rickards - 1966 - Philosophical Magazine 13 (126):1105-1111.
  14.  24
    Relationship between pre‐discharge occupational therapy home assessment and prevalence of post‐discharge falls.Kylie Johnston, Sarah Barras & Karen Grimmer-Somers - 2010 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 16 (6):1333-1339.
  15.  44
    Bilateral disadvantage: Lack of interhemispheric cooperation in schizophrenia.Kylie J. Barnett, Ian J. Kirk & Michael C. Corballis - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (2):436-444.
    Language anomalies and left-hemisphere dysfunction are commonly reported in schizophrenia. Additional evidence also suggests differences in the integration of information between the hemispheres. Bilateral gain is the increase in accuracy and decrease in latency that occurs when identical information is presented simultaneously to both hemispheres. This study measured bilateral gain in controls and individuals with schizophrenia using a lexical-decision task where word or non-word judgements were made to letter strings presented in the left visual field , right visual field or (...)
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  16.  27
    The New Museum.Kylie Message - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):603-606.
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  17.  11
    Tom Paine, friend of mankind.Hesketh Pearson - 1937 - London,: Harper & Brothers.
  18.  33
    The shared and unique genetic relationship between mental well-being, depression and anxiety symptoms and cognitive function in healthy twins.Kylie M. Routledge, Karen L. O. Burton, Leanne M. Williams, Anthony Harris, Peter R. Schofield, C. Richard Clark & Justine M. Gatt - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (7):1465-1479.
    Alterations to cognitive function are often reported with depression and anxiety symptoms, yet few studies have examined the same associations with mental well-being. This study examined the association between mental well-being, depression and anxiety symptoms and cognitive function in 1502 healthy adult monozygotic and dizygotic twins, and the shared/unique contribution of genetic and environmental variance. Using linear mixed models, mental well-being was positively associated with sustained attention, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, motor coordination and working memory, whereas depression and anxiety symptoms were (...)
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  19.  14
    Trainability of novel person recognition based on brief exposure to form and motion cues.Kylie Ann Steel, Rachel A. Robbins & Patti Nijhuis - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Fast and accurate recognition of teammates is crucial in contexts as varied as fast-moving sports, the military, and law enforcement engagements; misrecognition can result in lost scoring opportunities in sport or friendly fire in combat contexts. Initial studies on teammate recognition in sport suggests that athletes are adept at this perceptual ability but still susceptible to errors. The purpose of the current proof-of-concept study was to explore the trainability of teammate recognition from very brief exposure to vision of the whole-body (...)
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  20.  44
    Fronto-temporal white matter connectivity predicts reversal learning errors.Kylie H. Alm, Tyler Rolheiser, Feroze B. Mohamed & Ingrid R. Olson - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  21.  16
    Citizenship, Identity, Blood Donation.Kylie Valentine - 2005 - Body and Society 11 (2):113-128.
    Blood donation is broadly understood to be a public and altruistic act. However, new theories of citizenship and subjectivity suggest that the individual and embodied qualities of blood also need to be taken into account when examining donation. This article examines the relationship between public and private elements of blood donation. Donating blood is not an entirely public act, and does not provide an entirely impersonal resource. The embodied self is integral to public practices, and, equally, public domains are important (...)
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  22. Commanding and Controlling Protest Crowds.Kylie Bourne - 2011 - Critical Horizons 12 (2):189-210.
    Police and authorities have increasingly adopted "command and control" strategies to the policing of intentionally peaceful protest crowds. These strategies work to close down access to a physical space in which a protest is to occur and thus in turn they effectively restrict the capacity of a citizen to engage in the democratic right of peaceful protest.
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  23.  38
    Diagnosing froude's disease: Boundary work and the discipline of history in late‐victorian Britain.Ian Hesketh - 2008 - History and Theory 47 (3):373-395.
    Historians looking to make history a professional discipline of study in Victorian Britain believed they had to establish firm boundaries demarcating history from other literary disciplines. James Anthony Froude ignored such boundaries. The popularity of his historical narratives was a constant reminder of the continued existence of a supposedly overturned phase of historiography in which the historian was also a man of letters, transcending the boundary separating fact from fiction and literature from history. Just as professionalizing historians were constructing a (...)
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  24.  23
    Experimental Pain Differentially Affects Cortical Involvement In Force And Position Control Tasks.Tucker Kylie, Poortvliet Peter, Scott Dion, Sowman Paul, Finnigan Simon & Hodges Paul - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  25.  13
    Is Mixed Practice More Effective than Physical Practice Alone for the Acquisition of Non-dominant Side Kicking Performance?Kylie A. Steel & Eathan Ellem - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  26.  19
    Down under Darwin: Australasian perspectives on Darwin Studies.Ian Hesketh, Ruth Barton & Evelleen Richards - 2024 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 103 (C):69-76.
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  27.  35
    Counterfactuals and history: Contingency and convergence in histories of science and life.Ian Hesketh - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 58:41-48.
  28.  21
    An Existential Phenomenology of Addiction, written by Anna Westin.Kylie M. Burdge - 2021 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 52 (1):119-125.
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  29.  37
    Graffiti as Art as Language: The Logic of a Modern Language.Kylie I. Casino - 2019 - Philosophy Study 9 (5).
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  30.  25
    Darwinian we are not: Counterfactualism as the natural course of history.Ian Hesketh - 2014 - History and Theory 53 (2):295-303.
    This article considers Peter Bowler's recent contribution to the genre of counterfactual history as exemplifying a “restrained” counterfactual framework, one that must downplay the role of contingency in the historical process in order to present what Bowler calls a more “natural course” of historical development. This restrained counterfactual methodology is discussed with reference to analogous debates within evolutionary science about the competing roles of contingency and convergence in the history of life, along with recent work done within the humanities about (...)
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  31.  51
    The role of the positive emotional attractor in vision and shared vision: toward effective leadership, relationships, and engagement.Richard E. Boyatzis, Kylie Rochford & Scott N. Taylor - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  32.  80
    Antagonistic neural networks underlying differentiated leadership roles.Richard E. Boyatzis, Kylie Rochford & Anthony I. Jack - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  33.  45
    The Recurrence of the Evolutionary Epic.Ian Hesketh - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (2):196-219.
    _ Source: _Volume 9, Issue 2, pp 196 - 219 In his 1978 On Human Nature, Edward Wilson defined the evolutionary epic as the scientific story of all life, a linear narrative beginning with the big bang and ending with the story of human history. Since that time several popular science writers have attempted to write that story of life producing such titles as The Universe Story and The Epic of Evolution. Historians have also gotten into the act under the (...)
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  34.  22
    Technologies of the Scientific Self: John Tyndall and His Journal.Ian Hesketh - 2019 - Isis 110 (3):460-482.
    This essay examines the physicist John Tyndall’s journal writing in the mid-nineteenth century and focuses on how Tyndall used his journal during a series of transitions that occurred when he was a young man: when he went from being a surveyor to a public school instructor and then from a Ph.D. student and budding experimenter in Germany to Professor of Natural Philosophy at the Royal Institution in London. As well as providing insight into these various transitions, the journal more importantly (...)
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  35.  20
    A possible mechanism of irradiation creep and its reference to uranium.R. V. Hesketh - 1962 - Philosophical Magazine 7 (80):1417-1420.
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  36.  19
    A transient irradiation creep in non-fissile metals.R. V. Hesketh - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (92):1321-1333.
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  37.  24
    The formation of dislocation loops in copper during neutron irradiation.R. V. Hesketh - 1962 - Philosophical Magazine 7 (75):519-521.
  38.  55
    The Aesthetics of Scale.Ian Hesketh & Knox Peden - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (2):169-175.
  39.  10
    The photo creation and destruction of F centres.R. V. Hesketh - 1959 - Philosophical Magazine 4 (37):114-125.
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  40.  19
    Gillian Beer. Alice in Space: The Sideways Victorian World of Lewis Carroll. ix + 296 pp., figs., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2016. $35. [REVIEW]Ian Hesketh - 2018 - Isis 109 (1):189-191.
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  41.  11
    Review of Murōji: Rearranging Art and History at a Japanese Buddhist Temple by Sherry D. Fowler. [REVIEW]William Hesketh - 2007 - Buddhist Studies Review 24 (1):125-128.
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  42.  18
    Feminist theory and science: Rosi Braidotti, Transpositions: On Nomadic Ethics. Cambridge and Malden, MA: Polity, 2006. 320 pp. (incl. index). ISBN 9780745635965 (pbk) Elizabeth Grosz, Time Travels: Feminism, Nature, Power. Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2005. 272 pp. (incl. index). ISBN 0—8223—3566—2 (pbk) Elizabeth A. Wilson, Psychosomatic: Feminism and the Neurological Body. Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2004. 125 pp. (incl. index). ISBN 0—8223—3365—1 (pbk). [REVIEW]Kylie Valentine - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (3):355-365.
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  43.  76
    Consideration of the Role of Guanxi in the Ethical Judgments of Chinese Managers.Cynthia Ho & Kylie A. Redfern - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 96 (2):207 - 221.
    The importance of personal connections and relationships, or guanxi when doing business with the Chinese is widely acknowledged amongst Western academics and business managers alike. However, aspects of guanxi-rehted behaviours in the workplace are often misunderstood by Westerners with some going so far as to equate guanxi with forms of corruption. This study extends earlier study of Tan and Snell: 2002, Journal of Business Ethics 41 (December), 361-384) in its investigation of the underlying modes of moral reasoning in ethical decisions (...)
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  44.  34
    John Robert Seeley, Natural Religion, and the Victorian Conflict between Science and Religion.Ian Hesketh - 2018 - Journal of the History of Ideas 79 (2):309-329.
    This essay examines the publishing and reception of J. R. Seeley’s Natural Religion, a book that sought to bring about a reconciliation between science and religion. While Natural Religion has long been overlooked, it is argued that its reception gives us insight into changing views about the relationship between science and religion in the late Victorian period. The essay also explores how the reception of the book was conditioned by its bibliographic lineage as it was signed not by Seeley, but (...)
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  45.  22
    Drugs, Brains and Other Subalterns: Public Debate and the New Materialist Politics of Addiction.Mats Ekendahl, Kylie Valentine & Suzanne Fraser - 2018 - Body and Society 24 (4):58-86.
    Over the last few decades feminists, science and technology studies scholars and others have grappled with how to take materiality into account in understanding social practices, subjectivity and events. One key area for these debates has been drug use and addiction. At the same time, neuroscientific accounts of drug use and addiction have also arisen. This development has attracted criticism as simplistically reinstating material determinism. In this article we draw on 80 interviews with health professionals directly involved in drug-related public (...)
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  46. Episodic knowledge and implicit learning.A. Neal & B. Hesketh - 1997 - Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 4:24-37.
  47.  14
    Mixed populations of vacancy and interstitial precipitates.R. V. Hesketh & G. K. Rickards - 1966 - Philosophical Magazine 13 (125):1069-1071.
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  48.  24
    Introduction: Evolution and historical explanation.Peter Harrison & Ian Hesketh - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 58:1-7.
  49.  60
    Prediction in Social Science — The Case of Research on the Human Resource Management-Organisational Performance Link.Steve Fleetwood & Anthony Hesketh - 2006 - Journal of Critical Realism 5 (2):228-250.
    Despite inroads made by critical realism against the ‘scientific method’ in social science, the latter remains strong in subject-areas like human resource management. One argument for the alleged superiority of the scientific method lies in the taken-for-granted belief that it alone can formulate empirically testable predictions. Many of those who employ the scientific method are, however, confused about the way they understand and practice prediction. This paper takes as a case study empirical research on the alleged empirical association between human (...)
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  50.  32
    A good Darwinian? Winwood Reade and the making of a late Victorian evolutionary epic.Ian Hesketh - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 51:44-52.
    In 1871 the travel writer and anthropologist W. Winwood Reade (1838–1875) was inspired by his correspondence with Darwin to turn his narrow ethnological research on West African tribes into the broadest history imaginable, one that would show Darwin's great principle of natural selection at work throughout the evolutionary history of humanity, stretching back to the origins of the universe itself. But when Martyrdom of Man was published in 1872, Reade confessed that Darwin would not likely find him a very good (...)
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