Results for 'William Epstein'

991 found
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  1. The Sensory Core and the Medieval Foundations of Early Modern Perceptual Theory.Gary Hatfield & William Epstein - 1979 - Isis 70 (3):363-384.
    This article seeks the origin, in the theories of Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen), Descartes, and Berkeley, of two-stage theories of spatial perception, which hold that visual perception involves both an immediate representation of the proximal stimulus in a two-dimensional ‘‘sensory core’’ and also a subsequent perception of the three dimensional world. The works of Ibn al-Haytham, Descartes, and Berkeley already frame the major theoretical options that guided visual theory into the twentieth century. The field of visual perception was the first area (...)
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  2. Evolutionary theory meets cognitive psychology: A more selective perspective.Lawrence Shapiro & William Epstein - 1998 - Mind and Language 13 (2):171-94.
    Quite unexpectedly, cognitive psychologists find their field intimately connected to a whole new intellectual landscape that had previously seemed remote, unfamiliar, and all but irrelevant. Yet the proliferating connections tying together the cognitive and evolutionary communities promise to transform both fields, with each supplying necessary principles, methods, and a species of rigor that the other lacks. (Cosmides and Tooby, 1994, p. 85).
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  3.  9
    Confirmational Response Bias Among Social Work Journals.William M. Epstein - 1990 - Science, Technology and Human Values 15 (1):9-38.
    This article reports the results of a study of confirmational response bias among social work journals. A contrived research paper with positive findings and its negative mirror image were submitted to two different groups of social work journals and to two comparison groups of journals outside social work. The quantitative results, suggesting bias, are tentative; but the qualitative findings based upon an analysis of the referee comments are clear and consistent. Few referees from prestigious or nonprestcgrous social work journals prepared (...)
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  4.  65
    Perceived Shape at a Slant as a Function of Processing Time and Processing Load.William Epstein, Gary Hatfield & Gerard Muise - 1977 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 3:473–483.
    Shape and slant judgments of rotated or frontoparallel ellipses were elicited from three groups of 10 subjects. A masking stimulus was introduced to control processing time. Backward masking trials were presented with interstimulus intervals of 0, 25, and 50 msec, Reduction of processing time altered shape judgments in the direction of projective shape and slant judgments in the direction of frontoparallelness. This finding is consistent with the shape-slant invariance hypothesis. In order to study the effects of processing load, one group (...)
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  5. Gestalt psychology and the philosophy of mind.William Epstein & Gary Hatfield - 1994 - Philosophical Psychology 7 (2):163-181.
    The Gestalt psychologists adopted a set of positions on mind-body issues that seem like an odd mix. They sought to combine a version of naturalism and physiological reductionism with an insistence on the reality of the phenomenal and the attribution of meanings to objects as natural characteristics. After reviewing basic positions in contemporary philosophy of mind, we examine the Gestalt position, characterizing it m terms of phenomenal realism and programmatic reductionism. We then distinguish Gestalt philosophy of mind from instrumentalism and (...)
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  6.  38
    The Locus of Masking Shape-at-a-Slant.William Epstein & Gary Hatfield - 1978 - Perception and Psychophysics 24 (6):501-504.
    Twelve subjects provided shape and orientation judgments for a set of projectively equivalent, variously rotated rectangles under three viewing conditions—monoptic, dichoptic, and binocular—with and without the presence of a pattern mask. In the absence of the mask, partial constancy was exhibited under the first two conditions and near perfect constancy under the binocular condition. Orientation was discriminated. Presence of the mask produced projective shape matching and diminished orientation discrimination. It is argued that the site of masking was postchiasmal, and the (...)
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  7. Internalization: A metaphor we can live without.Michael Kubovy & William Epstein - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (4):618-625.
    Shepard has supposed that the mind is stocked with innate knowledge of the world and that this knowledge figures prominently in the way we see the world. According to him, this internal knowledge is the legacy of a process of internalization; a process of natural selection over the evolutionary history of the species. Shepard has developed his proposal most fully in his analysis of the relation between kinematic geometry and the shape of the motion path in apparent motion displays. We (...)
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  8.  22
    Searching for to-be-forgotten material in a directed forgetting task.William Epstein & Lucinda Wilder - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (2):349.
  9.  10
    Internalization: A metaphor we can live without.Michael Kubovy & William Epstein - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (4):756-757.
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  10. George Graham.Peter R. Killeen, Robert Epstein, Willard F. Day Jr, K. Richard Garrett, Max Hocutt, Wv Quine, Roger Schna1tter, Donald Baer, William Baum & David Begelman - 1985 - Behaviorism 13.
  11.  20
    Constraining the use of constraints.James L. Dannemiller & William Epstein - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (3):373-374.
  12.  18
    Forget instructions: Effect of selective rehearsal and categorical distinctiveness.Wayne Shebilske, Lucinda Wilder & William Epstein - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 89 (2):372.
  13.  18
    The induction of nonveridical slant and the perception of shape.William Epstein, Helen Bontrager & John Park - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 63 (5):472.
  14.  18
    Functional Equivalence of Masking and Cue Reduction in Perception of Shape at a Slant.William Epstein & Gary Hatfield - 1978 - Perception and Psychophysics 23 (2):137-144.
    In a backward masking paradigm Epstein, Hatfield, and Muise (1977) found that presentation of a frontoparallel pattern mask caused the perceived shape of elliptical figures which were rotated in depth to conform to a projective shape function. The current study extended the masking function by examining the effect of a mask which was partially or wholly cotemporal with the target. The study also assessed the functional equivalence of the masking treatment and the conventional treatment for minimizing depth information. Reports (...)
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  15.  26
    Epilogue: Advances and open questions.Gary Hatfield & William Epstein - 2012 - In Gary Hatfield & Sarah Allred (eds.), Visual Experience: Sensation, Cognition, and Constancy. Oxford University Press. pp. 232-241.
    The term “perceptual constancy” was used by the Gestalt theorists in the early part of the twentieth century (e.g., Koffka 1935, 34, 90) to refer to the tendency of perception to remain invariant over changes of viewing distance, viewing angle, and conditions of illumination. This tendency toward constancy is remarkable: every change in the viewing distance, position, and illumination is necessarily accompanied by a change in the local proximal (retinal) stimulation, and yet perception remains relatively stable. The tendency toward perceptual (...)
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  16.  29
    Effectiveness of serial position and preceding-item cues in serial learning.John R. Heslip & William Epstein - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 80 (1):64.
  17.  9
    Contesting the Subject: Essays in the Postmodern Theory and Practice of Biography and Biographical Criticism.William H. Epstein - 1991 - Purdue University Press.
    Stanley Fish opens the collection with a persuasive argument for the role of intention and biography. Michael McKeon, Gordon Turnbull, and Jerome Christensen are concerned with the late eighteenth--and early nineteenth-century English cultural discourse that gave rise to the nearly simultaneous emergence of literary biography, Romantic sensibility, and reflexive human consciousness. The essays by Alison Booth, Cheryl Walker, and Sharon O'Brien reveal that the recognition or lack thereof the biographical subject has received and remains both a problem and an opportunity (...)
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  18.  5
    Welfare in America: How Social Science Fails the Poor.William M. Epstein - 1997
    William M. Epstein charges that most current social welfare programs are not held to credible standards in their design or their results. Rather than spending less on such research and programs, however, Epstein suggests we should spend much more, and do the job right. The American public and policymakers need to rely on social science research for objective, credible information when trying to solve problems of employment, affordable housing, effective health care, and family integrity. But, Epstein (...)
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  19.  24
    Attitudes of judgment and the size-distance invariance hypothesis.William Epstein - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 66 (1):78.
  20.  3
    The Obligation of Intellectuals.William M. Epstein - 1990 - Science, Technology and Human Values 15 (2):244-247.
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  21.  10
    A test of two interpretations of the apparent size effects in a distorted room.William Epstein - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 63 (2):124.
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  22.  31
    Clinical practice and the biopsychosocial approach.Ronald M. Epstein, Diane S. Morse, Geoffrey C. Williams, P. LeRoux, A. L. Suchman & T. E. Quill - 2003 - In Richard M. Frankel, Timothy E. Quill & Susan H. McDaniel (eds.), The Biopsychosocial Approach: Past, Present, and Future. University of Rochester Press.
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  23.  16
    Direct perception or mediated perception: a comparison of rival viewpoints.William Epstein - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (3):384-385.
  24.  12
    Facilitation of retrieval resulting from post-input exclusion of part of the input.William Epstein - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 86 (2):190.
  25.  10
    Gail Kennedy 1900-1972.Joseph Epstein & William Kennick - 1971 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 45:216 - 217.
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  26.  13
    Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World: by Samuel Moyn, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 2018, 276 pp., $29.95/£23.95.William Epstein - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (6):707-710.
    Volume 25, Issue 6, September 2020, Page 707-710.
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  27.  30
    Perceived depth as a function of relative height under three background conditions.William Epstein - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 72 (3):335.
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  28.  13
    Poststimulus output specification and differential retrieval from short-term memory.William Epstein - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 82 (1p1):168.
  29.  20
    Retention of adaptation to uniocular image magnification: Effect of interpolated activity.William Epstein - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 92 (3):319.
  30.  37
    Relative size in isolation as a stimulus for relative perceived distance.William Epstein & Stephen S. Baratz - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 67 (6):507.
  31.  9
    Studies in molecular compton scattering.Irving Epstein & Brian Williams - 1973 - Philosophical Magazine 27 (2):311-328.
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  32.  4
    Studying Journal Editors: The Worst Heresy.William M. Epstein - 1989 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 11 (5):7.
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  33.  30
    Selective search in directed forgetting.William Epstein, Dominc W. Massaro & Lucinda Wilder - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 94 (1):18.
  34.  23
    Tryouts: A Memoir.William H. Epstein - 1998 - Critical Inquiry 25 (1):126-135.
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  35.  24
    The effect of level of depth processing and degree of informational discrepancy on adaptation to uniocular image magnification.William Epstein & Cynthia A. Morgan-Paap - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (4):585.
  36.  31
    The Importance of Being Civil: The Struggle for Political Decency.William M. Epstein - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (2):217-219.
  37.  25
    The Lighter Side of Deception Research in the Social Sciences: Social Work as Comedy.William Epstein - 2006 - Journal of Information Ethics 15 (1):11-26.
  38.  51
    The Status of the Minimum Principle in the Theoretical Analysis of Visual Perception.Gary Hatfield & William Epstein - 1985 - Psychological Bulletin 97 (2):155–186.
    We examine a number of investigations of perceptual economy or, more specifically, of minimum tendencies and minimum principles in the visual perception of form, depth, and motion. A minimum tendency is a psychophysical finding that perception tends toward simplicity, as measured in accordance with a specified metric. A minimum principle is a theoretical construct imputed to the visual system to explain minimum tendencies. After examining a number of studies of perceptual economy, we embark on a systematic analysis of this notion. (...)
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  39. The neural-cognitive basis of the Jamesian stream of thought.Russell Epstein - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (4):550-575.
    William James described the stream of thought as having two components: (1) a nucleus of highly conscious, often perceptual material; and (2) a fringe of dimly felt contextual information that controls the entry of information into the nucleus and guides the progression of internally directed thought. Here I examine the neural and cognitive correlates of this phenomenology. A survey of the cognitive neuroscience literature suggests that the nucleus corresponds to a dynamic global buffer formed by interactions between different regions (...)
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  40. Consciousness, art, and the brain: Lessons from Marcel Proust.Russell Epstein - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (2):213-40.
    In his novel Remembrance of Things Past, Marcel Proust argues that conventional descriptions of the phenomenology of consciousness are incomplete because they focus too much on the highly-salient sensory information that dominates each moment of awareness and ignore the network of associations that lies in the background. In this paper, I explicate Proust’s theory of conscious experience and show how it leads him directly to a theory of aesthetic perception. Proust’s division of awareness into two components roughly corresponds to (...) James’ division of the stream of thought into a “nucleus” and “fringe.” Proust argues that the function of art is to evoke the underlying associative network indirectly in the mind of the observer by using carefully chosen sensory surfaces to control the stream of thought. I propose a possible neural basis for this Proustian/Jamesian phenomenology, and argue that the general principles of Proustian aesthetics can be applied to all forms of art. I conclude that a scientific theory of art should follow in a straightforward manner from a scientific theory of consciousness. (shrink)
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  41.  31
    Substantive thoughts about substantive thought: A reply to Galin.Russell Epstein - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (4):584-590.
    In his commentary, David Galin raises several important issues that deserve to be addressed. In this response, I do three things. First, I briefly discuss the relation between the present work and the metaphoric theories of thought developed by cognitive lin- guists such as Lakoff and Johnson (1998). Second, I address some of the confusions that seem to have arisen about my use of the terms ''substantive thought'' and ''nucleus.'' Third, I briefly discuss some of the directions that Galin suggests (...)
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  42. Economic Imperatives and Ethical Values in Global Business: The South African Experience and International Codes Today by S. Prakash Sethi and Oliver F. Williams, CSC. [REVIEW]E. M. Epstein - 2001 - Business and Society 40 (3):349-356.
     
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  43.  63
    Group theory and geometric psychology.William C. Hoffman - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (4):674-676.
    The commentary is in general agreement with Roger Shepard's view of evolutionary internalization of certain procedural memories, but advocates the use of Lie groups to express the invariances of motion and color perception involved. For categorization, the dialectical pair is suggested. [Barlow; Hecht; Kubovy & Epstein; Schwartz; Shepard; Todorovic].
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  44.  18
    Syntactic representations and the L2 acquisition device.William O'Grady - 1996 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (4):737-738.
    Epstein et al.'s theory of SLA is heavily dependent on assumptions about both the nature of the acquisition device and the grammar that it produces. This commentary briefly explores the consequences of an alternative set of assumptions, focusing on the possibility that the acquisition device does not include UG and that syntactic representations do not contain functional projections.
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  45.  10
    The Masses are the Ruling Classes: Policy Romanticism, Democratic Populism, and Social Welfare in America: by William Epstein, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2017, 280 pp. £29.99.Andrew Simon Gilbert - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (7-8):866-868.
    Volume 25, Issue 7-8, November - December 2020, Page 866-868.
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  46. Comments on Epstein's Neurocognitive Interpretation of William James's Model of Consciousness.David Galin - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (4):576-583.
  47.  83
    Mary Anne O'Neil, William E. Cain, Christopher Wise, C. S. Schreiner, Willis Salomon, James A. Grimshaw, Jr., Donald K. Hedrick, Wendell V. Harris, Paul Duro, Julia Epstein, Gerald Prince, Douglas Robinson, Lynne S. Vieth, Richard Eldridge, Robert Stoothoff, John Anzalone, Kevin Walzer, Eric J. Ziolkowski, Jacqueline LeBlanc, Anna Carew-Miller, Alfred R. Mele, David Herman, James M. Lang, Andrew J. McKenna, Michael Calabrese, Robert Tobin, Sandor Goodhart, Moira Gatens, Paul Douglass, John F. Desmond, James L. Battersby, Marie J. Aquilino, Celia E. Weller, Joel Black, Sandra Sherman, Herman Rapaport, Jonathan Levin, Ali Abdullatif Ahmida, David Lewis Schaefer. [REVIEW]Donald Phillip Verene - 1994 - Philosophy and Literature 18 (1):131.
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  48.  7
    Miracles from Microbes; The Road to StreptomycinSamuel Epstein Beryl Williams.Morris C. Leikind - 1948 - Isis 38 (3/4):270-271.
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  49.  14
    Ornithology from Aristotle to the Present. Erwin Stresemann, Cathleen Epstein, G. William Cottrell, Hans J. Epstein.Paul Lawrence Farber - 1976 - Isis 67 (4):629-630.
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  50.  56
    Moral obligations of nurses and physicians in neonatal end-of-life care.Elizabeth Gingell Epstein - 2010 - Nursing Ethics 17 (5):577-589.
    The aim of this study was to explore the obligations of nurses and physicians in providing end-of-life care. Nineteen nurses and 11 physicians from a single newborn intensive care unit participated. Using content analysis, an overarching obligation of creating the best possible experience for infants and parents was identified, within which two categories of obligations (decision making and the end of life itself) emerged. Obligations in decision making included talking to parents and timing withdrawal. End-of-life obligations included providing options, preparing (...)
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