Results for 'M. Tyler Boden'

963 found
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  1.  31
    Emotional awareness, gender, and suspiciousness.M. Tyler Boden & Howard Berenbaum - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (2):268-280.
  2.  44
    Meta-Analysis of the Association Between Emotional Clarity and Attention to Emotions.Matthew Tyler Boden & Renee J. Thompson - 2017 - Emotion Review 9 (1):79-85.
    Emotional clarity and attention to emotions represent the extent to which people understand and attend to their own emotions, respectively, and are broad facets of emotional awareness, alexithymia, and emotional intelligence. To examine the extent to which these two constructs are associated, we conducted a meta-analysis of studies including well-validated self-report measures of trait clarity and attention to emotion. Clarity and attention were moderately, positively associated. Assessment instrument, but not sample gender or age, moderated the association between clarity and attention. (...)
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  3.  39
    Are emotional clarity and emotion differentiation related?Matthew Tyler Boden, Renee J. Thompson, Mügé Dizén, Howard Berenbaum & John P. Baker - 2013 - Cognition and Emotion 27 (6):961-978.
  4.  34
    Emotional awareness, gender, and peculiar body-related beliefs.Matthew Tyler Boden, Sasha Gala & Howard Berenbaum - 2013 - Cognition and Emotion 27 (5):942-951.
  5.  14
    Automaticity of lexical access in deaf and hearing bilinguals: Cross-linguistic evidence from the color Stroop task across five languages.Rain G. Bosworth, Eli M. Binder, Sarah C. Tyler & Jill P. Morford - 2021 - Cognition 212 (C):104659.
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  6.  28
    Emotional variability and clarity in depression and social anxiety.Renee J. Thompson, Matthew Tyler Boden & Ian H. Gotlib - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (1):98-108.
  7. The intellectual context of artificial life.M. A. Boden - 1996 - In Margaret A. Boden (ed.), The philosophy of artificial life. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1--35.
     
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  8.  28
    Improving metacognitive accuracy: How failing to retrieve practice items reduces overconfidence.Tyler M. Miller & Lisa Geraci - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 29:131-140.
  9. Cognitive science.M. A. Boden - 2005 - In Donald M. Borchert (ed.), Encyclopedia of Philosophy. macmillan reference. pp. 2--296.
  10.  33
    Geschichte der Religionsphilosophie von Spinoza bis auf die Gegenwart.Chas M. Tyler - 1894 - Philosophical Review 3 (2):244-244.
  11.  59
    Personal philosophy and personnel achievement: belief in free will predicts better job performance.Tyler F. Stillman, Roy F. Baumeister, Kathleen D. Vohs, Nathaniel M. Lambert, Frank D. Fincham & Lauren E. Brewer - 2010 - .
    Do philosophic views affect job performance? The authors found that possessing a belief in free will predicted better career attitudes and actual job performance. The effect of free will beliefs on job performance indicators were over and above well-established predictors such as conscientiousness, locus of control, and Protestant work ethic. In Study 1, stronger belief in free will corresponded to more positive attitudes about expected career success. In Study 2, job performance was evaluated objectively and independently by a supervisor. Results (...)
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  12.  9
    Outside and Outside: Plastic Passages—of Philosophy and Literature.Tyler M. Williams - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):99-123.
    In Subjects That Matter, Namita Goswami attends to philosophy’s institutional and disciplinary failures to reconcile its identitarian claims to universality and reason with the feminist and postcolonial modes of thinking it traditionally keeps at bay. This essay places Goswami’s critique within a context of “the thought from outside,” which, beginning with Foucault’s reading of Blanchot, continuing through the geopolitics of Dussel’s philosophy of liberation, and prominent in Catherine Malabou’s conceptualization of plasticity, demonstrates how political critiques of philosophical hegemony contain an (...)
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  13.  56
    Motive and consequence in repression.M. Boden Joseph - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (5):514-515.
    Erdelyi's unified theory of repression offers a significant advance in understanding the disparate findings related to repression. However, the theory de-emphasizes the role of motive in repression, and it is argued here that motive is critical to the understanding of repression as it occurs in the mental life of individuals.
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  14.  40
    State emotional clarity and attention to emotion: a naturalistic examination of their associations with each other, affect, and context.Renee J. Thompson & Matthew Tyler Boden - 2019 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (7):1514-1522.
    ABSTRACTDespite emotional clarity and attention to emotion being dynamic in nature, research has largely focused on their trait forms. We examined the association between state and trait forms of t...
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  15.  11
    Examining the effects of caffeine during an auditory attention task.Tyler B. Kruger, Mike J. Dixon, Jonathan M. Oakman & Daniel Smilek - 2024 - Consciousness and Cognition 124 (C):103729.
  16.  28
    Sonic Histories: Reckoning with Race through Campus Soundscapes.Tyler Kinnear, Robert Hunt Ferguson & Jessica M. Hayden - 2023 - Environment, Space, Place 15 (1):32-65.
    The sounds of the college campus raise important questions of participation, identity, privilege, disability, and marginalization. During the 2019–2020 academic year, three university instructors from distinct disciplines (music, history, and political science) and a student research assistant (history) used sound as a method for inquiring into contested and erased sites on the campus of Western Carolina University, a regional comprehensive university located in the southeastern United States. The project came to be called Sonic Histories. Paid student volunteers were led on (...)
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  17.  20
    Resilience and psychiatric epidemiology: Implications for a conceptual framework.Joseph M. Boden & Geraldine F. H. McLeod - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38.
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  18. Is metabolism necessary?M. A. Boden - 1999 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 50 (2):231-248.
    Metabolism is a criterion of life. Three senses are distinguished. The weakest allows strong A-Life: virtual creatures having physical existence in computer electronics, but not bodies, are classes as 'alive'. The second excludes strong A-Life but allows that some non-biochemical A-Life robots could be classed as alive. The third, which stresses the body's self-production by energy budgeting and self-equilibrating energy exchanges of some (necessary) complexity, excludes both strong A-Life and living non-biochemical robots.
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  19.  58
    Asymmetric cultural effects on perceptual expertise underlie an own-race bias for voices.Tyler K. Perrachione, Joan Y. Chiao & Patrick C. M. Wong - 2010 - Cognition 114 (1):42-55.
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  20.  42
    Constitutive spectral EEG peaks in the gamma range: suppressed by sleep, reduced by mental activity and resistant to sensory stimulation.Tyler S. Grummett, Sean P. Fitzgibbon, Trent W. Lewis, Dylan DeLosAngeles, Emma M. Whitham, Kenneth J. Pope & John O. Willoughby - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  21. The social impact of artificial intelligence.M. A. Boden - 1990 - In Ray Kurzweil (ed.), The Age of Intelligent Machines. MIT Press. pp. 450--453.
  22. The Moral Inefficacy of Carbon Offsetting.Tyler M. John, Amanda Askell & Hayden Wilkinson - 2024 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy (4):795-813.
    Many real-world agents recognise that they impose harms by choosing to emit carbon, e.g., by flying. Yet many do so anyway, and then attempt to make things right by offsetting those harms. Such offsetters typically believe that, by offsetting, they change the deontic status of their behaviour, making an otherwise impermissible action permissible. Do they succeed in practice? Some philosophers have argued that they do, since their offsets appear to reverse the adverse effects of their emissions. But we show that (...)
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  23.  64
    Shadows of complexity: what biological networks reveal about epistasis and pleiotropy.Anna L. Tyler, Folkert W. Asselbergs, Scott M. Williams & Jason H. Moore - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (2):220-227.
    Pleiotropy, in which one mutation causes multiple phenotypes, has traditionally been seen as a deviation from the conventional observation in which one gene affects one phenotype. Epistasis, or gene–gene interaction, has also been treated as an exception to the Mendelian one gene–one phenotype paradigm. This simplified perspective belies the pervasive complexity of biology and hinders progress toward a deeper understanding of biological systems. We assert that epistasis and pleiotropy are not isolated occurrences, but ubiquitous and inherent properties of biomolecular networks. (...)
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  24. First Come, First Served?Tyler M. John & Joseph Millum - 2020 - Ethics 130 (2):179-207.
    Waiting time is widely used in health and social policy to make resource allocation decisions, yet no general account of the moral significance of waiting time exists. We provide such an account. We argue that waiting time is not intrinsically morally significant, and that the first person in a queue for a resource does not ipso facto have a right to receive that resource first. However, waiting time can and sometimes should play a role in justifying allocation decisions. First, there (...)
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  25.  58
    Review of Instructional Approaches in Ethics Education. [REVIEW]Tyler J. Mulhearn, Logan M. Steele, Logan L. Watts, Kelsey E. Medeiros, Michael D. Mumford & Shane Connelly - 2017 - Science and Engineering Ethics 23 (3):883-912.
    Increased investment in ethics education has prompted a variety of instructional objectives and frameworks. Yet, no systematic procedure to classify these varying instructional approaches has been attempted. In the present study, a quantitative clustering procedure was conducted to derive a typology of instruction in ethics education. In total, 330 ethics training programs were included in the cluster analysis. The training programs were appraised with respect to four instructional categories including instructional content, processes, delivery methods, and activities. Eight instructional approaches were (...)
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  26. How to allocate scarce health resources without discriminating against people with disabilities.Tyler M. John, Joseph Millum & David Wasserman - 2017 - Economics and Philosophy 33 (2):161-186.
    One widely used method for allocating health care resources involves the use of cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to rank treatments in terms of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained. CEA has been criticized for discriminating against people with disabilities by valuing their lives less than those of non-disabled people. Avoiding discrimination seems to lead to the ’QALY trap’: we cannot value saving lives equally and still value raising quality of life. This paper reviews existing responses to the QALY trap and argues that all (...)
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  27. An evaluation of computational modeling in cognitive science.M. A. Boden - 2008 - In Ron Sun (ed.), The Cambridge handbook of computational psychology. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 667--683.
     
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  28.  26
    Adam Green and Eleonore Stump : Hidden Divinity and Religious Belief: New Perspectives. Cambridge University Press 2016.Tyler M. Taber - 2017 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (2):240-243.
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  29. Dose-response relationships using brain–computer interface technology impact stroke rehabilitation.Brittany M. Young, Zack Nigogosyan, Léo M. Walton, Alexander Remsik, Jie Song, Veena A. Nair, Mitchell E. Tyler, Dorothy F. Edwards, Kristin Caldera, Justin A. Sattin, Justin C. Williams & Vivek Prabhakaran - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  30.  42
    Modeling the Instructional Effectiveness of Responsible Conduct of Research Education: A Meta-Analytic Path-Analysis.Logan L. Watts, Tyler J. Mulhearn, Kelsey E. Medeiros, Logan M. Steele, Shane Connelly & Michael D. Mumford - 2017 - Ethics and Behavior 27 (8):632-650.
    Predictive modeling in education draws on data from past courses to forecast the effectiveness of future courses. The present effort sought to identify such a model of instructional effectiveness in scientific ethics. Drawing on data from 235 courses in the responsible conduct of research, structural equation modeling techniques were used to test a predictive model of RCR course effectiveness. Fit statistics indicated the model fit the data well, with the instructional characteristics included in the model explaining approximately 85% of the (...)
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  31.  31
    Anthropological Religion.C. M. Tyler & F. Max Muller - 1892 - Philosophical Review 1 (3):334.
  32.  45
    National symposium on problems of presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease, Cardiff.A. Tyler & M. Morris - 1990 - Journal of Medical Ethics 16 (1):41-42.
    Presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease has given rise to several ethical problems relating to such issues as confidentiality, the privacy of the individual, the testing of minors and informed consent in connection with blood sample donation. A multidisciplinary conference of staff from genetic centres involved with presymptomatic testing was organised in Cardiff to discuss these and other problems. Recommendations on good practice are described under four headings: pre- and post-test counselling; confidentiality in relation to test results; collection and storage of (...)
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  33.  23
    Epidemiological foundations for the insurance hypothesis: Methodological considerations.Joseph M. Boden & Geraldine F. H. McLeod - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  34.  35
    Social influence and vulnerability.Joseph M. Boden - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (4):442-443.
    Redish et al. outline 10 vulnerabilities in the decision-making system that increase the risks of addiction. In this commentary I examine the potential role of social influence in exploiting at least one of these vulnerabilities, and argue that the needs satisfied by social interaction may play a role in decision-making with regard to substance use, increasing the risks of addiction.
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  35.  36
    Creativity and Reason in Cognitive Development.M. Boden - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (2):219-221.
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  36.  45
    Gratitude and depressive symptoms: The role of positive reframing and positive emotion.Nathaniel M. Lambert, Frank D. Fincham & Tyler F. Stillman - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (4):615-633.
  37.  60
    Authorship policies of scientific journals: Table 1.David B. Resnik, Ana M. Tyler, Jennifer R. Black & Grace Kissling - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (3):199-202.
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  38.  16
    Generalizability challenges in applied psychological and organizational research and practice.Brenton M. Wiernik, Mukhunth Raghavan, Tyler Allan & Alex J. Denison - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45.
    Yarkoni highlights patterns of overgeneralization in psychology research. In this comment, we note that such challenges also pertain to applied psychological and organizational research and practice. We use two examples – cross-cultural generalizability and implicit bias training – to illustrate common practices of overgeneralization from narrow research samples to broader operational populations. We conclude with recommendations for research and practice.
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  39. The impact on philosophy.M. A. Boden - 1993 - In Donald Eric Broadbent (ed.), The Simulation of human intelligence. Cambridge: Blackwell. pp. 178--197.
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  40.  27
    Personal Utility and Early Intervention in Alzheimer’s Disease.Ana M. Tyler, Jennifer S. Yokoyama & Jalayne J. Arias - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 12 (4):226-228.
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in its most common form results in cognitive changes in memory function leading to dementia due to underlying neurodegenerative disease. Recent research advancements in AD...
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  41.  33
    The Proactive Patient: Long-Term Care Insurance Discrimination Risks of Alzheimer's Disease Biomarkers.Jalayne J. Arias, Ana M. Tyler, Benjamin J. Oster & Jason Karlawish - 2018 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 46 (2):485-498.
    Previously diagnosed by symptoms alone, Alzheimer's disease is now also defined by measures of amyloid and tau, referred to as “biomarkers.” Biomarkers are detectible up to twenty years before symptoms present and open the door to predicting the risk of Alzheimer's disease. While these biomarkers provide information that can help individuals and families plan for long-term care services and supports, insurers could also use this information to discriminate against those who are more likely to need such services. In this article, (...)
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  42.  47
    Subtle variation in ambient room temperature influences the expression of social cognition.Jacob M. Vigil, Tyler J. Swartz & Lauren N. Rowell - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5):502-503.
    Social signaling models predict that subtle variation in climatic temperature induces systematic changes in expressed cognition. An experiment showed that perceived room temperature was associated with variability in self-descriptions, social reactions of others, and desiring differing types of social networks. The findings reflect the tendency to inflate capacity demonstrations in warmer climates as a result of the social networking opportunities they enable.
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  43. Against Constructivism.M. A. Boden - 2010 - Constructivist Foundations 6 (1):84-89.
    Context: Radical Constructivism is an issue that deeply divides the cognitive science community: most researchers reject it, but an increasing number do not. Problem: Constructivists stress that our knowledge starts from experience. Some (“ontic” constructivists) deny the existence of a mind-independent world, while others (“radical” constructivists) claim merely that, if such a world exists, we can know nothing about it. Both positions conflict with scientific realism. It is not clear that the conflict can be resolved. Method: This paper uses philosophical (...)
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  44. Crafts, perception, and the possibilities of the body.M. A. Boden - 2000 - British Journal of Aesthetics 40 (3):289-301.
  45. Encyclopedia of Philosophy.M. A. Boden - 2006
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  46.  32
    Sex differences in the developmental antecedents of aggression.Joseph M. Boden - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (3-4):269-270.
    Archer examines sex differences in aggression, and argues that these differences may be better explained by sexual selection theory than by social role theory. This commentary examines sex differences in the developmental antecedents of aggression and violence, and presents a preliminary framework for examining whether the observed sex differences amongst these developmental antecedents can also be accounted for by sexual selection theory.
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  47.  24
    The influence of retrieval practice on metacognition: The contribution of analytic and non-analytic processes.Tyler M. Miller & Lisa Geraci - 2016 - Consciousness and Cognition 42:41-50.
  48.  18
    Health Justice Partnerships: An International Comparison of Approaches to Employing Law to Promote Prevention and Health Equity.Elizabeth Tobin-Tyler, Tessa Boyd-Caine, Hazel Genn & Nola M. Ries - 2023 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 51 (2):332-343.
    This article traces the development and growth of health justice partnerships (HJPs) in three countries: the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom.
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  49.  13
    The CI Review. [REVIEW]Tyler M. Williams - 2020 - Critical Inquiry 46 (4):940-942.
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  50. Empowering Future People by Empowering the Young?Tyler M. John - 2023 - In Greg Bognar & Axel Gosseries (eds.), Ageing Without Ageism: Conceptual Puzzles and Policy Proposals. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter starts from the claim that the state is plagued with problems of political short-termism: excessive priority given to near-term benefits at the expense of benefits further in thefuture. One possible mechanism to reduce short-termism involves apportioning greater relative political influence to the young, since younger citizens generally have greater additional life expectancy than older citizens and thus it looks reasonable to expect that they have preferences that are extended further into the future. But the chapter shows that this (...)
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