Results for 'L. Douglas Kiel'

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  1. Chaos in social systems: assessment and relevance.L. Douglas Kiel - 2005 - In Andreas Wimmer & Reinhart Kössler (eds.), Understanding change: models, methodologies, and metaphors. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 51--58.
     
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  2.  28
    Acquiring Emptiness: Interpreting Nāgārjuna’s MMK 24:18.Douglas L. - 2010 - Philosophy East and West 60 (1):40-64.
  3.  48
    Descriptive behaviorism versus cognitive theory in verbal operant conditioning.Charles D. Spielberger & L. Douglas DeNike - 1966 - Psychological Review 73 (4):306-326.
  4.  26
    The temporal relationship between awareness and performance in verbal conditioning.L. Douglas Denike - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 68 (6):521.
  5.  68
    Neurointerventions in Criminal Justice: On the Scope of the Moral Right to Bodily Integrity.G. Meynen, S. Ligthart, L. Forsberg, T. Douglas & V. Tesink - 2023 - Neuroethics 16 (3):1-11.
    There is growing interest in the use of neurointerventions to reduce the risk that criminal offenders will reoffend. Commentators have raised several ethical concerns regarding this practice. One prominent concern is that, when imposed without the offender’s valid consent, neurointerventions might infringe offenders’ right to bodily integrity. While it is commonly held that we possess a moral right to bodily integrity, the extent to which this right would protect against such neurointerventions is as-yet unclear. In this paper, we will assess (...)
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  6.  92
    Aidōs: The Psychology and Ethics of Honour and Shame in Ancient Greek Literature.Douglas L. Cairns - 1993 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Introduction; Aidos in Homer; From Hesiod to the Fifth Century; Aeschylus; Sophocles; Euripides; The Sophists, Plato, and Aristotle; References; Glossary; Index of Principal Passages; General Index.
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  7.  24
    Who's Asking?: Native Science, Western Science, and Science Education.Douglas L. Medin & Megan Bang - 2014 - MIT Press.
    Analysis and case studies show that including different orientations toward the natural world makes for more effective scientific practice and science education.
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  8.  54
    Folkbiology.Douglas L. Medin & Scott Atran (eds.) - 1999 - MIT Press.
    This book takes an interdisciplinary approach, bringing together the work of researchers in anthropology, cognitive and developmental psychology, biology, and ...
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  9.  29
    Respects for similarity.Douglas L. Medin, Robert L. Goldstone & Dedre Gentner - 1993 - Psychological Review 100 (2):254-278.
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  10.  23
    Processing implicit and explicit representations.Douglas L. Nelson, Thomas A. Schreiber & Cathy L. McEvoy - 1992 - Psychological Review 99 (2):322-348.
  11.  69
    Concepts and categories: Memory, meaning, and metaphysics.Douglas L. Medin & Lance J. Rips - 2005 - In K. Holyoak & B. Morrison (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of thinking and reasoning. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 37--72.
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  12.  15
    1 6 Twenty-Five Years of Learning and Memory: Was the Cognitive Revolution a Mistake?Douglas L. Hintzman - 1993 - In David E. Meyer & Sylvan Kornblum (eds.), Attention and Performance XIV: Synergies in Experimental Psychology, Artificial Intelligence, and Cognitive Neuroscience. MIT Press. pp. 14--359.
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  13.  45
    Jin Y. Park in Conversation with Erin McCarthy, Leah Kalmanson, Douglas L. Berger, and Mark A. Nathan.Douglas L. Berger, Leah Kalmanson, Erin McCarthy, Mark A. Nathan & Jin Y. Park - 2020 - Journal of World Philosophies 5 (2):155-182.
    These essays engage Jin Y. Park’s recent translation of the work of Kim Iryŏp, a Buddhist nun and public intellectual in early twentieth-century Korea. Park’s translation of Iryŏp’s Reflections of a Zen Buddhist Nun was the subject of two book panels at recent conferences: the first a plenary session at the annual meeting of the Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy and the second at the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association on a group program session sponsored by the (...)
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  14.  29
    Judgments of frequency and recognition memory in a multiple-trace memory model.Douglas L. Hintzman - 1988 - Psychological Review 95 (4):528-551.
  15.  26
    Constraints and Preferences in Inductive Learning: An Experimental Study of Human and Machine Performance.Douglas L. Medin, William D. Wattenmaker & Ryszard S. Michalski - 1987 - Cognitive Science 11 (3):299-339.
    The paper examines constraints and preferences employed by people in learning decision rules from preclassified examples. Results from four experiments with human subjects were analyzed and compared with artificial intelligence (AI) inductive learning programs. The results showed the people's rule inductions tended to emphasize category validity (probability of some property, given a category) more than cue validity (probability that an entity is a member of a category given that it has some property) to a greater extent than did the AI (...)
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  16.  69
    Language acquisition in the absence of explicit negative evidence: how important is starting small?Douglas L. T. Rohde & David C. Plaut - 1999 - Cognition 72 (1):67-109.
  17. Batman Begins: Insanity and the Cutting Edge of Heroism.Douglas L. Howard - 2008 - In Anthony David Hughes & Miranda Jane Hughes (eds.), Modern and postmodern cutting edge films. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 159.
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  18.  14
    Indian and intercultural philosophy: personhood, consciousness, and causality.Douglas L. Berger - 2021 - New York, NY, USA: Bloomsbury Academic.
    For over twenty years Douglas Berger has advanced research and reflection on Indian philosophical traditions from both classical and cross-cultural perspectives. This volume reveals the extent of his contribution by bringing together his perspectives on these classical Indian philosophies and placing them in conversation with Confucian, Chinese Buddhist and medieval Indian Sufi traditions. Delving into debates between Nyaya and Buddhist philosophers on consciousness and identity, the nature of Sankara's theory of the self, the precise character of Nagarjuna's idea of (...)
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  19.  51
    Corrected Feedback: A Procedure to Enhance Recall of Informed Consent to Research Among Substance Abusing Offenders.Douglas B. Marlowe, Jason R. Croft, Karen L. Dugosh, David S. Festinger & Patricia L. Arabia - 2010 - Ethics and Behavior 20 (5):387-399.
    This study examined the efficacy of corrected feedback for improving consent recall throughout the course of an ongoing longitudinal study. Participants were randomly assigned to either a corrected feedback or a no-feedback control condition. Participants completed a consent quiz 2 weeks after consenting to the host study and at months 1, 2, and 3. The corrected feedback group received corrections to erroneous responses and the no-feedback control group did not. The feedback group displayed significantly greater recall overall and in specific (...)
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  20.  11
    Comparative Philosophy and Method: Contemporary Practices and Future Possibilities ed. by Steven Burik, Robert Smid and Ralph Weber (review).Douglas L. Berger - 2024 - Philosophy East and West 74 (2):1-5.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Comparative Philosophy and Method: Contemporary Practices and Future Possibilities ed. by Steven Burik, Robert Smid and Ralph WeberDouglas L. Berger (bio)Comparative Philosophy and Method: Contemporary Practices and Future Possibilities. Edited by Steven Burik, Robert Smid and Ralph Weber. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2023. Pp. vi + 272. Paperback $40.28, isbn 978-1-350-29704-3.The editors Steven Burik, Robert Smid and Ralph Weber, who have all made important revisions to (...)
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  21.  16
    Encounters of mind: luminosity and personhood in Indian and Chinese thought.Douglas L. Berger - 2014 - Albany: SUNY Press.
    Discusses the journey of Buddhist ideas on awareness and personhood from India to China. Encounters of Mind explores a crucial step in the philosophical journey of Buddhism from India to China, and what influence this step, once taken, had on Chinese thought in a broader scope. The relationship of concepts of mind, or awareness, to the constitution of personhood in Chinese traditions of reflection was to change profoundly after the Cognition School of Buddhism made its way to China during the (...)
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  22.  15
    In the mind, in the body, in the world: emotions in early China and ancient Greece.Douglas L. Cairns & Curie Virág (eds.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    This volume is the result of a three-year collaboration (funded by the American Council of Learned Societies and the British Academy) between scholars of early China and of ancient/Hellenistic Greece to investigate the emergent discourses of emotions in philosophy, medicine, and literature from around the fifth century BCE to the second century CE. It brings together scholars working on the history and philosophy of emotions in the two ancient traditions, and with different areas of expertise, to investigate the emotions and (...)
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  23.  44
    Precaution, prevention, and public health ethics.Douglas L. Weed - 2004 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 29 (3):313 – 332.
    The precautionary principle brings a special challenge to the practice of evidence-based public health decision-making, suggesting changes in the interpretative methods of public health used to identify causes of disease. In this paper, precautionary changes to these methods are examined: including discounting contrary evidence, reducing the number of causal criteria, weakening the rules of evidence assigned to the criteria, and altering thresholds for statistical significance. All such changes reflect the precautionary goal of earlier primary preventive intervention, i.e. acting on insufficient (...)
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  24.  23
    Simpson's paradox and the analysis of memory retrieval.Douglas L. Hintzman - 1980 - Psychological Review 87 (4):398-410.
  25.  8
    God under fire: modern scholarship reinvents God.Douglas S. Huffman & Eric L. Johnson (eds.) - 2002 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan.
    God Never ChangesOr does he? God has been getting a makeover of late, a "reinvention" that has incited debate and troubled scholars and laypeople alike. Modern theological sectors as diverse as radical feminism and the new “open theism” movement are attacking the classical Christian view of God and vigorously promoting their own images of Divinity.God Under Fire refutes the claim that major attributes of the God of historic Christianity are false and outdated. This book responds to some increasingly popular alternate (...)
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  26.  13
    Observational Studies on Human Populations.Douglas L. Weed & Robert E. McKeown - 2008 - In Ezekiel J. Emanuel (ed.), The Oxford textbook of clinical research ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 325.
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  27.  44
    Eliminating Categorical Exclusion Criteria in Crisis Standards of Care Frameworks.Catherine L. Auriemma, Ashli M. Molinero, Amy J. Houtrow, Govind Persad, Douglas B. White & Scott D. Halpern - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (7):28-36.
    During public health crises including the COVID-19 pandemic, resource scarcity and contagion risks may require health systems to shift—to some degree—from a usual clinical ethic, focused on the well-being of individual patients, to a public health ethic, focused on population health. Many triage policies exist that fall under the legal protections afforded by “crisis standards of care,” but they have key differences. We critically appraise one of the most fundamental differences among policies, namely the use of criteria to categorically exclude (...)
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  28.  22
    Amount and locus of stimulus-response overlap in paired-associate acquisition.Douglas L. Nelson & Richard M. Garland - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 82 (2):297.
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  29.  26
    Effect of meaning on processing of phonetic features of words.Douglas L. Nelson & Richard C. Borden - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 101 (2):373.
  30.  33
    Functional independence of pictures and their verbal memory codes.Douglas L. Nelson & David H. Brooks - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 98 (1):44.
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  31.  43
    Independence of phonetic and imaginal features.Douglas L. Nelson & David H. Brooks - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (1):1.
  32.  38
    Interference produced by phonetic similarities: Stimulus recognition, associative retrieval, or both?Douglas L. Nelson & Richard C. Borden - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (2):167.
  33.  31
    Information theory and stimulus encoding in paired-associate acquisition: Ordinal position of formal similarity.Douglas L. Nelson & Frank A. Rowe - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (2p1):342.
  34.  16
    Paired-associate acquisition as a function of association value, degree, and location of similarity.Douglas L. Nelson - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 77 (3p1):364.
  35.  33
    Phonetic similarity as opposed to informational structure as a determinant of word encoding.Douglas L. Nelson, Jerry Peebles & Frank Pancotto - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 86 (1):117.
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  36.  22
    Retroactive inhibition of rhyme categories in free recall: Inacessibility and unavailability of information.Douglas L. Nelson & David H. Brooks - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (2):277.
  37.  25
    Word coding: The role of intrinsic and extrinsic features.Douglas L. Nelson - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (4):241-243.
  38.  31
    Why is that? Structural prediction and ambiguity resolution in a very large corpus of English sentences.Douglas Roland, Jeffrey L. Elman & Victor S. Ferreira - 2006 - Cognition 98 (3):245-272.
  39.  63
    Episodic versus semantic memory: A distinction whose time has come – and gone?Douglas L. Hintzman - 1984 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7 (2):240.
  40.  51
    Repetition and memory: Evidence for a multiple-trace hypothesis.Douglas L. Hintzman & Richard A. Block - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 88 (3):297.
  41.  50
    "Schema abstraction" in a multiple-trace memory model.Douglas L. Hintzman - 1986 - Psychological Review 93 (4):411-428.
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  42.  20
    Hesiodus. Theogonia; Opera et Dies; Scutum.Douglas Young, Hesiod, Friedrich Solmsen, R. Merkelbach & M. L. West - 1973 - American Journal of Philology 94 (2):188.
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  43.  42
    Hybris, dishonour, and thinking big.Douglas L. Cairns - 1996 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 116:1-32.
  44.  63
    Symposium: Does Cross-Cultural Philosophy Stand in Need of a Hermeneutic Expansion?Douglas L. Berger, Hans-Georg Moeller, A. Raghuramaraju & Paul A. Roth - 2017 - Journal of World Philosophies 2 (1):121-143.
    Does cross-cultural philosophy stand in need of a hermeneutical expansion? In engaging with this question, the symposium focuses upon methodological issues salient to cross-cultural inquiry. Douglas L. Berger lays out the ground for the debate by arguing for a methodological approach, which is able to rectify the discipline’s colonial legacies and bridge the hermeneutical distance with its objects of study. From their own perspectives, Hans-Georg Moeller, Paul Roth and A. Raghuramaraju analyze whether such a processual and hermeneutically-sensitive approach can (...)
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  45.  36
    Paying for Fairness? Incentives and Fair Subject Selection.Douglas MacKay & Rebecca L. Walker - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (3):35-37.
    In their Target Article, “Promoting Ethical Payment in Human Infection Challenge Studies,” Lynch et al. propose a framework for ethical payment to research participants and apply it to the c...
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  46.  90
    A reply to Garfield and Westerhoff on "acquiring emptiness".Douglas L. Berger - 2011 - Philosophy East and West 61 (2):368-372.
    I am most grateful to Professors Garfield and Westerhoff for their comments on my article "Acquiring Emptiness: Interpreting Nāgārjuna's MMK 24 : 18" in the January 2010 issue of Philosophy East and West. Their responses to my essay and the critiques they offer, grounded in their considerable expertise in Buddhist philosophical schools, are well argued and rooted in thorough commentarial analysis. In what follows, I attempt to respond to their critiques and concerns.There can be no doubt that the occurrence of (...)
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  47.  27
    Export agriculture, ecological disruption, and social inequity: Some effect of pesticides in Southern Honduras.Douglas L. Murray - 1991 - Agriculture and Human Values 8 (4):19-29.
    Pesticides remain an integral part of development efforts to renew economic growth in Central America and lift the region out of a severe economic crisis. This paper analyzes the implications of the continued reliance on pesticides for heightening economic and ecological problems in the agrarian sector.Relying on a case study of export melon production in Choluteca, Honduras, the author argues that current development strategies, which rely heavily on pesticides, are generating ecological disruption that creates conditions biased against small producers. Lack (...)
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  48.  65
    Psychopaths Show Enhanced Amygdala Activation during Fear Conditioning.Douglas H. Schultz, Nicholas L. Balderston, Arielle R. Baskin-Sommers, Christine L. Larson & Fred J. Helmstetter - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
    Psychopathy is a personality disorder characterized by emotional deficits and a failure to inhibit impulsive behavior and is often subdivided into “primary” and “secondary” psychopathic subtypes. The maladaptive behavior related to primary psychopathy is thought to reflect constitutional “fearlessness,” while the problematic behavior related to secondary psychopathy is motivated by other factors. The fearlessness observed in psychopathy has often been interpreted as reflecting a fundamental deficit in amygdala function, and previous studies have provided support for a low-fear model of psychopathy. (...)
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  49. Acquiring emptiness: Interpreting nāgārjuna's mmk 24:18.Douglas L. Berger - 2010 - Philosophy East and West 60 (1):pp. 40-64.
    A pivotal focus of exegesis of Nāgārjuna's Mūlamadhyamakakārïkā (MMK) for the past half century has been the attempt to decipher the text's philosophy of language, and determine how this best aids us in characterizing Madhyamaka thought as a whole. In this vein, MMK 24:18 has been judged of particular weight insofar as it purportedly insists that the concepts pratītyasamutpāda (conditioned co-arising) and śūnyatā (emptiness), both indispensable to Buddhist praxis, are themselves only "nominal" or "conventional," that is, they are merely labels (...)
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  50.  34
    Relationship between recognition accuracy and order of reporting stimulus dimensions.Douglas H. Lawrence & David L. Laberge - 1956 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 51 (1):12.
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