103 research outputs found
Theiss Bendixen's Quick Files
The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity
Theiss Bendixen's Quick Files
The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity
Theiss Bendixen's Quick Files
The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity
Raising a Child With Congenital Muscular Dystrophy: Impact on the Family
Abstract
Date Presented 3/31/2017
This study examines the impact on families of raising children with congenital muscular dystrophy. The findings expand the understanding of challenges they face and contribute to an evidence-based approach for families.
Primary Author and Speaker: Yoonjeong Lim
Additional Authors and Speakers: Consuelo Kreider, Roxanna Bendixen</jats:p
Does she still love and feel hungry? Afterlife beliefs, mind-body dualism, and religion across 24 countries
Data and analysis scripts for the manuscript: "Does she still love and feel hungry? Afterlife beliefs, mind-body dualism, and religion across 24 countries"
Authors: Suzanne Hoogeveen, Sacha Altay, Theiss Bendixen, Renatas Berniūnas, Joseph A. Bulbulia, Arik Cheshin, Claudio Gentili, Raluca Georgescu, Julia M. Haaf, Kristin Hagel, Christopher Kavanagh, Neil Levy, Ryan McKay, Alejandra Neely, Lin Qiu, André Rabelo, Jonathan E. Ramsay, Robert M. Ross, Hugh Turpin, Robin Wuyts, Dimitris Xygalatas & Michiel van Elk
Examining the Effects of the Mealtime PREP Intervention for Toddlers With Sensory Food Aversions
Abstract
Date Presented 3/30/2017
The Mealtime PREP intervention shows promise to improve dietary variety and mealtime behaviors and lower risk of nutritional deficiency in toddlers with sensory food aversions. Moderate to large effect sizes were observed in a small sample of 11 families trained to deliver this intervention in the home.
Primary Author and Speaker: Angela Caldwell
Contributing Authors: Roxanna Bendixen, Cynthia Danford, Lauren Terhorst, Elizabeth Skidmore</jats:p
The Einstein effect: Global evidence for scientific source credibility and the influence of religiosity (data and analysis code)
Data and analysis scripts for the manuscript: "The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity"
Authors: Suzanne Hoogeveen, Julia M. Haaf, Joseph A. Bulbulia, Robert M. Ross, Ryan McKay, Sacha Altay, Theiss Bendixen, Renatas Berniūnas, Arik Cheshin, Claudio Gentili, Raluca Georgescu, Will M. Gervais, Kristin Hagel, Christopher Kavanagh, Neil Levy, Alejandra Neely, Lin Qiu, André Rabelo, Jonathan E. Ramsay, Bastiaan T. Rutjens, Hugh Turpin, Filip Uzarevic, Robin Wuyts, Dimitris Xygalatas & Michiel van Elk
Does she still love and feel hungry? Afterlife beliefs, mind-body dualism, and religion across 24 countries
Data and analysis scripts for the manuscript: "Does she still love and feel hungry? Afterlife beliefs, mind-body dualism, and religion across 24 countries"
Authors: Suzanne Hoogeveen, Sacha Altay, Theiss Bendixen, Renatas Berniūnas, Joseph A. Bulbulia, Arik Cheshin, Claudio Gentili, Raluca Georgescu, Julia M. Haaf, Kristin Hagel, Christopher Kavanagh, Neil Levy, Ryan McKay, Alejandra Neely, Lin Qiu, André Rabelo, Jonathan E. Ramsay, Robert M. Ross, Hugh Turpin, Robin Wuyts, Dimitris Xygalatas & Michiel van Elk
What Do Nonreligious Nonbelievers Believe in? Secular Worldviews Around the World
The global increase in nonreligious individuals begs for a better understanding of what nonreligious beliefs and worldviews actually entail. Rather than assuming an absence of belief or imposing a predetermined set of beliefs, this research uses an open-ended approach to investigate which secular beliefs and worldviews nonreligious nontheistic individuals in 10 countries around the world might endorse. Approximately, one thousand participants were recruited (N = 996; approximately 100 participants per country) and completed the online survey. A data-driven coding scheme of the open-ended question about the participants' beliefs and worldviews was created and includes 51 categories in 11 supercategories (agency and control, collaboration and peace, equality and kindness, morality, natural laws and the here and now, nonreligiosity, reflection and acceptance, science and critical thinking, spirituality, truth, and other). The 10 most frequently mentioned categories were science, humanism, critical skepticism, natural laws, equality, kindness and caring, care for the earth, left-wing political causes, atheism, and individualism and freedom. Patterns of beliefs were explored, demonstrating three worldview belief sets: scientific worldviews, humanist worldviews, and caring nature-focused worldviews. This project is a timely data-driven exploration of the content and range of global secular worldviews around the world and matches previous theoretical work. Future research may utilize these data and findings to construct more comprehensive surveys to be completed in additional countries.Understanding Unbelief RFP2 Early Career Award; Aarhus University Research Foundation; Finnish Cultural Foundation [00180271]This research was funded by an Understanding Unbelief RFP2 Early Career Award awarded to Valerie van Mulukom; Benjamin Grant Purzycki and Theiss Bendixen acknowledge support from the Aarhus University Research Foundation; and Roosa Haimila was supported by a research grant from the Finnish Cultural Foundation (Grant: 00180271)
Cognitive and cultural models in psychological science: A tutorial on modeling free-list data as a dependent variable in Bayesian regression
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