Results for 'Brielle Lillywhite'

14 found
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  1.  15
    Auditing the impact of artificial intelligence on the ability to have a good life: using well-being measures as a tool to investigate the views of undergraduate STEM students.Brielle Lillywhite & Gregor Wolbring - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-16.
    AI/ML increasingly impacts the ability of humans to have a good life. Various sets of indicators exist to measure well-being/the ability to have a good life. Students play an important role in AI/ML discussions. The purpose of our study using an online survey was to learn about the perspectives of undergraduate STEM students on the impact of AI/ML on well-being/the ability to have a good life. Our study revealed that many of the abilities participants perceive to be needed for having (...)
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  2.  21
    Meal replacement: calming the hot-state brain network of appetite.Brielle M. Paolini, Paul J. Laurienti, James Norris & W. Jack Rejeski - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  3.  9
    Coverage of well-being within artificial intelligence, machine learning and robotics academic literature: the case of disabled people.Aspen Lillywhite & Gregor Wolbring - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-19.
    Well-being is an important policy concept including in discussions around the use of artificial intelligence, machine learning and robotics. Disabled people experience challenges in their well-being. Therefore, the aim of our scoping review study of academic abstracts employing Scopus, IEEE Xplore, Compendex and the 70 databases from EBSCO-HOST as sources was to better understand how academic literature focusing on AI/ML/robotics engages with well-being in relation to disabled people. Our objective was to answer the following research question: how and to what (...)
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  4.  17
    Development of thalamocortical connections between the mediodorsal thalamus and the prefrontal cortex and its implication in cognition.Brielle R. Ferguson & Wen-Jun Gao - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  5.  38
    Presencing the Past: Materiality and the Experience of Time in Derrida and Bergson.Austin Lillywhite - 2022 - Derrida Today 15 (2):167-188.
    Deconstruction and duration are arguably the two most important theories of time to emerge from French philosophy in the twentieth century. Yet, despite the resurgence of interest in Bergson, scholars have ignored Derrida’s own discussions of Bergson, both positive and negative, throughout his career. This lack of attention obscures an important influence on Derrida’s early thought, and hampers our ability to understand the nature of Derrida’s relationship to fields such as new materialism, posthumanism, and affect studies, that frequently turn to (...)
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  6.  11
    An alternative perspective on mental activity: Fourier filtering.P. G. Lillywhite - 1979 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (2):271-271.
  7.  29
    Growing Chinese medicinal herbs in the United States: understanding practitioner preferences.Jay M. Lillywhite, Jennifer E. Simonsen & Vera Wilson - 2012 - Agriculture and Human Values 29 (2):151-159.
    The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) by US consumers has grown in recent years. CAM therapies often utilize medicinal herbs as part of the treatment process; however, research on US practitioner preferences for medicinal herbs is limited, despite growing concern surrounding the sustainability of wild-harvested medicinal herbs. In order better to understand consumer preferences for this emerging market, a mail survey of US practitioners (licensed acupuncturists) was conducted to examine the importance of five herb attributes in practitioners’ herb (...)
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  8.  14
    Is Posthumanism a Primitivism? Networks, Fetishes, and Race.Austin Lillywhite - 2018 - Diacritics 46 (3):100-119.
    This essay considers the possibility that prominent theories of the posthuman may draw problematic forms of inspiration from ideas about the "primitive" human. This would complicate how the post in posthuman is defined by current scholarship. It would also suggest that there are potentially concerning racial politics, hitherto unnoticed, embedded within certain modes of posthuman theorizing. In assessing these concerns, the essay develops an analysis of the unexpected racializing and fetishistic dimensions commonly at work in the idea of networks, and (...)
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  9.  29
    Nationwide Newspaper Coverage of Rape and Rape Culture on College Campuses: Testing Community Structure Theory.John C. Pollock, Brielle Richardella, Amanda Jahr, Melissa Morgan & Judi Puritz Cook - 2018 - Human Rights Review 19 (2):229-248.
  10.  10
    Assessing aphantasia prevalence and the relation of self-reported imagery abilities and memory task performance.Michael J. Beran, Brielle T. James, Kristin French, Elizabeth L. Haseltine & Heather M. Kleider-Offutt - 2023 - Consciousness and Cognition 113 (C):103548.
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  11.  24
    Commentary: A crisis in comparative psychology: where have all the undergraduates gone?Michael J. Beran, Brielle T. James, Sara E. Futch & Audrey E. Parrish - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  12. Measuring Inner Speech Objectively and Subjectively in Aphasia.Julianne Alexander, Peter Langland-Hassan & Brielle Stark - 2023 - Aphasiology.
    Background: Many people with aphasia and people without brain injury talk to themselves in their heads, i.e., have “inner speech.” Inner speech may be more preserved compared with spoken speech for some people with aphasia and may serve a variety of functions (e.g., emotion regulation), which motivates us to provide a high-fidelity characterization of it. Researchers have used multiple methods to measure this internal phenomenon in the past, which we combine here for the first time in a single study. -/- (...)
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  13.  27
    The Light and Shadow of Feminist Research Mentorship: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Faculty-Student Research.Julia Moore, Jennifer A. Scarduzio, Brielle Plump & Patricia Geist-Martin - 2013 - Journal of Research Practice 9 (2):Article M8 (proof).
    “Research assistant” is a term used to describe student researchers across a variety of contexts and encompasses a wide array of duties, rewards, and costs. As critical/qualitative scholars situated in a discipline that rarely offers funded research assistantships to graduate students, we explore how we have engaged in faculty-student research in one particularly understudied context: the independent study. Using narrative writing and reflection within a framework of collaborative autoethnography, the first three authors reflect as three “generations” of protégés who were (...)
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  14.  12
    "Sine clausura": Unlocking the archive of the cloister of the Poor Clares St.-Elisabethsdal in Boxtel.Geertrui Van Synghel - 2019 - Franciscan Studies 77 (1):89-110.
    The cloister of the Poor Clares St.-Elisabethsdal in Boxtel, in the present-day province of Brabant, the Netherlands, is one of the monasteries created during the new wave of Observant Clarissan monastic foundations in the Northern Low Countries between ca. 1460 and 1513. It was established after Wamel, Haarlem, Veere, Delft, Brielle, Gouda and Alkmaar.1 But it was not the first Clarissan settlement in what is currently the Netherlands. More than a century before, Willem van den Bossche, lord of Erp, (...)
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