Results for 'Amanda Jane Fairchild'

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  1. Evaluating a Method to Estimate Mediation Effects With Discrete-Time Survival Outcomes.Amanda Jane Fairchild, Chao Cai, Heather McDaniel, Dexin Shi, Amanda Gottschall & Katherine E. Masyn - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  2.  65
    The Patients Changing Things Together (PATCHATT) ethics pack: A tool to support inclusive ethical decision-making in the development of a community-based palliative care intervention.Amanda Jane Roberts - 2023 - Clinical Ethics 18 (1):128-137.
    The Patients Changing Things Together (PATCHATT) programme supports individuals with a life-limiting illness to lead a change that matters to them. Individuals join a facilitated online peer support group to identify an issue they feel strongly about, plan for change and take action to bring that change about. The programme is developed and guided by a Programme Advisory Group with clinical and lay membership. This article charts the trialling of the patients changing thing together ethics pack, designed to support all (...)
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  3.  82
    Using Self-Determination Theory to Examine Musical Participation and Well-Being.Amanda E. Krause, Adrian C. North & Jane W. Davidson - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:439908.
    A recent surge of research has begun to examine music participation and well-being; however, a particular challenge with this work concerns theorizing around the associated well-being benefits of musical participation. Thus, the current research used Self-Determination Theory to consider the potential associations between basic psychological needs (competence, relatedness, and autonomy), self-determined autonomous motivation, and the perceived benefits to well-being controlling for demographic variables and the musical activity parameters. A sample of 192 Australian residents (17-85, Mage = 36.95), who were currently (...)
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  4. Do Lions have Manes? For Children, Generics are about Kinds, not Quantities.Amanda Brandone, Andrei Cimpian, Sarah-Jane Leslie & Susan Gelman - 2012 - Child Development 83:423-433.
  5.  17
    Research governance review of a negligible-risk research project: Too much of a good thing?Amanda Rush, Rod Ling, Jane E. Carpenter, Candace Carter, Andrew Searles & Jennifer A. Byrne - 2017 - Research Ethics 14 (3):1-12.
    There are increasing concerns that research regulatory requirements exceed those required to manage risks, particularly for low- and negligible-risk research projects. In particular, inconsistent documentation requirements across research sites can delay the conduct of multi-site projects. For a one-year, negligible-risk project examining biobank operations conducted at three separate Australian institutions, we found that the researcher time required to meet regulatory requirements was eight times greater than that required for the approved research activity. In total, 76 business days were required to (...)
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  6. Effective Educational Strategies to Promote Life-Long Musical Investment: Perceptions of Educators.Amanda E. Krause & Jane W. Davidson - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  7. A Qualitative Exploration of Aged-Care Residents’ Everyday Music Listening Practices and How These May Support Psychosocial Well-Being.Amanda E. Krause & Jane W. Davidson - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Strategies to support the psychosocial well-being of older adults living in aged-care are needed; and evidence points toward music listening as an effective, non-pharmacological tool with many benefits to quality of life and well-being. Yet, the everyday listening practices of older adults living in residential aged-care remain under-researched. The current study explored older adults’ experiences of music listening in their daily lives while living in residential aged-care and considered how music listening might support their well-being. Specifically, what might go into (...)
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  8.  23
    Visual Antipriming Effect: Evidence from Chinese Character Identification.Zhang Feng, J. Fairchild Amanda & Li Xiaoming - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  9.  39
    Narrative Symposium: Challenges With Care During Labor and Delivery.Erica Morrell, Nikki Johnson, Linda Echegaray, Kimberly Fairchild, Alaina Pyle, Erin E. Mckee, Elizabeth Tillinger, Farah Diaz–Tello, Samantha Knowlton, Amanda Kracen, Naomi Rendina, Kristen Terlizzi, Katherine Rand & Cheryl Lebedevitch - 2017 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 7 (3):182-E6.
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  10.  16
    Deliberating Upon the Living Wage to Alleviate In-Work Poverty: A Rhetorical Inquiry Into Key Stakeholder Accounts.Darrin J. Hodgetts, Amanda Maria Young-Hauser, Jim Arrowsmith, Jane Parker, Stuart Colin Carr, Jarrod Haar & Siautu Alefaio - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:810870.
    Most developed nations have a statutory minimum wage set at levels insufficient to alleviate poverty. Increased calls for a living wage have generated considerable public controversy. This article draws on 25 interviews and four focus groups with employers, low-pay industry representatives, representatives of chambers of commerce, pay consultants, and unions. The core focus is on how participants use prominent narrative tropes for the living wage and against the living wage to argue their respective perspectives. We also document how both affirmative (...)
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  11.  15
    Investigating the Impact of Isolation During COVID-19 on Family Functioning – An Australian Snapshot.Jade Sheen, Anna Aridas, Phillip Tchernegovski, Amanda Dudley, Jane McGillivray & Andrea Reupert - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    This study explored possible changes in family functioning from the perspective of parents during the COVID-19 pandemic. Thirty-four parents/guardians of children under 18 years completed a semi-structured interview, average length 47 min. Interviews focussed on changes in different aspects of family functioning including family roles, routines, and rules; parenting practices; communication and relationships; and strengths, challenges, and tensions. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis applied in an idiographic and inductive manner to reduce the loss of individual experiences and perspectives. (...)
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  12.  58
    The Written World: Past and Place in the Work of Orderic Vitalis. By Amanda Jane Hingst.R. N. Swanson - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (3):474-475.
  13.  14
    Sense and Sensibility.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
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  14. The genesis of public health ethics.Ronald Bayer & Amy L. Fairchild - 2004 - Bioethics 18 (6):473–492.
    ABSTRACT As bioethics emerged in the 1960s and 1970s and began to have enormous impacts on the practice of medicine and research – fuelled, by broad socio‐political changes that gave rise to the struggle of women, African Americans, gay men and lesbians, and the antiauthoritarian impulse that characterised the New Left in democratic capitalist societies – little attention was given to the question of the ethics of public health. This was all the more striking since the core values and practices (...)
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  15.  17
    Disputed subjects: essays on psychoanalysis, politics, and philosophy.Jane Flax - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    _Disputed Subjects_ analyzes some of the assumptions behind the contemporary attraction to rationalistic notions of justice and knowledge and discusses why modernity cannot be emancipatory. The effects of gender relations in constituting modern political ideas and theories of knowledge are explored, while at the same time the author identifies problematic aspects of discourses such as psychoanalysis, postmodernism and feminist theorizing. Flax pays special attention to recurrent difficulties concerning maternity, sexuality and race within feminist theorizing, and she addresses the inadequacies of (...)
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  16.  7
    Controversies over Stalinism: Searching for a Soviet Society.Jane Burbank - 1991 - Politics and Society 19 (3):325-340.
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  17.  40
    Body stakes: an existential ethics of care in living with biometrics and AI.Amanda Lagerkvist, Matilda Tudor, Jacek Smolicki, Charles M. Ess, Jenny Eriksson Lundström & Maria Rogg - 2024 - AI and Society 39 (1):169-181.
    This article discusses the key existential stakes of implementing biometrics in human lifeworlds. In this pursuit, we offer a problematization and reinvention of central values often taken for granted within the “ethical turn” of AI development and discourse, such as autonomy, agency, privacy and integrity, as we revisit basic questions about what it means to be human and embodied. Within a framework of existential media studies, we introduce an existential ethics of care—through a conversation between existentialism, virtue ethics, a feminist (...)
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  18.  65
    Facial expression of pain: An evolutionary account.Amanda C. De C. Williams - 2002 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (4):439-455.
    This paper proposes that human expression of pain in the presence or absence of caregivers, and the detection of pain by observers, arises from evolved propensities. The function of pain is to demand attention and prioritise escape, recovery, and healing; where others can help achieve these goals, effective communication of pain is required. Evidence is reviewed of a distinct and specific facial expression of pain from infancy to old age, consistent across stimuli, and recognizable as pain by observers. Voluntary control (...)
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  19.  38
    Hearing things: Inside outness and ‘sonic ghosts’.Jane Grant - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 9 (2-3):217-223.
    This article will consider sound as a glue between internal and external experience, a link between sensing and cognition, memory and perception. In looking at research in neuroscience, specifically Eugene Izhikevich’s work with models of spiking neurons, parallels may be drawn with faulty source monitoring where a subject cannot differentiate between external and internal stimuli, and with a collapsing of present into the past. These ideas will be discussed through a number of sonic artworks that have neural plasticity, space and (...)
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  20.  74
    Differences in preschoolers’ and adults’ use of generics about novel animals and artifacts: A window onto a conceptual divide.Amanda C. Brandone & Susan A. Gelman - 2009 - Cognition 110 (1):1-22.
    Children and adults commonly produce more generic noun phrases (e.g., birds fly) about animals than artifacts. This may reflect differences in participants’ generic knowledge about specific animals/artifacts (e.g., dogs/chairs), or it may reflect a more general distinction. To test this, the current experiments asked adults and preschoolers to generate properties about novel animals and artifacts (Experiment 1: real animals/artifacts; Experiments 2 and 3: matched pairs of maximally similar, novel animals/artifacts). Data demonstrate that even without prior knowledge about these items, the (...)
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  21. Are you (relevantly) experienced? A moral argument for video games.Amanda Cawston & Nathan Wildman - 2022 - In Laura D'Olimpio, Panos Paris & Aidan P. Thompson (eds.), Educating Character Through the Arts. Routledge.
    Many have offered moral objections to video games, with various critics contending that they depict and promote morally dubious attitudes and behaviour. However, few have offered moral arguments in favour of video games. In this chapter, we develop one such positive moral argument. Specifically, we argue that video games offer one of the only morally acceptable methods for acquiring some ethical knowledge. Consequently, we have (defeasible) moral reasons for creating, distributing, and playing certain morally educating video games.
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  22.  28
    (3 other versions)Books in Review.Jane Bennett - 1986 - Political Theory 14 (4):682-686.
  23.  26
    4. Disenchantment Tales.Jane Bennett - 2001 - In The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings, and Ethics. Princeton University Press. pp. 56-90.
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  24.  33
    Out for a Walk.Jane Bennett - 2019 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 10 (1):93-105.
    I explore two walks, one by Henry Thoreau on a hot day in 1851 and one by a line as it winds its way into a doodle today. Walks, I contend, generate circuits of energies and affects, some issuing from people, some from elsewhere. The goal is to accent how ahuman energies and affects inscribe themselves upon selves and inflect their positions and dispositions. Borrowing a term from Lorenz Engell, I call this inscriptive inflection an ›ontographic‹ procedure. Ontography will mark (...)
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  25.  11
    Alessandro Minelli and Thomas Pradeu : Towards a theory of development: Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014, xiii + 283 pp, illus, £ 75.Jane Maienschein - 2014 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 36 (2):299-300.
  26. The First Century of Cell Theory: From Structural Units to Complex Living Systems.Jane Maienschein - 2017 - In Friedrich Stadler (ed.), Integrated History and Philosophy of Science: Problems, Perspectives, and Case Studies. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  27.  42
    Political and Aesthetic Equality in the Work of Jacques Rancière: Applying his Writing to Debates in Education and the Arts.Mcdonnell Jane - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 51 (2):387-400.
    This paper draws on insights from Jacques Rancière's writing on politics and aesthetics to offer new perspectives on debates in education and the arts. The paper addresses three debates in turn; the place of contemporary art in schools and gallery education, the role of art in democratic education and the blurring of boundaries between participatory art and community education. I argue that Rancière's work helps to illuminate some essentialist assumptions behind dichotomous arguments about contemporary art in the classroom—both over-hyped claims (...)
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  28. Needed: A new paradigm for liberal education.Jane Roland Martin - 1981 - In Jonas F. Soltis & Kenneth J. Rehage (eds.), Philosophy and education. Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press.
  29.  47
    The Sufficiency Fallacy in Cognitive Developmentalism.Jane Rachner - 1970 - Journal of Critical Analysis 2 (3):1-13.
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  30.  26
    (1 other version)Robot nannies get a wheel in the door.Noel Sharkey & Amanda Sharkey - 2010 - Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies / Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies 11 (2):302-313.
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  31.  8
    Janus's Gaze: Essays on Carl Schmitt.Adam Sitze & Amanda Minervini (eds.) - 2015 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    First published in Italian in 2008 and appearing here in English for the first time, _Janus's Gaze_ is the culmination of Carlo Galli's ongoing critique of the work of Carl Schmitt. Galli argues that Schmitt's main accomplishment, as well as the thread that unifies his oeuvre, is his construction of a genealogy of the modern that explains how modernity's compulsory drive to achieve order is both necessary and impossible. Galli addresses five key problems in Schmitt's thought: his relation to the (...)
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  32. Externalism and Memory.Heal Jane - 1998 - Proceedings of Aristotelian Society 72 (1).
     
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  33.  18
    Artaud and painting: the quest for a language of gnosis.Jane Goodall - 1989 - Paragraph 12 (2):107-123.
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  34.  16
    Journeys in Caribbean Thought: The Paget Henry Reader.Jane Anna Gordon, Lewis R. Gordon, Aaron Kamugisha & Neil Roberts (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    For the past 30 years, Paget Henry has been one of the most articulate and creative voices in Caribbean scholarship, making seminal contributions to the study of Caribbean political economy, C.L.R. James studies, critical theory, phenomenology, and Africana philosophy. This volume includes some of his most important essays from across his remarkable career, providing an introduction to a broad range of pressing contemporary themes and to the unique mind of one of the leading Caribbean intellectuals of his generation.
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  35. Pragmatism and Anscombe on the first person.Jane Heal - 2016 - In Cheryl Misak & Huw Price (eds.), The Practical Turn: Pragmatism in Britain in the Long Twentieth Century. Oxford: Oup/Ba.
     
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  36.  26
    Kant's Practical Philosophy: From Critique to Doctrine, by Gary Banham.Jane Singleton - 2006 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 37 (1):105-106.
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  37. Science as a Process: An Evolutionary Account of the Social and Conceptual Development of Science. [REVIEW]Jane Maienschein - 1989 - Journal of the History of Biology 22 (3):507-509.
     
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  38.  10
    Quintessentialism.Jane Caputi - 2000 - Feminist Theology 8 (24):13-18.
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  39.  59
    Rape as a Form of Torture.Jane Duran - 2000 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 14 (2):191-196.
    Using material taken from contemporary feminist theory and also from work on human rights, it is argued that rape is a form of torture, and that it operates on powerful levels, both literally and metaphorically. Part of the argument is that rape has achieved the status it has as political force for exploitation because of strong beliefs about cultural reproduction and about the roles that women play in cultural reproduction.
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  40.  36
    Cliometrics, child labor, and the industrial revolution.Jane Humphries - 1999 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 13 (3-4):269-283.
    Abstract Ten years ago, Clark Nardinelli shocked conventional historians by reinterpreting child labor as a sensible response to the Industrial Revolution. Nardinelli's exculpation of child labor follows front the way in which he deploys neoclassical economic theory. How relevant is his neoclassical model to the early industrial economy, and how realistic is methodological individualism to the decisions that sent young children into the appalling work places of early industrial Britain? Rather than seeing neoclassical economics as a substitute for historical judgment, (...)
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  41.  21
    Ethics and Microcredit.Jane Duran - 2019 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 33 (2):231-241.
    An analysis of the specific yogurt and phone microcredit schemes in Bangladesh is made along three lines of argument. It is important to note that these schemes are pulled together by NGO’s (non-governmental organizations) to assist women and children in developing areas to attain financial independence—the first line employs leftist criticism of the corporate constructs, and an additional line of inquiry compares some of the programs to those in other nations. A final line of argument analyzes the specific cultural views (...)
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  42.  22
    Law, Social Contract Theory, and the Construction of Colonial Hierarchies “.Jane F. Collier - 1998 - In Bryant G. Garth & Austin Sarat (eds.), How does law matter? Evanston, Ill.: American Bar Foundation. pp. 162--190.
  43.  7
    Mapping a Global Labor Market: Gender and Skill in the Globalizing Garment Industry.Jane L. Collins - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (6):921-940.
    This article examines the ways that managers in a rapidly globalizing industry use gendered discourses of skill to justify and frame their search for inexperienced workers in low-wage regions, using a case of a U.S.-based apparel firm that relocated and subcontracted its sewing operations in the 1990s. It uses feminist theory to examine managers' claims that women's sewing skills in the United States were disappearing and that they needed to seek out these skills in parts of the world where women (...)
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  44.  27
    Passage and Possibility: A Study of Aristotle's Modal Concepts.Jane M. Day - 1984 - Philosophical Books 25 (2):81-83.
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  45.  40
    Folk Terms and Agency.Jane Duran - 1991 - Philosophica 47 (1):111-124.
  46.  24
    The Ideological Function in Semiosis.Jane A. Nicholson - 1985 - Semiotics:382-389.
  47. The Reception of Continental Reformation in Britain.Dawson Jane Ea - 2010
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  48.  22
    Practical Reasoning.Jane M. Day - 1991 - Philosophical Books 32 (2):96-98.
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  49.  25
    Kierkegaard's Christian Reflectivity: Its Precursors in the Aesthetic of "Either/Or".Jane Duran - 1985 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 17 (3):131 - 137.
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  50.  11
    Embodied Identity? The Life and Art of Estelle Ishigo.Jane Dusselier - 2006 - Feminist Studies 32 (3):534.
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