472 research outputs found

    Supplementary_Materials_for_Non-invasive_brain_stimulation_reveals_message-processing_mechanisms – Supplemental material for Evaluating Didactic and Exemplar Information: Noninvasive Brain Stimulation Reveals Message-Processing Mechanisms

    No full text
    Supplemental material, Supplementary_Materials_for_Non-invasive_brain_stimulation_reveals_message-processing_mechanisms for Evaluating Didactic and Exemplar Information: Noninvasive Brain Stimulation Reveals Message-Processing Mechanisms by Jason C. Coronel, Matthew B. O’Donnell, Elizabeth C. Beard, Roy H. Hamilton and Emily B. Falk in Communication Research</p

    Brains and Behavior

    No full text
    Brain scans showing neural reactions to pro-health messages can predict if you'll keep that resolution to quit smoking more accurately than you yourself can. Our brains may know what we do not Interview and B-roll with asst prof Emily Falkhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/93328/1/falk_jan_11.mo

    sj-pdf-1-mrj-10.1177_00222437231194319 - Supplemental material for Neural Signals of Video Advertisement Liking: Insights into Psychological Processes and Their Temporal Dynamics

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-mrj-10.1177_00222437231194319 for Neural Signals of Video Advertisement Liking: Insights into Psychological Processes and Their Temporal Dynamics by Hang-Yee Chan, Maarten A.S. Boksem, Vinod Venkatraman and Roeland C. Dietvorst, Christin Scholz, Khoi Vo, Emily B. Falk, Ale Smidts in Journal of Marketing Research</p

    10 questions to Falk Reckling, Austrian Science Fund, by Bruno Bauer

    No full text
    Advocates of Open Access call to substitute the established scholarly publication model, in particular subscriptions and licences, by an Open Access Publishing model. Scholarly papers should be immediately accessible without paying and leave the copyright to the author. At the beginning the Open Access movement focused on and demanded for the publication of original scientific articles in Open Access journals. Meanwhile they moved on to support a form of secondary publication, the self-archiving of sholarly papers in institutional repositories. The current interview with Falk Reckling gives an account of the FWF Austrian Science Fund (http://www.fwf.ac.at) and their point of view towards Open Access. The interview hits the Golden Road as well as the Green Road to open access and their costs. Preconditions for a paradigm shift towards Open Access Publishing are brought up and prospects of sholarly publishing in 2020 were discussed with a look on libraries and their possible role within this settingBefürworter von Open Access Publishing fordern, das etablierte wissenschaftliche Publikationswesen, insbesondere das System der subskriptions- und lizenzfinanzierten wissenschaftlichen Zeitschriften, durch das Open Access Publishing-Modell zu ersetzen. Wissenschaftliche Fachpublikationen sollen unmittelbar und kostenfrei über das Internet zugänglich sein , wobei das Copyright beim Autor bleibt. Stand dabei zunächst die Primärpublikation eines wissenschaftlichen Fachartikels in einer Open Access Zeitschrift im Mittelpunkt, so verlagerte sich der Handlungsschwerpunkt der Open Access Befürworter in jüngster Zeit auf die Zweitpublikation in der Form der Selbstarchivierung von wissenschaftlichen Fachartikeln in institutionellen Repositorien. Das aktuelle Interview mit Falk Reckling informiert über den FWF Der Wissenschaftsfonds (http://www.fwf.ac.at) und dessen Einschätzung von Open Access. Thematisiert werden sowohl der Goldene Weg zu Open Access als auch der Grüne Weg zu Open Access sowie die Kostenfrage. Angesprochen werden auch die Voraussetzungen für einen Paradigmenwechsel zu Open Access Publishing, Perspektiven für das wissenschaftliche Publikationswesen 2020 sowie die mögliche zukünftige Rolle von Bibliotheken

    Emily Rigl

    No full text
    Front of cabinet card photograph

    Revised estimates and projections of international migration : 1980-2000

    No full text
    This report reviews the World Bank's latest international migration statistics for every country in the world for each five year period from 1980 - 2000. The estimates and projections of net international migration during this period will be used as input statistics for the forthcoming edition of the World Population Projections. In the early 1980s, net international migration to all receiving countries totaled more than 1.2 million persons a year. The author assumes this figure to gradually decrease to fewer than 900,000 persons a year in the period 1995 - 2000. The current male dominance of international migration flows is also expected to decrease. He also assumes that the importance of the United States as a prime destination of immigrants will increase substantially in the 1990s. Mexico is by far the largest net exporter of international migrants.Human Migrations&Resettlements,Voluntary and Involuntary Resettlement,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,International Migration,Gender and Social Development

    Neo-Nazism and discrimination against foreigners: A direct test of taste discrimination

    No full text
    I test some predictions of Gary Becker’s theory of taste discrimination regarding discrimination of foreigners by employers, co-workers and customers. I combine a 2% sample of the German working population and a 50% sample of German plants with low-level regional data, including the vote shares of three right-wing parties as a proxy for regional racism. The results show that (a) foreigner-native wage differentials rise with the share of right-wing voters, (b) the exact magnitude of the effects varies between skill groups and by gender, the largest effects being found for high-skilled men and women, (c) average employment shares of natives vary very little with the share of right-wing voters, (d) segregated firms become more common in manufacturing and construction when support for right-wing parties rises, while no effects are found for services and gastronomy and (e) the negative wage effects are strongest for foreigners working in services, while no effects are found in manufacturing and gastronomy. These results broadly confirm the predictions from taste discrimination.taste discrimination, segregated firms, wage differentials

    Mindfulness and the Neuroscience of Influence

    No full text

    Can Neuroscience Advance Our Understanding of Core Questions in Communication Studies? An Overview of Communication Neuroscience

    No full text
    Can neuroimaging methods offer any benefit to communication scholars? Although communication scholars draw on multiple, interdisciplinary methods, the field has not traditionally leveraged neuroimaging techniques (Cappella, 1996). By contrast, other social science disciplines have benefitted greatly from the use of neuroscience methodologies to test core theoretical questions (Adolphs, 2003; Cabeza & Nyberg, 2000a; Cacioppo, 2002; Cacioppo, Berntson, Sheridan, & McClintock, 2000; Lieberman, 2010; Loewenstein, Rick, & Cohen, 2008; Ochsner & Lieberman, 2001; Poldrack, 2008; Sanfey, Loewenstein, & Mcclure, 2006; Yarkoni, Poldrack, Van Essen, & Wager, 2010). The current chapter outlines a vision for how communication studies might leverage neuroimaging technologies moving forward. We begin by defining communication neuroscience as a subdiscipline and giving a brief overview of the most commonly employed neuroimaging methods. We follow this introduction with a discussion of the types of questions that neuroimaging is most equipped to answer and suggest areas for further exploration
    corecore