Results for 'James J. Knierim'

996 found
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  1.  25
    The problem of conflicting reference frames when investigating three-dimensional space in surface-dwelling animals.Francesco Savelli & James J. Knierim - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5):564-565.
    In a surface-dwelling animal like the rat, experimental strategies for investigating the hippocampal correlates of three-dimensional space appear inevitably complicated by the interplay of global versus local reference frames. We discuss the impact of the resulting confounds on present and future empirical analysis of the hypothesis by Jeffery and colleagues.
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  2. James J. Gibson.James J. Gibson - 1967 - In . pp. 125-143.
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  3. The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception: Classic Edition.James J. Gibson - 1979 - Houghton Mifflin.
    This is a book about how we see: the environment around us (its surfaces, their layout, and their colors and textures); where we are in the environment; whether or not we are moving and, if we are, where we are going; what things are good for; how to do things (to thread a needle or drive an automobile); or why things look as they do.The basic assumption is that vision depends on the eye which is connected to the brain. The (...)
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  4.  10
    Sensations of history: animation and new media art.James J. Hodge - 2019 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    In Sensations of History, James J. Hodge argues that animation in new media art transforms historical experience in the digital age. Combining close textual analysis of experimental new media artworks with discussion of key phenomenological texts, Sensations of History argues for the broad critical significance of animation as we shift from analog to digital technologies. Hodge looks closely at animation aesthetics, which allow for a clear grasp of the ways digital technologies transform our sense of historical experience.
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  5. Patricia Harkin James J. Sosnoski.James J. Sosnoski - forthcoming - Intertexts: Reading Pedagogy in College Writing Classrooms.
     
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  6. The Perception Of The Visual World.James J. Gibson - 1950 - Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  7. An Ecological Theory of Perception.James J. Gibson - 1979 - Houghton Miflin.
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  8. Emotion regulation: Conceptual foundations.James J. Gross & Ross A. Thompson (eds.) - 2007
  9. A theory of direct visual perception.James J. Gibson - 2002 - In Alva Noe & Evan Thompson (eds.), Vision and Mind: Selected Readings in the Philosophy of Perception. MIT Press. pp. 77--89.
  10.  26
    Kant: Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason: A Commentary.James J. DiCenso - 2012 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Kant's Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason is one of the great modern examinations of religion's meaning, function and impact on human affairs. In this volume, the first complete English-language commentary on the work, James J. DiCenso explains the historical context in which the book appeared, including the importance of Kant's conflict with state censorship. He shows how the Religion addresses crucial Kantian themes such as the relationship between freedom and morality, the human propensity to evil, the status (...)
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  11. Handbook of Emotion Regulation.James J. Gross (ed.) - 2007 - Guilford Press.
    This authoritative volume provides a comprehensive road map of the important and rapidly growing field of emotion regulation.
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  12. Prospective and practicing secondary school science teachers' knowledge and beliefs about the philosophy of science.James J. Gallagher - 1991 - Science Education 75 (1):121-133.
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  13.  8
    Violence Beyond the Proximal Subjective: Theorizing an addendum of distal causality.James J. Brittain - 2017 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 11 (1).
    Not a day passes over society where the immediate expressions of violence are not widely propagated and subsequently witnessed through cultural or political mediums. Such depictions, accounts, scenes, have been uniquely framed as a lexis of ‘subjective violence’; reactions or evident illustrations of descent in physical form. Amidst their over-representation is a lapse of measured attention given to the pretext amounting to said outbursts. Seldom is the objective, if at all, contextualized as a catalytic toward the subjective. The following work (...)
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  14. Analogy and" kinds" of things.James J. Heaney - 1971 - The Thomist 35 (2):291-304.
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  15.  5
    Values Based Decision Making in Healthcare: Introduction.James J. Mccartney Osa - 2005 - HEC Forum 17 (1).
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  16. New reasons for realism.James J. Gibson - 1967 - Synthese 17 (1):162 - 172.
    Both the psychology of perception and the philosophy of perception seem to show a new face when the process is considered at its own level, distinct from that of sensation. Unfamiliar conceptions in physics, anatomy, physiology, psychology, and phenomenology are required to clarify the separation and make it plausible. But there have been so many dead ends in the effort to solve the theoretical problems of perception that radical proposals may now be acceptable. Scientists are often more conservative than philosophers (...)
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  17. A Synoptic History of Classical Rhetoric.James J. Murphy - 1973 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 6 (1):61-62.
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  18.  13
    Aesthetics Across the Color Line: Why Nietzsche (Sometimes) Can't Sing the Blues.James J. Winchester - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    James Winchester brings the western philosophical tradition into dialog with contemporary African-American thinkers in an attempt to bridge the culture gap in aesthetic judgments.
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  19.  20
    Education for social change: New directions for the third century.James J. Shields & Aage R. Nielson - 1976 - Educational Studies 7 (3):iv-vi.
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  20.  8
    Hugh MacColl’s contributions to the Educational Times.James J. Tattersall - 2011 - Philosophia Scientiae 15:77-95.
    Il y eut plus de 1 900 contributeurs à la section mathématique du journal Educational Times durant ses 67 ans d’existence. Cette rubrique mensuelle contenait des problèmes et leurs solutions, de courts articles, et souvent de courts comptes rendus de l’assemblée la plus récente de la London Mathematical Society. Hugh MacColl (1837-1909), enseignant et tuteur, était l’un des contributeurs les plus prolifiques à cette section. Il soumettait ses contributions depuis Boulogne-sur-Mer, France. Son expertise portait essentiellement sur la probabilité géométrique, les (...)
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  21.  22
    Chronic illness and the physician-patient relationship: A response to the Hastings center's "ethical challenges of chronic illness".J. Strain James - 1991 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (2).
    The following article is a response to the position paper of the Hastings Center, "Ethical Challenges of Chronic Illness", a product of their three year project on Ethics and Chronic Care. The authors of this paper, three prominent bioethicists, Daniel Callahan, Arthur Caplan, and Bruce Jennings, argue that there should be a different ethic for acute and chronic care. In pressing this distinction they provide philosophical grounds for limiting medical care for the elderly and chronically ill. We give a critical (...)
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  22.  2
    Education and physical education.J. Myrle James - 1967 - London,: Bell.
  23.  47
    Perceptual learning: Differentiation or enrichment?James J. Gibson & Eleanor J. Gibson - 1955 - Psychological Review 62 (1):32-41.
  24. Emotion elicitation using films.James J. Gross & Robert W. Levenson - 1995 - Cognition and Emotion 9 (1):87-108.
  25. Events are perceivable but time is not.James J. Gibson - 1975 - In J. T. Fraser & Nathaniel M. Lawrence (eds.), The Study of Time II: Proceedings of the Second Conference of the International Society for the Study of Time Lake Yamanaka-Japan. Springer Verlag. pp. 295-301.
    For centuries psychologists have been trying to explain how a man or an animal could perceive space. They have thought of space as having three dimensions and the difficulty was how an observer could see the third dimension. For depth, as Bishop Berkeley asserted at the outset of the New Theory of Vision (1709), “is a line endwise to the eye which projects only one point in the fund of the eye.” Space was its dimensions. It was empty save for (...)
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  26.  37
    Scientific and Philosophical Perspectives in Neuroethics.James J. Giordano & Bert Gordijn (eds.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    It examines three core questions. First, what is the scope and direction of neuroscientific inquiry?
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  27. Introduction: International Medical Informatics Association Working Group 6 and the 2005 Rome Conference.James J. Cimino & Barry Smith - 2006 - Journal of Biomedical Informatics 39 (3):249-251.
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  28.  1
    Baron Friedrich von Hügel's philosophy of religion.James J. Kelly - 1983 - Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters.
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  29.  29
    Edward Bellamy and the New Deal: The Revival of Bellamyism in the 1930s.James J. Kopp - 1991 - Utopian Studies 4:10-16.
  30. Justus Möser and the German enlightenment.James J. Sheehan - 1988 - History of European Ideas 9 (6):746-747.
     
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  31. Emotion Regulation: Past, Present, Future.James J. Gross - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (5):551-573.
    Modern emotion theories emphasise the adaptive value of emotions. Emotions are by no means always helpful, however. They often must be regulated. The study of emotion regulation has its origins in the psychoanalytic and stress and coping traditions. Recently, increased interest in emotion regulation has led to crucial boundary ambiguities that now threaten progress in this domain. It is argued that distinctions need to be made between (1) regulation of emotion and regulation by emotion; (2) emotion regulation in self and (...)
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  32.  32
    What is an Emotion? A Connectionist Perspective.Gaurav Suri & James J. Gross - 2022 - Emotion Review 14 (2):99-110.
    Emotion Review, Volume 14, Issue 2, Page 99-110, April 2022. Researchers often disagree as to whether emotions are largely consistent across people and over time, or whether they are variable. They also disagree as to whether emotions are initiated by appraisals, or whether they may be initiated in diverse ways. We draw upon Parallel-Distributed-Processing to offer an algorithmic account in which features of an emotion instance are bi-directionally connected to each other via conjunction units. We propose that such indirect connections (...)
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  33.  25
    Authors' Reply: Why a Connectionist Perspective on Emotion is Helpful.Gaurav Suri & James J. Gross - 2022 - Emotion Review 14 (2):116-120.
    Emotion Review, Volume 14, Issue 2, Page 116-120, April 2022. To make progress related to long-standing questions related to the nature of emotion, we offer the Interactive Activation and Competition framework for Emotion. The IAC-E is not another conventional theory of emotion. Rather, it offers a neural-network-based, algorithmic account of how emotion instances and categories arise. Our approach suggests that there need not be a contradiction between instances of the same emotion being sometimes consistent and sometimes variable. Similarly, there need (...)
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  34. Rationales for indirect speech: The theory of the strategic speaker.James J. Lee & Steven Pinker - 2010 - Psychological Review 117 (3):785-807.
    Speakers often do not state requests directly but employ innuendos such as Would you like to see my etchings? Though such indirectness seems puzzlingly inefficient, it can be explained by a theory of the strategic speaker, who seeks plausible deniability when he or she is uncertain of whether the hearer is cooperative or antagonistic. A paradigm case is bribing a policeman who may be corrupt or honest: A veiled bribe may be accepted by the former and ignored by the latter. (...)
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  35.  34
    Rationales for indirect speech: The theory of the strategic speaker.James J. Lee & Steven Pinker - 2010 - Psychological Review 117 (3):785-807.
  36.  27
    Observations on active touch.James J. Gibson - 1962 - Psychological Review 69 (6):477-491.
  37. Emotion Generation and Emotion Regulation: One or Two Depends on Your Point of View.James J. Gross & Lisa Feldman Barrett - 2011 - Emotion Review 3 (1):8-16.
    Emotion regulation has the odd distinction of being a wildly popular construct whose scientific existence is in considerable doubt. In this article, we discuss the confusion about whether emotion generation and emotion regulation can and should be distinguished from one another. We describe a continuum of perspectives on emotion, and highlight how different (often mutually incompatible) perspectives on emotion lead to different views about whether emotion generation and emotion regulation can be usefully distinguished. We argue that making differences in perspective (...)
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  38.  26
    The visual perception of objective motion and subjective movement.James J. Gibson - 1954 - Psychological Review 61 (5):304-314.
  39. Rhetoric in the Middle Ages. A History of Rhetorical Theory from St. Augustine to the Renaissance.James J. Murphy - 1976 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 9 (3):181-185.
  40.  36
    J. David Hoeveler, Jr, James McCosh and the Scottish Intellectual Tradition: From Glasgow to Princeton.James J. S. Foster - 2018 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 16 (2):196-200.
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  41.  20
    What gives rise to the perception of motion?James J. Gibson - 1968 - Psychological Review 75 (4):335-346.
  42.  24
    Optical motions and transformations as stimuli for visual perception.James J. Gibson - 1957 - Psychological Review 64 (5):288-295.
  43. Technoprogressive Biopolitics and Human.James J. Hughes - 2010 - In Jonathan D. Moreno & Sam Berger (eds.), Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics. MIT Press. pp. 163.
     
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  44. The Democratic Metaverse: Building an Extended Reality Safe for Citizens, Workers and Consumers.Alec Stubbs, James J. Hughes, Nir Eisikovits & Jake Burley - 2023 - Ieet White Papers.
    We are likely to have immersive virtual reality and ubiquitous augmented reality in the coming decades. At least some people will use extended reality or “the metaverse” to work, play and shop. In order to achieve the best possible versions of this virtual future, however, we will need to learn from three decades of regulating the Internet. The new virtual world cannot consist of walled corporate fiefdoms ruled only by profitmaximization. The interests of workers, consumers and citizens in virtuality require (...)
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  45.  93
    The Ethics of Payments: Paper, Plastic, or Bitcoin?James J. Angel & Douglas McCabe - 2015 - Journal of Business Ethics 132 (3):603-611.
    Individuals and businesses make numerous payments every day. They sometimes have choices about what forms of payment to make or accept, and at other times are effectively forced to use a particular form. Often there is an asymmetric power relationship between payer and payee that raises the issue of whether one side unfairly exploits the other. Is it unethical exploitation for an employer to pay employees with a fee-laden payroll card over other more convenient forms of payment? Does the fee (...)
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  46.  22
    L'Ethique a Nicomaque.La Morale d'Aristote.James J. Walsh, Rene Antoine Gauthier, Jean Yves Jolif & R. -A. Gauthier - 1959 - Journal of Philosophy 56 (18):735.
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  47.  46
    Teleology in the ethics of Buridan.James J. Walsh - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (3):265-286.
  48. What does horizon analysis bring to the consistent ethic of life?James J. Walter - 2008 - In Thomas A. Nairn (ed.), The Consistent Ethic of Life: Assessing its Reception and Relevance. Orbis Books.
     
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  49.  12
    Theories and Stories.James J. Winchester - 2006 - International Studies in Philosophy 38 (3):5-13.
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  50.  37
    The visual field and the visual world: a reply to Professor Boring.James J. Gibson - 1952 - Psychological Review 59 (2):149-151.
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