Results for 'Catherine B. Asher'

974 found
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  1.  30
    Architecture of Mughal India.Ebba Koch & Catherine B. Asher - 1994 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 114 (3):521.
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  2. Pour une critique marxiste de la théorie psychanalytique, coll. « Problèmes ».B. Catherine, Pierre Bruno & Lucien Sève - 1975 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 165 (2):252-254.
     
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  3.  36
    Daily and trait rumination: diurnal cortisol patterns in adolescent girls.Lori M. Hilt, Michael R. Sladek, Leah D. Doane & Catherine B. Stroud - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (8):1757-1767.
    Rumination is a maladaptive form of emotion regulation associated with psychopathology. Research with adults suggests that rumination covaries with diurnal cortisol rhythms, yet this has not been examined among adolescents. Here, we examine the day-to-day covariation between rumination and cortisol, and explore whether trait rumination is associated with alterations in diurnal cortisol rhythms among adolescent girls. Participants provided saliva samples 3 times per day over 3 days, along with daily reports of stress and rumination, questionnaires assessing trait rumination related to (...)
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  4.  3
    The Experience of Light: Divine Radiance and Religious Experience.Matthew Kapstein (ed.) - 2004 - The University of Chicago Press.
    There is perhaps no greater constant in religious intuition and experience than the presence of light. In spiritual traditions East and West, light is not only ubiquitous but something that assumes strikingly similar forms in altogether different historical and cultural settings. This study examines light as an aspect of religiously valued experiences and its entailments for mystical theology, philosophy, politics, and religious art. The essays in this volume make an important contribution to religious studies by proposing that it is misleading (...)
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  5. SciStarter 2.0 : A Digital Platform to Foster and Study Sustained Engagement in Citizen Science.Catherine Hoffman, Caren B. Cooper, Eric B. Kennedy, Mahmud Farooque & Darlene Cavalier - 2017 - In Luigi Ceccaroni (ed.), Analyzing the role of citizen science in modern research. Hershey PA: Information Science Reference.
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  6.  45
    Eliminating Categorical Exclusion Criteria in Crisis Standards of Care Frameworks.Catherine L. Auriemma, Ashli M. Molinero, Amy J. Houtrow, Govind Persad, Douglas B. White & Scott D. Halpern - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (7):28-36.
    During public health crises including the COVID-19 pandemic, resource scarcity and contagion risks may require health systems to shift—to some degree—from a usual clinical ethic, focused on the well-being of individual patients, to a public health ethic, focused on population health. Many triage policies exist that fall under the legal protections afforded by “crisis standards of care,” but they have key differences. We critically appraise one of the most fundamental differences among policies, namely the use of criteria to categorically exclude (...)
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  7.  26
    Sexual variation in cortical localization of naming as determined by stimulation mapping.Catherine A. Mateer, Samuel B. Polen & George A. Ojemann - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (2):310-311.
  8.  67
    Public Response to Media Coverage of Animal Cruelty.Catherine M. Tiplady, Deborah-Anne B. Walsh & Clive J. C. Phillips - 2013 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 26 (4):869-885.
    Activists’ investigations of animal cruelty expose the public to suffering that they may otherwise be unaware of, via an increasingly broad-ranging media. This may result in ethical dilemmas and a wide range of emotions and reactions. Our hypothesis was that media broadcasts of cruelty to cattle in Indonesian abattoirs would result in an emotional response by the public that would drive their actions towards live animal export. A survey of the public in Australia was undertaken to investigate their reactions and (...)
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  9.  25
    Determining Best Practice in Corporate-Stakeholder Relations Using Data Envelopment Analysis.Catherine Lerme Bendheim, Sandra A. Waddock & Samuel B. Graves - 1998 - Business and Society 37 (3):306-338.
    This article presents a study of corporate-stakeholder relationships using an empirical technique called Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) to assess company "best practices" with respect to five primary stakeholders at an industry level of analysis. Five key stakeholder domains are considered: community relations, employee relations, environment, customer (product category), and stockholders (financial performance). These data reflect the relationships between companies and these five primary stakeholders; these relationships are considered to be important elements of corporate social performance. About 15% of companies, on (...)
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  10.  47
    Why children learn color and size words so differently: evidence from adults' learning of artificial terms.Catherine M. Sandhofer & Linda B. Smith - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 130 (4):600.
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  11.  23
    Spatial-Numerical Associations Enhance the Short-Term Memorization of Digit Locations.Catherine Thevenot, Jasinta Dewi, Pamela B. Lavenex & Jeanne Bagnoud - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  12.  25
    Feeling but not seeing the hand: Occluded hand position reduces the hand proximity effect in ERPs.Catherine L. Reed, John P. Garza & Daivik B. Vyas - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 64:154-163.
  13.  2
    Thinking like a critical realist: getting through the portal.Catherine Hastings Karen Sheppard Angela Davenport A. Law School, Sydney Australiab Learning Designer Manager, Brisbane, Australiac Director of Nursing, A. B. U. Rehabilitation, Auckland & New Zealand - forthcoming - Journal of Critical Realism:1-20.
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  14.  30
    Staffing crisis capacity: a different approach to healthcare resource allocation for a different type of scarce resource.Catherine R. Butler, Laura B. Webster & Douglas S. Diekema - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (9):647-649.
    Severe staffing shortages have emerged as a prominent threat to maintaining usual standards of care during the COVID-2019 pandemic. In dire settings of crisis capacity, healthcare systems assume the ethical duty to maximise aggregate population-level benefit of existing resources. To this end, existing plans for rationing mechanical ventilators and intensive care unit beds in crisis capacity focus on selecting individual patients who are most likely to survive and prioritising these patients to receive scarce resources. However, staffing capacity is conceptually different (...)
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  15.  11
    The revival of beauty: aesthetics, experience and philosophy.Catherine Wesselinoff - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book provides original descriptive accounts of two schools of thought in the philosophy of beauty: the 20th-century "Anti-Aesethetic" movement and the 21st-century "Beauty Revival" movement. It also includes a positive defence of beauty as a lived experience extrapolated from Beauty-Revival position. Beauty was traditionally understood in the broadest sense as a notion that engages our sense perception and embraces everything evoked by that perception, including mental products and affective states. This book constructs and places in parallel with one another (...)
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  16. Colonial encounters of first peoples and first anthropologists in British Columbia, Canada: listening to the late 19th-century voices of the Jesup North Pacific Expedition.Catherine Carlson & Alice B. Kehoe - 2019 - In Peter Ridgway Schmidt & Alice Beck Kehoe (eds.), Archaeologies of listening. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
     
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  17. Deliberative Discourse Idealized and Realized: Accountable Talk in the Classroom and in Civic Life.Sarah Michaels, Catherine O’Connor & Lauren B. Resnick - 2007 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 27 (4):283-297.
    Classroom discussion practices that can lead to reasoned participation by all students are presented and described by the authors. Their research emphasizes the careful orchestration of talk and tasks in academic learning. Parallels are drawn to the philosophical work on deliberative discourse and the fundamental goal of equipping all students to participate in academically productive talk. These practices, termed Accountable TalkSM, emphasize the forms and norms of discourse that support and promote equity and access to rigorous academic learning. They have (...)
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  18.  13
    B. PANTELIĆ, The Architecture of Dečani and the Role of Archbishop Danilo II (= Spätantike, Frühes Christentum, Byzanz. Kunst im ersten Jahrtausend), Série B: Studien und Perspektiven 9, Wiesbaden, 2002.Catherine Vanderheyde - 2004 - Byzantion 74:297-298.
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  19.  11
    The lex Pompeia de provinciis of 52 B.C.: a reconsideration.Catherine Steel - 2012 - História 61 (1):83-93.
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  20.  63
    How patients experience respect in healthcare: findings from a qualitative study among multicultural women living with HIV.Sofia B. Fernandez, Alya Ahmad, Mary Catherine Beach, Melissa K. Ward, Michele Jean-Gilles, Gladys Ibañez, Robert Ladner & Mary Jo Trepka - 2024 - BMC Medical Ethics 25 (1):1-12.
    Background Respect is essential to providing high quality healthcare, particularly for groups that are historically marginalized and stigmatized. While ethical principles taught to health professionals focus on patient autonomy as the object of respect for persons, limited studies explore patients’ views of respect. The purpose of this study was to explore the perspectives of a multiculturally diverse group of low-income women living with HIV (WLH) regarding their experience of respect from their medical physicians. Methods We analyzed 57 semi-structured interviews conducted (...)
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  21.  34
    Hand function, not proximity, biases visuotactile integration later in object processing: An ERP study.Daivik B. Vyas, John P. Garza & Catherine L. Reed - 2019 - Consciousness and Cognition 69:26-35.
  22.  50
    WEIRD walking: Cross-cultural research on motor development.Lana B. Karasik, Karen E. Adolph, Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda & Marc H. Bornstein - 2010 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (2-3):95-96.
    Motor development – traditionally studied in WEIRD populations – falls victim to assumptions of universality similar to other domains described by Henrich et al. However, cross-cultural research illustrates the extraordinary diversity that is normal in motor skill acquisition. Indeed, motor development provides an important domain for evaluating cultural challenges to a general behavioral science.
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  23.  23
    A Survey of Overlapping Surgery Policies at U.S. Hospitals.Margaret B. Mitchell, Catherine M. Hammack-Aviran, Ellen W. Clayton & Alexander Langerman - 2021 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 49 (1):64-73.
    The authors surveyed hospitals across the country on their policies regarding overlapping surgery, and found large variation between hospitals in how this practice is regulated. Specifically, institutions chose to define “critical portions” in a variety of ways, ultimately affecting not only surgical efficiency but also the autonomy of surgical trainees and patient experiences at these different hospitals.
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  24. Aristotle, De anima 3. 2: How do we perceive that we see and hear?Catherine Osborne - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (02):401-411.
    The most important things in this seminal paper are (a) showing that the first part of the chapter is only setting up the aporia and does not provide the solution; (b) showing that the rest of the chapter provides the material for resolving the aporia; (c) showing that the question is not about how we perceive that we perceive, but how we can distinguish between seeing and hearing—how we are aware that we are seeing rather than hearing; (c) showing that (...)
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  25.  13
    Answering Moral Skepticism.B. V. E. Hyde & Catherine Bowden - forthcoming - International Journal of Philosophical Studies:1-6.
    Is morality real? Yale University ethicist Shelly Kagan thinks that it is: he aims to prove so in his recent book. By outlining a variety of skeptical positions and providing rebuttals to each one,...
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  26.  16
    Compte rendu de J. B. Kennedy, The Musical Structure of Plato’s Dialogues.Catherine Collobert - 2012 - Plato Journal 12.
    Cet ouvrage, composé de huit chapitres et de neuf appendices (qui contiennent des précisions utiles sur la méthode proposée), présente une thèse originale et controversée selon laquelle une structure musicale sous-tend les dialogues platoniciens, et en permet une plus riche compréhension. J. B. Kennedy s'appuie sur deux dialogues, le Banquet et l'Euthyphron pour la démontrer. Avant d'introduire sa méthodologie, il prend soin de tracer l'origine de ce type d'interprétation pour en défendre la pertinence. (…) - 12. Plato 12 (2012).
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  27.  35
    RePAIR consensus guidelines: Responsibilities of Publishers, Agencies, Institutions, and Researchers in protecting the integrity of the research record.Alice Young, B. R. Woods, Tamara Welschot, Dan Wainstock, Kaoru Sakabe, Kenneth D. Pimple, Charon A. Pierson, Kelly Perry, Jennifer K. Nyborg, Barb Houser, Anna Keith, Ferric Fang, Arthur M. Buchberg, Lyndon Branfield, Monica Bradford, Catherine Bens, Jeffrey Beall, Laura Bandura-Morgan, Noémie Aubert Bonn & Carolyn J. Broccardo - 2018 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 3 (1).
    The progression of research and scholarly inquiry does not occur in isolation and is wholly dependent on accurate reporting of methods and results, and successful replication of prior work. Without mechanisms to correct the literature, much time and money is wasted on research based on a crumbling foundation. These guidelines serve to outline the respective responsibilities of researchers, institutions, agencies, and publishers or editors in maintaining the integrity of the research record. Delineating these complementary roles and proposing solutions for common (...)
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  28. Process thought and chinese philosophy.John B. Cobb, Joseph Grange, William Hasker, Dirck Vorenkamp, Gu Linyu, James Behuniak, Yih-Hsien Yu, John Berthrong & Catherine Keller - 2005 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 32 (2):159-296.
  29.  41
    Self-deception and psychological realism.Catherine Wilson - 1980 - Philosophical Investigations 3 (4):47-60.
    Philosophers interested in the "paradox of self-Deception" have argued that self-Deception either (a) does not occur; (b) occurs but is unintelligible; or (c) can be explained by reference to sub-Components of a single personality. I argue that self-Deception can be explained as a variety of weakness of the will, Without the realist's mythology of dual or triple selves.
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  30.  28
    A Copayment Increase for Prescription Drugs: The Long-Term and Short-Term Effects on Use and Expenditures.Teresa B. Gibson, Catherine G. McLaughlin & Dean G. Smith - 2005 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 42 (3):293-310.
  31.  40
    How many books did Diodorus Siculus originally intend to write?Catherine Rubincam - 1998 - Classical Quarterly 48 (01):229-.
    Diodorus Siculus was notoriously inconsistent in his statements about the terminal date of his survey of history, the Bibliotheca Historica. In the ‘table of contents’ which he included in the general preface to the whole work, written apparently when he was preparing his manuscript for publication , he specifically names the year 60/59 as the last year of his narrative. Elsewhere, however, he not only gives a figure for the period of history encompassed by his work which would bring it (...)
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  32.  36
    The Effects of CEO Trustworthiness on Directors' Monitoring and Resource Provision.Esther B. Del Brio, Toru Yoshikawa, Catherine E. Connelly & Wee Liang Tan - 2013 - Journal of Business Ethics 118 (1):155-169.
    Because of the importance of board members’ resource provision and monitoring, a substantial body of research has been devoted to ascertaining how directors can be incented to perform their responsibilities. We use social exchange theory to empirically examine how board members’ resource provision and monitoring are affected by their perceptions of the CEOs’ trustworthiness. Our findings suggest that board members’ perceptions of the CEO’s ability, benevolence, and integrity have different effects on the board members’ resource provision and monitoring. Our results (...)
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  33.  33
    Speech Facilitates the Categorization of Motions in 9-Month-Old Infants.Micah B. Goldwater, R. Jason Brunt & Catherine H. Echols - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  34.  8
    Finding the Mind: Pedagogy for Verifying.Catherine Blanche King - 2011 - Upa.
    Drawing on the theory-of-mind in B. Lonergan's Insight: A Study of Human Understanding, King forges the much-needed critical-experimental link between the reader's own written or spoken expressions and the structure of the human mind. A philosophy of education emerges that the reader-experimenter can both verify and identify with personally.
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  35.  64
    The price of security: a roundtable.Catherine Audard, Tony McWalter, Saladin Meckled-García, Jonathan Rée & Alex Voorhoeve - 2006 - The Philosophers' Magazine 34:53-59.
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  36.  11
    Leo Strauss, Education, and Political Thought.Shadia B. Drury, Jon Fennell, Tim McDonough, Heinrich Meier, Neil G. Robertson, Timothy L. Simpson, J. G. York, Catherine H. Zuckert & Michael Zuckert (eds.) - 2011 - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
    This collection by some of the leading scholars of Strauss's work is the first devoted to Strauss's thought regarding education. It seeks to address his conception of education as it applies to a range of his most important concepts, such as his views on the importance of revelation, his critique of modern democracy and the importance of modern classical education.
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  37.  33
    Effect of Background Music on Attentional Control in Older and Young Adults.Amélie Cloutier, Natalia B. Fernandez, Catherine Houde-Archambault & Nathalie Gosselin - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  38.  21
    Emergency Department Visits for Firearm-Related Injuries among Youth in the United States, 2006–2015.Victor Lee, Catherine Camp, Vikram Jairam, Henry S. Park & James B. Yu - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (S4):67-73.
    Firearm injuries are a significant public health problem. Prior studies have analyzed firearm death data or adult firearm injury data, but few studies have analyzed firearm injury data specifically among youth. To inform the current debate surrounding gun policy in the United States, this study aims to provide an estimate of the immense burden of youth firearm injury and its associated risk factors. Therefore, we performed a descriptive analysis of the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample, the largest all-payer emergency department database (...)
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  39. Why women must guard and rule in Plato's kallipolis.Catherine Mckeen - 2006 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 87 (4):527–548.
    Plato's discussion of women in the Republic is problematic. For one, arguments in Book V which purport to establish that women should guard and rule alongside men do not deliver the advertised conclusion. In addition, Plato asserts that women are "weaker in all pursuits" than men. Given this assumption, having women guard and rule seems inimical to the health, security, and goodness of the kallipolis. I argue that we best understand the inclusion of women by seeing how women's inclusion contributes (...)
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  40.  35
    Decisions at the Brink: Locomotor Experience Affects Infants’ Use of Social Information on an Adjustable Drop-off.Lana B. Karasik, Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda & Karen E. Adolph - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  41. Plenitude and Compossibility in Leibniz.Catherine Wilson - 2000 - The Leibniz Review 10:1-20.
    Leibniz entertained the idea that, as a set of “striving possibles” competes for existence, the largest and most perfect world comes into being. The paper proposes 8 criteria for a Leibniz-world. It argues that a) there is no algorithm e.g., one involving pairwise compossibility-testing that can produce even possible Leibniz-worlds; b) individual substances presuppose completed worlds; c) the uniqueness of the actual world is a matter of theological preference, not an outcome of the assembly-process; and d) Goedel’s theorem implies that (...)
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  42.  29
    What Philosophers Can Learn from Agrotechnology: Agricultural Metaphysics, Sustainable Egg Production Standards as Ontologies, and Why and How Canola Exists.Catherine Kendig - 2023 - In Samantha Noll & Zachary Piso (eds.), Paul B. Thompson's Philosophy of Agriculture: Fields, Farmers, Forks, and Food. Springer Verlag. pp. 115-129.
    Agriculture is defined normatively and, as such, is an area of research and practice where values are an inextricable constituent of research, where facts and values elide, and normative constraints generate new ethical categories. While discussions of normativity are part and parcel within agricultural ethics and play a prominent role in ethical discussions, I suggest that other areas of agricultural philosophy such as agricultural metaphysics or ontologies present valuable case studies for philosophical discussion. A series of case studies focusing on (...)
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  43.  47
    Réinventer la sexualité: Remarques sur les derniers écrits de Michel Foucault.Catherine Chevalley - 2002 - Revista de Filosofía (Madrid) 27 (1):7-41.
    L’objet de l’article est d’analyser notre conception contemporaine de la sexualité, en liaison avec la caractérisation qu’en proposait Foucault et qui fait du “Sexe” l’élément central d’un “dispositif de sexualité”. Dans la première partie de l’article, je propose d’abord une description critique de certaines des composantes principales de notre conception de la sexualité, qui sont (a) la conviction que le sexe est une affaire privée; (b) l’idée que l’érotisme pourrait être une solution philosophique providentielle à l’opposition du Sujet et de (...)
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  44.  71
    Susanna and the pre-Christian book of Daniel: Structure and meaning.Catherine Brown Tkacz - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (2):181–196.
    The structure of the pre‐Christian book of Daniel as newly edited in Palestine in the first century B.C. is coherent, often symmetrical, and meaningful and was the version used by Jesus and the early Christians. Origen's and Jerome's reordering of the fourteen‐chapter book in conformity with the extant Hebrew, however, vitiated that structure. Susanna's account opened the pre‐Christian Palestinian version. That account inaugurates the themes of wisdom and judgment and provides the restoration of right order within the community in exile, (...)
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  45.  13
    B. BRENK (éd.), Innovation in der Spätantike. Kolloquium Basel 6. und 7. Mai 1994 (= Spätantike, Frühes Christentum, Byzanz. Kunst im ersten Jahrtausend), Série B: Studien und Perspektiven 1, Wiesbaden, 1996. [REVIEW]Catherine Vanderheyde - 2000 - Byzantion 70:361-362.
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  46.  47
    Unregulated Health Research Using Mobile Devices: Ethical Considerations and Policy Recommendations.Mark A. Rothstein, John T. Wilbanks, Laura M. Beskow, Kathleen M. Brelsford, Kyle B. Brothers, Megan Doerr, Barbara J. Evans, Catherine M. Hammack-Aviran, Michelle L. McGowan & Stacey A. Tovino - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (S1):196-226.
    Mobile devices with health apps, direct-to-consumer genetic testing, crowd-sourced information, and other data sources have enabled research by new classes of researchers. Independent researchers, citizen scientists, patient-directed researchers, self-experimenters, and others are not covered by federal research regulations because they are not recipients of federal financial assistance or conducting research in anticipation of a submission to the FDA for approval of a new drug or medical device. This article addresses the difficult policy challenge of promoting the welfare and interests of (...)
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  47.  46
    Subjectivity and representation in descartes: The origins of modernity: Dalia Judovitz , xii + 230pp., £25.00 H.B. [REVIEW]Catherine Wilson - 1989 - History of European Ideas 10 (3):387-389.
  48.  30
    LETTER-WRITING IN BYZANTIUM - (A.) Riehle (ed.) A Companion to Byzantine Epistolography. (Brill's Companions to the Byzantine World 7.) Pp. xii + 531, b/w & colour ills. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2020. Cased, €238, US$286. ISBN: 978-90-04-41369-6. [REVIEW]Catherine Rosbrook & Bronwen Neil - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (1):82-85.
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  49.  38
    Scientific Integrity Principles and Best Practices: Recommendations from a Scientific Integrity Consortium.Alison Kretser, Delia Murphy, Stefano Bertuzzi, Todd Abraham, David B. Allison, Kathryn J. Boor, Johanna Dwyer, Andrea Grantham, Linda J. Harris, Rachelle Hollander, Chavonda Jacobs-Young, Sarah Rovito, Dorothea Vafiadis, Catherine Woteki, Jessica Wyndham & Rickey Yada - 2019 - Science and Engineering Ethics 25 (2):327-355.
    A Scientific Integrity Consortium developed a set of recommended principles and best practices that can be used broadly across scientific disciplines as a mechanism for consensus on scientific integrity standards and to better equip scientists to operate in a rapidly changing research environment. The two principles that represent the umbrella under which scientific processes should operate are as follows: Foster a culture of integrity in the scientific process. Evidence-based policy interests may have legitimate roles to play in influencing aspects of (...)
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  50. Public Stem Cell Banks: Considerations of Justice in Stem Cell Research and Therapy.Ruth R. Faden, Liza Dawson, Alison S. Bateman-House, Dawn Mueller Agnew, Hilary Bok, Dan W. Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Xiao-Jiang Gao, Mark Greene, John A. Hansen, Patricia A. King, Stephen J. O'Brien, David H. Sachs, Kathryn E. Schill, Andrew Siegel, Davor Solter, Sonia M. Suter, Catherine M. Verfaillie, LeRoy B. Walters & John D. Gearhart - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
    If stem cell-based therapies are developed, we will likely confront a difficult problem of justice: for biological reasons alone, the new therapies might benefit only a limited range of patients. In fact, they might benefit primarily white Americans, thereby exacerbating long-standing differences in health and health care.
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