103,133 research outputs found
Bronze AE 20 of Roman Emperor Constantine I (307-337 CE)
AE 20 coin of Emperor Constantine I, the Great (307 - 337 CE). Obv: laureate, draped and cuirassed bust of Constantine I right. Rev: Sol standing left, raising right hand and holding globe in left, T - F in field, PTR in exergue. Minted in Arles
64. Barnes (T. D.), Constantine and Eusebius
Nautin Pierre. 64. Barnes (T. D.), Constantine and Eusebius. In: Revue des Études Grecques, tome 98, fascicule 465-466, Janvier-juin 1985. p. 217
Société Archéologique de Constantine — Livre du Centenaire, 1852-1952. (T. 68 des Notices et Mémoires de la Société). — Recueil des Notices... de la Société archéologique de Constantine, vol. LXIX, 1955-1956. Constantine, Attali, 1957
Mouterde René. Société Archéologique de Constantine — Livre du Centenaire, 1852-1952. (T. 68 des Notices et Mémoires de la Société). — Recueil des Notices... de la Société archéologique de Constantine, vol. LXIX, 1955-1956. Constantine, Attali, 1957. In: Mélanges de l'Université Saint-Joseph, tome 34, 1957. pp. 280-281
Le rocher de Constantine
Joleaud Léonce. Le rocher de Constantine. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 27, n°148-149, 1918. pp. 340-356
The why's the limit: curtailing self-enhancement with explanatory introspection
Self-enhancement is linked to psychological gains (e.g., subjective well-being, persistence in adversity) but also to intrapersonal and interpersonal costs (e.g., excessive risk taking, antisocial behavior). Thus, constraints on self-enhancement may sometimes afford intrapersonal and interpersonal advantages. We tested whether explanatory introspection (i.e., generating reasons for why one might or might not possess personality traits) constitutes one such constraint. Experiment 1 demonstrated that explanatory introspection curtails self-enhancement. Experiment 2 clarified that the underlying mechanism must (a) involve explanatory questioning rather than descriptive imagining, (b) invoke the self rather than another person, and (c) feature written expression rather than unaided contemplation. Finally, Experiment 3 obtained evidence that an increase in uncertainty about oneself mediates the effect
Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt
Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.
Self-concept clarity lays the foundation for self-continuity: the restorative function of autobiographical memory
The current research concerns the relations among self-concept clarity, autobiographic memory, and self-continuity. We hypothesized, and tested in seven studies, that low self-concept clarity would disrupt self-continuity, but resorting to autobiographic memory would counter this disruption, thus restoring self-continuity. In Studies 1-2, low or threatened self-concept clarity was associated with decreased, or led to a decrease of, self-continuity. In Study 3, participants low (vs. high) in self-concept clarity manifested a stronger preference for an autobiographical memory task (but not for a control task). In Study 4, a suppressed mediational model of autobiographical memory received empirical backing: Threatened self-concept clarity decreased self-continuity, but also increased the propensity to evoke autobiographical memory, which fostered self-continuity. By manipulating autobiographical memory in different ways, Studies 5-7 provided additional direct evidence for the capacity of autobiographical memory to restore self-continuity. Taken together, the results converge in support of the hypothesis
A latent semantic analysis of gender stereotype-consistency and narrowness in American English
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