1,354,291 research outputs found

    [News Clip: Dorrough]

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    Video footage from the WBAP-TV television station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story about the hearing of Jerry Mack Dorrough for being an accessory after the fact in a case of theft at the Lakewood State Bank in Dallas

    William Dorrough, (1916-1970), purchased by Doretha B. Dorrough on December 7, 1970

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    Documents regarding the purchase of a double headstone for William Dorrough (1916-1970), and Doretha B. Dorrough, by Doretha. Material used was Balfour Pink granite, with blown, Vermarco letters, polished and darkened. The surname is at the top of the stone, with crosses on each side. William's name and dates are on the left; Doretha's on the right. A squirrel holding an acorn is between the names. Great Loves Live On is inscribed at the bottom. The marker was placed at Woodlawn Cemetery, Lot 566 C, Section 32, in Toledo, Ohio

    NBC News Scripts

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    Script from the WBAP-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, covering a news story about the hearing of Jerry Mack Dorrough for being an accessory after the fact in a case of theft at the Lakewood State Bank in Dallas

    A second investigation of cross-national cooperation - the role of punishment stereotypes

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    Our previous research shows that people hold shared expectations regarding cooperation behavior of different nations (Dorrough & Glöckner, 2016). These expectations strongly influence cooperation towards these nations but in many cases turn out as incorrect stereotypes. With the current project we want to extend this research by adding an opportunity for costly peer punishment. We will investigate whether also shared expectations regarding punishment behavior of different nations can be observed and how these expectations influence cooperation rates

    Multinational investigation of cross-societal cooperation

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    In a globalized world, establishing successful cooperation between people from different nations is becoming increasingly important. We present results from a comprehensive investigation of cross-societal cooperation in one-shot prisoner's dilemmas involving population-representative samples from six countries and identify crucial facilitators of and obstacles to cooperation. In interactions involving mutual knowledge about only the other players' nationalities, we demonstrate that people hold strong and transnationally shared expectations (i.e., stereotypes) concerning the cooperation level of interaction partners from other countries. These expectations are the strongest determinants of participant cooperation. Paradoxically, however, they turn out to be incorrect stereotypes that even correlate negatively with reality. In addition to erroneous expectations, participants' cooperation behavior is driven by (shared) social preferences that vary according to the interaction partner's nationality. In the cross-societal context, these social preferences are influenced by differences in wealth and ingroup favoritism, as well as effects of specific country combinations but not by spatial distance between nations

    Elicited management gain with offset for each of 13 vegetation attributes across three different western slopes grassy woodland scenarios

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    The data provides randomly drawn data from 25 expert subjective probability distributions of the reference and future with offset values for 13 vegetation attributes with three different starting scenarios (see Dorrough, Sinclair and Oliver for full details). The prefix to each column heading indicates whether the data are the initial values provided to the experts (Start_), elicited reference values (Ref_) or elicited future values with a biodiversity offset (OS_). Remaining columns are calculated from these as per Dorrough, Sinclair and Oliver (submitted) Expert predictions of changes in vegetation condition reveal perceived risks in biodiversity offsetting PLOS One <br

    The influence of similarity concerning caring about a social issue on perceived trustworthiness

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    This is a student project by Lukas Bring under the supervision of Angela R. Dorrough and Iris K. Schneider. The project is conducted as part of a superordinate project. You can find the complete pre-registration attached as PDF

    Does expressing ambivalence concerning a social issue increase perceived trustworthiness?

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    This is a student project by Charlotte Butz under the supervision of Angela R. Dorrough and Iris K. Schneider. The project is conducted as a part of a superordinate project. You can find the complete pre-registration attached as PDF
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