1,608 research outputs found

    La recherche rabbinique depuis Strack

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    Stemberger Günter, Brecklé R. La recherche rabbinique depuis Strack. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 55e année n°4,1975. pp. 543-574

    Registered Replication Report : Strack, Martin, & Stepper (1988)

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    According to the facial feedback hypothesis, people’s affective responses can be influenced by their own facial expression (e.g., smiling, pouting), even when their expression did not result from their emotional experiences. For example, Strack, Martin, and Stepper (1988) instructed participants to rate the funniness of cartoons using a pen that they held in their mouth. In line with the facial feedback hypothesis, when participants held the pen with their teeth (inducing a “smile”), they rated the cartoons as funnier than when they held the pen with their lips (inducing a “pout”). This seminal study of the facial feedback hypothesis has not been replicated directly. This Registered Replication Report describes the results of 17 independent direct replications of Study 1 from Strack et al. (1988), all of which followed the same vetted protocol. A meta-analysis of these studies examined the difference in funniness ratings between the “smile” and “pout” conditions. The original Strack et al. (1988) study reported a rating difference of 0.82 units on a 10-point Likert scale. Our meta-analysis revealed a rating difference of 0.03 units with a 95% confidence interval ranging from −0.11 to 0.16

    Frühling ohne Opfer. Laurent Chétouanes Sacré Sacre du printemps

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    This paper presents a phenomenological in-depth analysis of Laurent Chétouane's choreography of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring. It focuses on the questions of sacrifice, community and relation

    sj-pdf-1-hpp-10.1177_15248399211053892 – Supplemental material for The Photovoice Decision Tree: Legal Considerations and Ethical Implications for Photographs and Captions

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-hpp-10.1177_15248399211053892 for The Photovoice Decision Tree: Legal Considerations and Ethical Implications for Photographs and Captions by Robin A. Evans-Agnew, Robert W. Strack, Lindsey R. Oakes, D. Rose Ewald, Muhsin Michael Orsini and Robert W. Strack in Health Promotion Practice</p

    What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and subjective probability

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    Bohner G, Bless H, Schwarz N, Strack F. What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and subjective probability. European Journal of Social Psychology. 1988;18(4):335-345.Various field studies and experimental simulations demonstrated that causal reasoning increases after unexpected as well as after unpleasant events. However, unpleasant events are seen as less likely than pleasant ones in everyday life. Accordingly, the subjective probability of the event and its hedonic quality were naturally confounded in these studies. To isolate the contribution of both determinants, the subjective probability and the valence of an event were independently manipulated in a laboratory experiment. Subjects completed an ostensible professional skills test and received either success or failure feedback in relation to a criterion set by the experimenter. The subjective probability of success was varied by informing subjects about the distribution of success and failure in a comparable population (either 23 per cent or 77 per cent were said to meet the criterion). The results indicate a pronounced valence effect: The intensity of causal reasoning and the number of possible reasons reported for the outcome was greater after negative than after positive feedback, independent of the a priori probability of the outcome. No evidence for an increase in causal explanations after unexpected, as compared to expected, events was obtained. Several mediating processes are discussed

    Metaphor from the ground up: understanding figurative language in context/ Daniel C. Strack.

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    Includes bibliographical references and index.Cross-referencing neurobiological knowledge with the invariance hypothesis, relevance theory, and frame semantics, Metaphor from the Ground Up: Understanding Figurative Language in Context unifies metaphor theory, fundamentally rethinks "context," and moves linguistics into the twenty-first century.Introduction: Metaphor theory at an impasse -- 1. Metaphor grounded in sense perception -- 2. Metonymic binding and conceptualization -- 3. The challenge of feature attribution -- 4. Conceptual filtering -- 5. Context and goal orientation -- 6. Metonymic cues and narrative framing -- 7. Metaphor productivity and dual-mode instantiation -- Conclusion: invariance and beyond -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the author.1 online resource (viii, 187 pages

    Hans A. Andersen. Cassius Dio und die Begründung des Principales. (Neue Deutsche Forschungen, hgg. von Hans R. G. Günther und Erich Rothacker, Band 196. Abt. Alte Geschichte, hgg. von Paul L. Strack, Band 4)

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    Zwaenepoel Albert. Hans A. Andersen. Cassius Dio und die Begründung des Principales. (Neue Deutsche Forschungen, hgg. von Hans R. G. Günther und Erich Rothacker, Band 196. Abt. Alte Geschichte, hgg. von Paul L. Strack, Band 4). In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 8, fasc. 2, 1939. pp. 460-461

    Relationship of Inglehart's and Schwartz's value dimensions revisited

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    This study examines the relationship between Inglehart's and Schwartz's value dimensions-both at the individual and the country levels. By rotating one set of items towards the other, we show that these value dimensions have more in common than previously reported. The ranking of countries (N = 47) based on Schwartz's Embeddedness-Autonomy and the Survival-Self-Expression dimensions reached a maximum of similarity, r=.82, after rotating Inglehart's factor scores 27 degrees clockwise. The correlation between the other pair of dimensions (Schwartz's Hierarchy-Mastery-Egalitarianism-Harmony and Inglehart's Traditional-Secular-Rational values) was near zero before and after rotation. At the individual level (N = 46,444), positive correlations were found for Schwartz's Conservation-Openness dimension with both of Inglehart's dimensions (Survival-Self-Expression and Traditional-Secular-Rational values). The highest correlation with this Schwartz dimension was obtained at the Secular-Rational/Self-Expression diagonal, r=.24, after rotating the factor scores 45 degrees clockwise. We conclude that Schwartz's and Inglehart's originally proposed two-dimensional value structures share one dimension at the country level and some commonality at the individual level, whereas the respective other pair of dimensions seem to be more or less unrelated

    Determination of contact resistivity of ohmic contacts to semiconductor plates by the method Cox-Strack

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    Modified variant of the method Cox-Strack, which allows to reduce an amount of frontal contacts on the test sample before 2 and simultaneously exclude an operation of the extrapolation of schedules at the determination of the specific contact resistance ρК, is considered. There is shown that contribution of the contact resistance RK in the impedance RT of the test structure takes greater values, when diameter of the frontal contact lies in the interval 40–1040 micrometer, that promote more efficient process of supervision resistivity of ohmic contacts to semiconductor plates

    Uses of Lotem for Indonesian hydrocarbon applications

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