549 research outputs found
Supplemental Material, Recession_SupplementaryMaterials_R_31Jan2020 - Integrating models of marital functioning to understand the mental health consequences of the Great Recession
Supplemental Material, Recession_SupplementaryMaterials_R_31Jan2020 for Integrating models of marital functioning to understand the mental health consequences of the Great Recession by Esra Ascigil, Emre Selcuk, Gul Gunaydin and Anthony D. Ong in Journal of Social and Personal Relationships</p
sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506231209793 – Supplemental material for Minimal Social Interactions and Life Satisfaction: The Role of Greeting, Thanking, and Conversing
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506231209793 for Minimal Social Interactions and Life Satisfaction: The Role of Greeting, Thanking, and Conversing by Esra Ascigil, Gul Gunaydin, Emre Selcuk, Gillian M. Sandstrom and Erdal Aydin in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506211061017 – Supplemental material for You Mean the World to Me: The Role of Residential Mobility in Centrality of Romantic Relationships
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506211061017 for You Mean the World to Me: The Role of Residential Mobility in Centrality of Romantic Relationships by Cansu Yilmaz, Emre Selcuk, Gul Gunaydin, Banu Cingöz-Ulu, Alpay Filiztekin and Oya Kent in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
Women leaders in trade unions of Pakistan : stories of struggle and leadership
Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Pakistan Office ; author: Saba Gul Khattak ; illustrators Abdullah Shahid, Aiman Saleem, Areeban Shaukat Qureshi [und weitere
Effectiveness of a group and brochure psychoeducation intervention to improve depression level and treatment continuity among adults with depression in turkey: A controlled study.
Purpose: The current study examined the efficacy of a group and brochure psychoeducation intervention for improving levels of depression among patients with a depressive disorder. Methods: This study is a semi-experimental with a pre-test, post-test, control group and follow-up. The sample of this study consisted of patients with depression (n=153). Based on their scores in depression inventory, the patients were divided into three groups. The groups received Continuity Enhancement Treatment for Antidepressants (CETA) with form of group and brochure. The psychoeducation and brochure groups both received psychoeducation and antidepressant treatment. The control (CG) group not received a psychoeducation and only continued antidepressant treatment. The Personal Information Form and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) were used. Results: When the scores of the depressed patients in the experimental groups and control group were compared at the pre-test, posttest and 3 and 6 months follow ups, a significant difference was only found in BDI post-test scores. Conclusion: Group and brochure psychoeducation included CETA program was effective for improving antidepressant adherence. Psychoeducational approaches to be applied by psychiatry nurses to outpatients who received diagnosis of depression for the first time were also considered as cost-effective methods
Status Quo Preference in Mate Selection: New Experiments
Gunaydin, Selcuk, Yilmaz, and Hazan (2018) provided evidence for status quo preference in resolving mate selection trade offs. The present experiments are modeled after Gunaydin et al. Study 1b. As in that study, participants will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions: the trustworthy partner, attractive alternative condition or the attractive partner, trustworthy alternative condition. The main difference compared to Gunaydin et al. Study 1b is that in the present experiments the scenarios will describe a situation where commitment level to the partner is likely to be lower
Masters of red terror (Felix Dzerzyhinsky and Vyacheslav Menzhinsky) in literary drafts of emigrant Roman Gul)
In the article, works of Roman Gul - a writer, a literary critic, a historian and memuaristof the first wave of the Russian emigration are examined. His literary work in Poland is littleknownand examined. As the research material there are two drafts about F. Dzerzyhinsky and V.Menzhinsky, Poles, noblemen. Gul, showing main stages of the life and revolutionary activityof Dzerzhinsky (“red executioner”, “father of terror”) is focusing his attention on portrait andpsychological characteristics this fanatic, author of Bolshevik terror. The author of sketches iscomparing “the lion of the revolution” with the Tomas de Torquemada Inquisitor and with activistsof the Great French Revolution Isidore de Robespierre and Antoine Quentin Fouquier deTinville. Convincingly and accurately he is reconstructing the portrait of Menzhinsky. He is alsocreating characteristics of intellectual and spiritual mediocrity
The avoidance of statutory benefits to employees by Hong Kong employers
Author name used in this publication: Gul, Reza Jashen.Author name used in this publication: Sun, Sunny.2012-2013 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishedPublisher permissio
How Do I Know You? Person Perception From Photographs To Live Interactions
Mental representations of unknown others play a central role in person perception. These representations, informed by our memories as well as the affective associations we acquire though our past experiences, heavily influence how we perceive, evaluate, and react to new people we encounter in our day-to-day lives. Three papers aim to understand the antecedents and consequences of these representations at different stages of relationship formation and functioning-from evaluating unknown others to getting acquainted with these individuals. The first paper focused on idiosyncratic cues pertaining to representations of significant others and showed that women evaluated unknown men who resembled their partner (vs. those who did not) more favorably, even when they were not consciously aware of the idiosyncratic cue. In everyday person perception, such idiosyncratic cues are encountered simultaneously with cues shared across perceivers. The second paper provided the first systematic examination of how resemblance to known others (an idiosyncratic cue) and facial width-to-height ratio (a shared cue) simultaneously influence person perception. Shared and idiosyncratic cues had additive effects when participants made evaluative judgments (i.e., snap judgments of liking). Across three studies, facial width-to-height ratio was negatively related to liking. However, this association was significantly attenuated for women with a wide-faced romantic partner. The idiosyncratic cue predicted liking only when novel faces resembled newly encountered people who engaged in blameworthy behaviors or when they resembled significant others. Shared and idiosyncratic cues interacted to influence processing efficiency when participants made categorical judgments (i.e., indicated whether unknown faces resembled someone they knew). Participants made slower and less accurate responses to wider faces resembling a liked known other (vs. not). By focusing on static photographs of faces, these studies showed that shared and idiosyncratic cues profoundly influence person perception. The third paper complements this research by showing that likeability judgments from photographs predicted likeability judgments following live interactions, even when judgments were separated by two weeks and when interactions provided more opportunities to learn about the person. Drawing from theorizing on mental representations, the present research sheds light on the multitude of factors that influence everyday person perception from photographs to live interactions
Language Features of the Epic "BULBUL VA GUL"(Nightingale and Flower)
In this article the linguistic features of the epic "Bulbul va Gul" (Nightingale and Flower) written by Salahiddin Salahi, who lived in the 18th century, are discussed, in particular, the image tools used in the work, monologue, dialogue, proverb, antonym, synonym, repetition, and the language of the author and character. This shows the poet's ability to use the lexical layers of the language. In addition, with the help of this article, we can get information about the state of the literary language of the 18th century
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