124 research outputs found

    Lee Durkee in Conversation with Tin House Publisher Craig Popelars

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    In this session, hosted by Square Books, Lee Durkee, author of The Last Taxi Driver, talks about writing, driving a cab, UFOs, Bigfoot, and Shakespeare with Tin House publisher Craig Popelars

    Data for: Pride and Shame: Key Components of a Culturally Universal Status Management System

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    Data on American's pride and shame ratings to 240 personal characteristics along with the mean sex-specific status-impacts of each personal characteristics across 14 countries

    Status foundations extended reply

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    Code and data for analyses presented in Durkee et al. (2021

    Status foundations extended reply

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    Code and data for analyses presented in Durkee et al. (2021

    Peter Appel Honorary Keynote

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    Keynote speech by farmer, educator, author, and food sovereignty activist Leah Penniman. Moderator Professor M.J. Durkee – Allen Post Professor, University of Georgia School of Law Keynote Leah Penniman – Co-Founder, Co-Director, and Program Manager, Soul Fire Far

    Role of aggressivity on reactivity and craving before and after cue exposure in recently detoxified alcoholics: Results from an experimental study

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    The role of aggressivity and cue exposure in induction of craving were investigated in a clinical setting. Thirty abstinent alcoholic patients were divided into a low and a high aggressive group based on scores on the physical aggression subscale of the Buss-Durkee Hostility Inventory and exposed to alcohol cues. Craving was measured by means of the Alcohol Craving Questionnaire (ACQ) and Visual Analogue Scales (VAS). Important findings are: (1) main effects of aggressivity on `emotionality', `purposefulness' and `expectancy' of ACQ were very significant; (2) on `drinking intention' and `craving for alcohol' of VAS, aggressivity and cue exposure showed a significant interaction; (3) the main effect of cue exposure on heart rate also reached a significance level of 0.007. The results were discussed in the context of the Classical, Operant Conditioning Theory, the Cognitive Craving Theory of Tiffany, Gilbert's STAR Model, and the Self-Medication Hypothesis Copyright (C) 2001 S. Karger AG, Basel

    sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506221094086 – Supplemental material for Sex Differences in Fearful Personality Traits Are Mediated by Physical Strength

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506221094086 for Sex Differences in Fearful Personality Traits Are Mediated by Physical Strength by Joseph H. Manson, Kristine J. Chua, Nina N. Rodriguez, Michael Barlev, Patrick K. Durkee and Aaron W. Lukaszewski in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p

    Suppl_material - Men’s Bodily Attractiveness: Muscles as Fitness Indicators

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    Suppl_material for Men’s Bodily Attractiveness: Muscles as Fitness Indicators by Patrick K. Durkee, Pablo Polo, José Antonio Muñoz-Reyes, Claudia Rodríguez-Ruiz, María Losada-Pérez, Ana B. Fernández-Martínez, Enrique Turiégano, David M. Buss and Miguel Pita in Evolutionary Psychology</p

    Rear window's haunted maternal spaces:

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    In this thesis, I explore the urban courtyard in Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window as a feminized space of personal transformation and potential social change. Using Tania Modleski's ideas about the possibilities of female spectatorship and the cinema, I examine the film from the perspective of Lisa, the beautiful and privileged socialite who is drawn not only to the diffident L.B. Jeffries, but to the neighbors in his modest Greenwich Village courtyard.M.A.Includes bibliographical references (p. 59)by Mary Durke

    Status foundations: Further consideration of the role of ‘dominance’ and the relative importance of cost infliction and benefit generation

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    This extended reply addresses comments on our paper examining the role of cost infliction and benefit generation in status allocations across 14 nations (Durkee et al., 2020). Specifically, Cheng et al. (2021) identified multicollinearity among our predictors as cause for concern and reviewed existing evidence that purportedly challenges our conclusion that benefit generation is the primary foundation of human status allocation. To counter these concerns, we conducted re-analyses that addressed the collinearity among our predictors in different ways and found further support for our original conclusion that benefit generation is a more important predictor of status allocations than cost infliction. Additionally, we discuss the ambiguity of the empirical support for the role of cost infliction in human hierarchies and propose a distinction between pure cost infliction (PCI) and benefit generation via cost infliction (BGCI) to explain why “dominance,” as it has been operationalized in extant empirical studies, might be associated with status in human groups. We hope that our original data on the inferential foundations of status allocations and this extended discussion of the empirical and conceptual issues with the “dominance” construct can help improve future investigations of human hierarchies and their psychological underpinnings
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