Results for 'Beverly Bishop'

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  1. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) in man: altered inspired 02 and C02.Judith Ann Hirsch & Beverly Bishop - 1981 - In G. Adam, I. Meszaros & E.I. Banyai (eds.), Advances in Physiological Science. pp. 305-312.
  2.  28
    Alternatives to the Grandmother Hypothesis.Beverly I. Strassmann & Wendy M. Garrard - 2011 - Human Nature 22 (1-2):201-222.
    We conducted a meta-analysis of 17 studies that tested for an association between grandparental survival and grandchild survival in patrilineal populations. Using two different methodologies, we found that the survival of the maternal grandmother and grandfather, but not the paternal grandmother and grandfather, was associated with decreased grandoffspring mortality. These results are consistent with the findings of psychological studies in developed countries (Coall and Hertwig Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33:1-59, 2010). When tested against the predictions of five hypotheses (confidence of (...)
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  3.  40
    Women, Management and Globalization in the Middle East.Beverly Dawn Metcalfe - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 83 (1):85-100.
    This paper provides new theoretical insights into the interconnections and relationships between women, management and globalization in the Middle East (ME). The discussion is positioned within broader globalization debates about women’s social status in ME economies. Based on case study evidence and the UN datasets, the article critiques social, cultural and economic reasons for women’s limited advancement in the public sphere. These include the prevalence of the patriarchal work contract within public and private institutions, as well as cultural and ethical (...)
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  4. Teaching problem solving without modeling through “thinking aloud pair problem solving”.Beverly C. Pestel - 1993 - Science Education 77 (1):83-94.
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  5.  26
    Human nature as a source of practical truth: Aristotelian-Thomistic realism and the practical science of nursing.Beverly J. B. Whelton Rn - 2002 - Nursing Philosophy 3 (1):35-46.
    This discussion is grounded in Aristotelian–Thomistic realism and takes the position that nursing is a practical science. As an exposition of the title statement, distinctions are made between opinion and truth, and the speculative, productive and practical sciences. Sources of opinion and truth are described and a discussion follows that truth can be achieved through knowing principles and causes of the natural kind behind phenomena. It is proposed that humans are the natural kind behind nursing phenomena. Thus, human nature provides (...)
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  6. The Psychology of Language: An Introduction to Psycholinguistics and Generative Grammar.Jerry Fodor, Bever A., Garrett T. G. & F. M. - 1974 - Mcgraw-Hill.
  7.  32
    Are humans cooperative breeders?: Most studies of natural fertility populations do not support the grandmother hypothesis.Beverly I. Strassmann & Nikhil T. Kurapati - 2010 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (1):35-39.
    In discussing the effects of grandparents on child survival in natural fertility populations, Coall & Hertwig (C&H) rely extensively on the review by Sear and Mace (2008). We conducted a more detailed summary of the same literature and found that the evidence in favor of beneficial associations between grandparenting and child survival is generally weak or absent. The present state of the data on human alloparenting supports a more restricted use of the term Human stem family situations with celibate helpers-at-the-nest (...)
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  8.  13
    Carlyle, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and the Hero as Victorian Poet.Beverly Taylor - 2013 - In David R. Sorensen & Brent E. Kinser (eds.), On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History. Yale University Press. pp. 235-246.
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  9.  37
    Client-therapist intimacy: Responses of psychotherapy clients to a consumer-oriented brochure.Beverly E. Thorn, Nancy J. Rubin, Angela J. Holderby & R. Clayton Shealy - 1996 - Ethics and Behavior 6 (1):17 – 28.
    Psychotherapy clients read two consumer-oriented brochures: a general brochure on psychology and a brochure on the topic of client-therapist intimacy. Half of the participants read the general brochure first and the brochure on client-therapist intimacy second, and half the participants did the reverse. Participants reported favorable reactions to the brochures, indicating they thought both should be made available to psychotherapy clients; that neither were too long, too sensitive, or too difficult to read; and that the brochures should be made available (...)
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  10.  3
    Between Problem and Critique: Whither the Postcolonial?Maurits Van Bever Donker - 2022 - Kronos 48 (1):1-10.
    This essay seeks to set to work on the question of race and the futures of the postcolonial in post-apartheid South Africa through abiding by the site of the indeterminacy between problem and critique. Arguing that reading, in the robust sense offered by Gayatri Spivak and Stuart Hall, is a necessary and urgent response to the question, the paper examines the interventions of three key figures for thinking radical black thought in our time, namely Achille Mbembe's Critique of Black Reason, (...)
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  11.  13
    Gender, race, religion, faith? Rethinking intersectionality in German feminisms.Beverly M. Weber - 2015 - European Journal of Women's Studies 22 (1):22-36.
    Despite the recent wave of scholarship on intersectionality, as well as a surge in feminist scholarship on Islam in German feminist studies, feminist research has yet to adequately engage with the role of religion in intersectionality. In this article the author draws on the work of the Aktionsbündnis muslimischer Frauen in Germany to explore the possibility for incorporating religion and faith into intersectional frameworks, which requires attention to women of color theorizing in German feminisms, recognition of ways in which religions (...)
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  12.  23
    Human nature as a source of practical truth: Aristotelian–Thomistic realism and the practical science of nursing.Beverly J. B. Whelton - 2002 - Nursing Philosophy 3 (1):35-46.
    This discussion is grounded in Aristotelian–Thomistic realism and takes the position that nursing is a practical science. As an exposition of the title statement, distinctions are made between opinion and truth, and the speculative, productive and practical sciences. Sources of opinion and truth are described and a discussion follows that truth can be achieved through knowing principles and causes of the natural kind behind phenomena. It is proposed that humans are the natural kind behind nursing phenomena. Thus, human nature provides (...)
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  13.  1
    Origins of Unsustainable Luxury: Becoming Slaves to Objects.Beverly Grindstaff - 2009 - Design Philosophy Papers 7 (2):107-122.
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  14.  28
    New racism, reformed teacher education, and the same ole 'oppression'.Beverly E. Cross - 2005 - Educational Studies 38 (3):263-274.
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  15.  23
    Controversy at Love Canal.Beverly Paigen - 1982 - Hastings Center Report 12 (3):29-37.
  16.  44
    The function of menstrual taboos among the dogon.Beverly I. Strassmann - 1992 - Human Nature 3 (2):89-131.
    Menstrual taboos are nearly ubiquitous and assume parallel forms in geographically distant populations, yet their function has baffled researchers for decades. This paper proposes that menstrual taboos are anticuckoldry tactics. By signaling menstruation, they may advertise female reproductive status to husbands, affines, and other observers. Females may therefore have difficulty in obfuscating the timing of the onset of pregnancy. This may have three consequences: (a) males are better able to assess their probabilities of paternity and to direct their parental investment (...)
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  17. An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability.Thomas G. Bever, Jerrold J. Katz & D. Terence Langendoen - 1977 - Critica 9 (26):123-127.
     
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  18.  71
    Is There a Special E-Commerce Ethics?Beverly Kracher & Cynthia L. Corritore - 2004 - Business Ethics Quarterly 14 (1):71-94.
    The speed and degree to which e- commerce is infiltrating the very fabric of our society, faster and more pervasively than any other entity in history, makes an examination of its ethical dimensions critical. Though ethical lag has heretofore hindered ourexplorations of e- commerce ethics, it is now time to identify and confront them. In this paper we define e- commerce and describe thecharacteristics that set it apart from traditional brick and-mortar business. We then examine the ethical foundation of e- (...)
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  19.  22
    Antoine de Bertrand: A view into the aesthetics of music in sixteenth century France.Beverly Jeanne Davis - 1962 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 21 (2):189-200.
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  20.  12
    The limitations of central nervous systemdirected gene transfer.Beverly L. Davidson - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (1):54-55.
    Complementation and correction of a genetic defect with CNS manifestations lags behind gene therapy for inherited disorders affecting other organ systems because of shortcomings in delivery vehicles and access to the CNS. The effects of improvements in viral and nonviral vectors, coupled with the development of delivery strategies designed to transfer genetic material thoughout the CNS are being investigated by a number of laboratories in efforts to overcome these problems.
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  21.  66
    Confidentiality, Consent and Autonomy in the Physician-Patient Relationship.Beverly Woodward - 2001 - Health Care Analysis 9 (3):337-351.
    In the practice of medicine there has long been a conflict between patient management and respect for patient autonomy. In recent years this conflict has taken on a new form as patient management has increasingly been shifted from physicians to insurers, employers, and health care bureaucracies. The consequence has been a diminshment of both physician and patient autonomy and a parallel diminishment of medical record confidentiality. Although the new managers pay lip service to the rights of patients to confidentiality of (...)
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  22.  39
    The multifaceted structure of nursing: an Aristotelian analysis.Beverly J. B. Whelton - 2002 - Nursing Philosophy 3 (3):193-204.
    A careful reading of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics focusing on his treatment of politics reveals a multifaceted discipline with political science, legislation, practice and ethics. These aspects of the discipline bear clear resemblance to the multiple conceptions of nursing. The potential that nursing is a multifaceted discipline, with nursing science as just one facet challenges the author's own conception of nursing as a practical science. Aristotle's discussion would seem to argue that nursing science is nursing, but nursing is more. Nursing is (...)
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  23.  15
    Spatial location of first- and second-order visual conditioned stimuli in second-order conditioning of the pigeon’s keypeck.Beverly S. Marshall, Daniel S. Gokey, Patricia L. Green & Michael E. Rashotte - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (3):133-136.
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  24.  12
    Power, ideology, and women’s ordination: Discursive strategies in three Roman Catholic documents.Beverly J. Matiko & Eun-Young Julia Kim - 2019 - Critical Research on Religion 7 (3):237-256.
    This article analyzes through a linguistic lens three official documents of the Roman Catholic Church on women’s ordination; it also identifies various discursive tactics utilized by text creators to reinforce gender hierarchy within the Church. Drawing from Fairclough’s three dimensional discourse framework, we examine the ideological message embedded in the linguistic features and the role each text plays within a matrix of power relations. Through close readings of Inter Insigniores: On the Question of Admission of Women to the Ministerial Priesthood, (...)
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  25.  2
    Late Sixteenth-Century Chinese Buddhist Fellowship: Spiritual Ambitions, Intellectual Debates, and Epis- tolary Connections. By Jennifer Eichman.Beverly Foulks McGuire - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (4):889.
    A Late Sixteenth-Century Chinese Buddhist Fellowship: Spiritual Ambitions, Intellectual Debates, and Epis- tolary Connections. By Jennifer Eichman. Sinica Leidensia, vol. 127. Boston: Brill, 2016. Pp. xvi + 422. €139, $180.
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  26.  10
    McGee C. Douglas. Who means what by ‘synonymy’? Inquiry, vol. 2 , pp. 199–212.Beverly Robbins - 1962 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 27 (1):121-121.
  27.  19
    Interactions of Pyramidal Structures With Energy and Consciousness.Beverly Rubik - 2016 - Cosmos and History 12 (2):259-275.
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  28.  3
    Embodied Experience: Representing Risk in Speech and Gesture.Beverly Sauer - 1999 - Discourse Studies 1 (3):321-354.
    This article investigates the ways in which individuals assume two distinct viewpoints in both speech and gesture - both simultaneously and sequentially - when they represent the uncertain knowledge that characterizes risk. In the mimetic viewpoint, individuals represent events as characters in their own narrative or mimic the character viewpoint of an Other. In the analytic viewpoint, individuals move outside of embodied experience to analyze events from a distance. As part of a larger study investigating viewpoint in discourses of risk, (...)
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  29. Associations to stimulus-response theories of language.Thomas G. Bever - 1968 - In T. Dixon & Deryck Horton (eds.), Verbal Behavior and General Behavior Theory. Prentice-Hall. pp. 478--494.
  30.  18
    Effects of Intention; Energy Healing and Mind-Body States on Biophoton Emission.Beverly Rubik & Jabs - 2017 - Cosmos and History 13 (2):227-247.
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  31.  13
    An Illegal Assembly of One.Beverly Fok - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (1):67-79.
    In Singapore, the law holds that one person may constitute an illegal assembly. This makes each person, individually and at all times, latently assembled if not actually so. But where exactly does the permissible, non-assembled one end and the unlawful, gathered one begin? How and when does one become more than one, that is, some? For here an excess of one is not many, but rather an indeterminate some. Of what does this someness consist? This essay draws on Foucault and (...)
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  32.  20
    A Historical Note on Women's Fiction: A Reply to Annette Kolodny.Beverly Voloshin - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 2 (4):817-820.
    While I appreciate Annette Kolodny's attempt to clarify the aims of feminist criticism, I would like to correct a historical misconception in her recent article, "Some Notes on Defining A 'Feminist Literary Criticism.'" When Kolodny comes to defining a feminist criticism, near the end of the essay, she advocates applying to individual works, without preconceived conclusions, "rigorous methods for analyzing style and image.” . . . Kolodny implies that Hawthorne wrongly condemned domestic novels without having read them and that once (...)
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  33.  7
    Troubled Waters: Marcantonio Raimondi and Dürers Nightmares on the Shore.Beverly Louise Brown - 2016 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 92 (2):25-43.
    Marcantonio Raimondis Il Sogno and Albrecht Dürers Sea Monster share a number of compositional similarities as well as a fascination with the bizarre. The association of monstrous forms as an omen of grave misfortune, including pestilence and war, was particularly common at the beginning of the sixteenth century. In Marcantonios engraving the chimeric monsters, billowing inferno and shooting star can be perceived as a graphic warning that by 1509 Venices world was in deep peril.
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  34.  11
    The True Meaning of Christmases Past.Beverly Seaton - 1990 - American Journal of Semiotics 7 (4):29-39.
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  35.  22
    Cross-modal Association between Auditory and Visuospatial Information in Mandarin Tone Perception in Noise by Native and Non-native Perceivers.Beverly Hannah, Yue Wang, Allard Jongman, Joan A. Sereno, Jiguo Cao & Yunlong Nie - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  36. The specificity of language skills.Jerry A. Fodor, Thomas G. Bever & Mary Garrett - 1974 - In Jerry Fodor, Bever A., Garrett T. G. & F. M. (eds.), The Psychology of Language: An Introduction to Psycholinguistics and Generative Grammar. Mcgraw-Hill.
     
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  37.  24
    Being human in a global age of technology.Beverly J. B. Whelton - 2016 - Nursing Philosophy 17 (1):28-35.
    This philosophical enquiry considers the impact of a global world view and technology on the meaning of being human. The global vision increases our awareness of the common bond between all humans, while technology tends to separate us from an understanding of ourselves as human persons. We review some advances in connecting as community within our world, and many examples of technological changes. This review is not exhaustive. The focus is to understand enough changes to think through the possibility of (...)
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  38.  20
    The Biofield: Bridge Between Mind and Body.Beverly Rubik - 2015 - Cosmos and History 11 (2):83-96.
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  39.  28
    A critical look at Finnis's natural law ethics and the role of human choice.Beverly Hinton - 2003 - Journal of Value Inquiry 37 (1):69-81.
  40.  77
    On Synonymy of Word-Events.Beverly Levin Robbins - 1951 - Analysis 12 (4):98 - 100.
  41. Wound of love feminine theosis a embodied mysticism in Teresa of Avila.Beverly J. Lanzetta - 2008 - In Jorge N. Ferrer & Jacob H. Sherman (eds.), The Participatory Turn: Spirituality, Mysticism, Religious Studies. State University of New York Press.
     
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  42.  25
    A nineteenth-century metalanguage: Le Langage des Fleurs.Beverly Seaton - 1985 - Semiotica 57 (1-2):73-86.
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  43.  28
    "Blue Roses and Other Horticultural Illusions.Beverly Seaton - 1985 - Semiotics:203-215.
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  44.  35
    Extra-Coding in Nineteenth-Century Flower Personification.Beverly Seaton - 1992 - Semiotics:17-24.
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  45.  27
    Further Dialogue with a Nobel Laureate.Beverly Seaton - 1984 - Semiotics:51-61.
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  46.  27
    The Pragmatical Dimension of Reserve in John Keble's The Christian Year.Beverly Seaton - 1988 - Semiotics:367-373.
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  47.  19
    The True Meaning of Christmases Past.Beverly Seaton - 1990 - American Journal of Semiotics 7 (4):29-39.
  48.  3
    Dalibray, Le Pailleur, and the "New Astronomy" in French Seventeenth-Century Poetry.Beverly S. Ridgely - 1956 - Journal of the History of Ideas 17 (1/4):3.
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  49.  23
    Antonio Gramsci’s Reformulation of Benedetto Croce’s Speculative Idealism.Beverly L. Kahn - 1985 - Idealistic Studies 15 (1):18-40.
    The philosophical legacy of Antonio Gramsci, co-founder of the Italian Communist Party, represents a significant contribution to Marxist philosophy. Gramsci breathes new life into the Marxist tradition by infusing Marxism with persistent strands of Italian political thought. Not only does Gramsci turn to the Marxist philosophy of Antonio Labriola, but, furthermore, he reaches outside the Marxist tradition to such non-Marxist thinkers as Giambattista Vico, Niccolo Machiavelli, Gaetano Mosca, Giovanni Gentile, and Benedetto Croce. In particular, it is through his encounter with, (...)
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  50.  49
    A Critique of Carl Ginet's Intrinsic Theory of Volition.Beverly K. Hinton - 2001 - Behavior and Philosophy 29:101 - 120.
    This essay presents an analysis in the area of the theory of human action. Philosophers and pschologists are interested in theories of action because action defines those behaviors that are under our control as opposed to behaviors that in some sense just happen. In its wider context, a theory of action has implications for legal reasoning or moral reasoning. Throughout the history of this topic, one of the leading theories of action has been the volitional theory. Volition, in its simplest (...)
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