Jurnal STAI Al-Hamidiyah
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Augmentation of frontoparietal gamma-band phase coupling enhances human altruistic behavior
A review of the concussion literature supporting the return to physical activity for children aged 3 to 12 years: A Scoping Review Protocol
Development of the Self-Efficacy of Engagement Scale
This project aims to develop the Self-Efficacy for Engagement Scale (SEES) as an accurate and reliable measure of one's belief in their ability to contribute to patient-centered research; and establish psychometric properties of the SEES to advance the science of engagement
Uncovering the Hidden Value of Unpaid Work: A Global History of Marginalized Metrics
Although economics derives its name from the Greek oikos nomos, or household management, the question of domestic labor, usually performed by women, has long been ignored in canonical conceptions of labor and value. But not by everyone. The canons of economic discipline have obscured the problem by systematically marginalizing the work of economists and activists who have sought to propose alternative methods of calculating the value of domestic work. This article proposes a comprehensive review of a century of research on the contribution of unpaid work to the global economy, and examines the mechanisms of exclusion of the value of unpaid work from GDP and national accounts. It highlights that the reluctance to reform these mainstream measures perpetuates well-known bias, despite generations of economists, especially women, consistently demonstrating the potential for improvement in accounting for diversity
Computational Reproduction for "The Wisdom of Model Crowds"
We conduct a computational reproduction for "The Wisdom of Model Crowds" published at Management Science in 2022
Higher education predicts global cultural similarity to WEIRD countries
Preregistration, data, and code for "Higher education predicts global cultural similarity to WEIRD countries." Please see attached components for further details
Perceived Corruption is a Robust Associate of Conspiracy, Paranormal, and Pseudoscience Beliefs
Although country-level corruption predicts conspiracy beliefs, the use of country-level indices suffers from limitations, such as ecological fallacy and limited number of countries. We utilized the individual-level perception of corruption to understand whether it is a predictor of conspiracy beliefs and whether this relationship extends to other epistemically suspect beliefs, like paranormal and pseudoscience beliefs. We also controlled for individual-level differences previously shown to be effective such as demographic factors (age, sex, education, SES), socio-political attitudes (ideology, religiosity, right-wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation), personality traits (Big Five and Dark Triad), cognitive sophistication (cognitive reflection and science literacy), and generalized social trust. In three samples (Ntotal = 5,400; Turkish and British participants), we found that perceived corruption is still a robust associate of conspiracy, paranormal, and pseudoscience beliefs, even after accounting for all these relevant factors. The results are consistent with the argument that perceived corruption plays a fundamental role in the formation of epistemically suspect beliefs beyond other factors