Results for 'Tomer T. Levin'

988 found
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  1.  8
    Preventing and De-Escalating Ethical Conflict: A Communication-Training Mediation Model.Patricia A. Parker & Tomer T. Levin - 2015 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 26 (4):342-345.
    While ethical conflicts in the provision of healthcare are common, the current third-party mediator model is limited by a lack of expert ethical mediators, who are often not on site when conflict escalates. In order to improve clinical outcomes in situations such as conflicts at the end of life, we suggest that clinicians—physicians, nurses and social workers—be trained to prevent and deescalate emerging conflicts. This can be achieved using a mediation model framed by a communication-training approach. A case example is (...)
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  2. Phenomenal qualities of ayahuasca ingestion and its relation to fringe consciousness and personality.T. Bresnick & R. Levin - 2006 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 13 (9):5-24.
    Ayahuasca, a hallucinogen with profound consciousness- altering properties, has been increasingly utilized in recent studies (e.g., Strassman, 2001; Shanon, 2002a,b). However, other than Shanon's recent work, there has been little attempt to examine the effects of ayahuasca on perceptual, affective and cognitive experience, its relation to fringe consciousness or to pertinent personality variables. Twenty-one volunteers attending a seminar on ayahuasca were administered personality measures and a semi-structured interview about phenomenal qualities of their experience. Ayahuasca ingestion was associated with profound alterations (...)
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  3.  10
    Interacting with others while reacting to the environment.Ilan Fischer, Simon A. Levin, Daniel I. Rubenstein, Shacked Avrashi, Lior Givon & Tomer Oz - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45.
    Here, we revise Pietraszewski's model of groups by assigning participant pairs with two triplets, denoting: the type of game that models the interaction, its critical switching point between alternatives, and the perception of strategic similarity with the opponent. These triplets provide a set of primitives that accounts for individuals' strategic motivations and observed behaviors.
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  4. New books. [REVIEW]Vernon Lee, Frank Angell, W. F. Trotter, T. E., T. W. Levin & Alfred W. Benn - 1896 - Mind 5 (18):270-286.
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  5. Consultation-liaison psychiatry.Marguerite Lederberg & Tomer Levin - 1981 - In Sidney Bloch & Stephen A. Green (eds.), Psychiatric ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
  6.  10
    Existential and Spiritual Issues in Death Attitudes.Adrian Tomer, Grafton Eliason & Paul T. P. Wong (eds.) - 2007 - Psychology Press.
    _Existential and Spiritual Issues in Death Attitudes_ provides: an in-depth examination of death attitudes, existentialism, and spirituality and their relationships; a review of the major theoretical models; clinical applications of these models to issues such as infertility, bereavement, anxiety, and suicide; and an introduction to meaning management theory and how it can be applied to grief counseling. In this new volume, death is treated both as a threat to meaning and as an opportunity to create meaning. The first section introduces (...)
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  7.  8
    Community Matters: Challenges to Civic Engagement in the 21st Century.Meira Levinson, William A. Galston, Jacob T. Levy, Peter Levine, Robert K. Fullinwider & Mick Womersley (eds.) - 2005 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In Community Matters: Challenges to Civic Engagement in the 21st Century, six distinguished scholars address three perennial challenges of civic life: the making of a citizen, how citizens are to agree , and how to define the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. These essays will encourage students, academics, and interested citizens outside the academy to go farther and dig deeper into these vital issues.
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  8. The relationship between change detection and recognition of centrally attended objects in motion pictures.Bonnie L. Angelone, Daniel T. Levin & Daniel J. Simons - 2003 - Perception 32 (8):947-962.
  9.  7
    More on Making Consent Forms More Readable.T. M. Grundner, Robert J. Levine & Alan Meisel - 1982 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 4 (1):8.
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  10. Change blindness.Daniel J. Simons & Daniel T. Levin - 1997 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 1 (1):241-82.
  11.  9
    Critical notices.T. W. Levin - 1881 - Mind (23):424-427.
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  12. Change blindness blindness: Beliefs about the roles of intention and scene complexity in change detection.Melissa R. Beck, Daniel T. Levin & Bonnie Angelone - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (1):31-51.
    Observers have difficulty detecting visual changes. However, they are unaware of this inability, suggesting that people do not have an accurate understanding of visual processes. We explored whether this error is related to participants’ beliefs about the roles of intention and scene complexity in detecting changes. In Experiment 1 participants had a higher failure rate for detecting changes in an incidental change detection task than an intentional change detection task. This effect of intention was greatest for complex scenes. However, participants (...)
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  13.  50
    Metacognitive errors in change detection: Lab and life converge.Melissa R. Beck, Daniel T. Levin & Bonnie L. Angelone - 2007 - Consciousness and Cognition 16 (1):58-62.
    Smilek, Eastwood, Reynolds, and Kingstone suggests that the studies reported in Beck, M. R., Levin, D. T. and Angelone, B. A. are not ecologically valid. Here, we argue that not only are change blindness and change blindness blindness studies in general ecologically valid, but that the studies we reported in Beck, Levin, and Angelone, 2007 are as well. Specifically, we suggest that many of the changes used in our study could reasonably be expected to occur in the real (...)
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  14. Change blindness blindness: The metacognitive error of overestimating change-detection ability.Daniel T. Levin, Nausheen Momen, Sarah B. Drivdahl & Daniel J. Simons - 2000 - Visual Cognition 7 (1):397-412.
  15.  24
    The role of relational triggers in event perception.Lewis J. Baker & Daniel T. Levin - 2015 - Cognition 136 (C):14-29.
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  16. Larry Cahill, Lukasz Gorski, Annabelle Belcher, and Quyen Huynh. The influence of sex versus sex-related traits on long-term.Matthew Brown, Derek Besner, Daniel T. Levin & Donald A. Varakin - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13:212.
  17. Effective family planning programs.Rodolfo A. Bulatao, Ann Levin, Eduardo R. Bos, Cynthia Green, N. N. Sarkar, R. Bromley, K. Tones, T. Byrd, K. Enge & M. Favin - 1993 - Journal of Biosocial Science 25 (1):45-9.
     
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  18. Fractionation and lacalization of distinct frontal lobe processes: Evidence from focal lesions in humans.D. T. Stuss, M. P. Alexander, D. Floden, M. A. Binns, B. Levine, A. R. McIntosh & R. T. Knight - 2002 - In Donald T. Stuss & Robert T. Knight (eds.), Principles of Frontal Lobe Function. Oxford University Press.
  19. Unseen and unaware: Implications of recent research on failures of visual awareness for human-computer interface design.D. Alexander Varakin, Daniel T. Levin & Roger Fidler - 2004 - Human-Computer Interaction 19 (4):389-422.
     
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  20. Memory for centrally attended changing objects in an incidental real-world change detection paradigm.Daniel T. Levin, Daniel J. Simons, Bonnie L. Angelone & Christopher Chabris - 2002 - British Journal of Psychology 93:289-302.
  21. Fractionalization and localization of distinct frontal lobe processes: Evidence from focal lesions in humans.D. T. Stuss, M. P. Alexander, D. Floden, M. A. Binns, B. Levine, A. R. Mcintosh, N. Rajah & S. J. Hevenor - 2002 - In Donald T. Stuss & Robert T. Knight (eds.), Principles of Frontal Lobe Function. Oxford University Press.
  22.  24
    Mental Transformation Skill in Young Children: The Role of Concrete and Abstract Motor Training.Susan C. Levine, Susan Goldin-Meadow, Matthew T. Carlson & Naureen Hemani-Lopez - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (4):1207-1228.
    We examined the effects of three different training conditions, all of which involve the motor system, on kindergarteners’ mental transformation skill. We focused on three main questions. First, we asked whether training that involves making a motor movement that is relevant to the mental transformation—either concretely through action or more abstractly through gestural movements that represent the action —resulted in greater gains than training using motor movements irrelevant to the mental transformation. We tested children prior to training, immediately after training, (...)
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  23.  21
    Cognition can affect perception: Restating the evidence of a top-down effect.Daniel T. Levin, Lewis J. Baker & Mahzarin R. Banaji - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
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  24.  57
    Change blindness blindness as visual metacognition.Daniel T. Levin - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (5-6):111-30.
    Many experiments have demonstrated that people fail to detect seemingly large visual changes in their environment. Despite these failures, most people confidently predict that they would see changes that are actually almost impossible to see. Therefore, in at least some situations visual experience is demonstrably not what people think it is. This paper describes a line of research suggesting that overconfidence about change detection reflects a deeper metacognitive error founded on beliefs about attention and the role of meaning as a (...)
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  25.  57
    False predictions about the detectability of visual changes: The role of beliefs about attention, memory, and the continuity of attended objects in causing change blindness blindness.Daniel T. Levin, Sarah B. Drivdahl, Nausheen Momen & Melissa R. Beck - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (4):507-527.
    Recently, a number of experiments have emphasized the degree to which subjects fail to detect large changes in visual scenes. This finding, referred to as “change blindness,” is often considered surprising because many people have the intuition that such changes should be easy to detect. Levin, Momen, Drivdahl, and Simons documented this intuition by showing that the majority of subjects believe they would notice changes that are actually very rarely detected. Thus subjects exhibit a metacognitive error we refer to (...)
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  26.  8
    Mechanism and explanation in the development of biological thought: The case of disease.Frank C. Keil, Daniel T. Levin, Bethany A. Richman & Grant Gutheil - 1999 - In D. Medin & S. Atran (eds.), Folkbiology. MIT Press.
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  27.  13
    The Incomplete Tyranny of Dynamic Stimuli: Gaze Similarity Predicts Response Similarity in Screen‐Captured Instructional Videos.Daniel T. Levin, Jorge A. Salas, Anna M. Wright, Adrianne E. Seiffert, Kelly E. Carter & Joshua W. Little - 2021 - Cognitive Science 45 (6):e12984.
    Although eye tracking has been used extensively to assess cognitions for static stimuli, recent research suggests that the link between gaze and cognition may be more tenuous for dynamic stimuli such as videos. Part of the difficulty in convincingly linking gaze with cognition is that in dynamic stimuli, gaze position is strongly influenced by exogenous cues such as object motion. However, tests of the gaze‐cognition link in dynamic stimuli have been done on only a limited range of stimuli often characterized (...)
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  28.  51
    Dissociation of Processes Underlying Spatial S-R Compatibility: Evidence for the Independent Influence of What and Where.Jeffrey P. Toth, Brian Levine, Donald T. Stuss, Alfred Oh, Gordon Winocur & Nachshon Meiran - 1995 - Consciousness and Cognition 4 (4):483-501.
    The process-dissociation procedure was used to estimate the influence of spatial and form-based processing in the Simon task. Subjects made manual responses to the direction of arrows . The results provide evidence that the form and spatial location of a single stimulus can have functionally independent effects on performance. They also indicate the existence of two kinds of automaticity—an associative component that reflects prior S-R mappings and a nonassociative component that reflects the correspondence between stimulus and response codes.
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  29.  7
    New books. [REVIEW]T. Woodhouse Levin - 1892 - Mind 1 (1):143-144.
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  30.  10
    Evidence from Focal Lesions in Humans.Donald T. Stuss, Michael P. Alexander, Darlene Floden, Malcolm A. Binns, Brian Levine, Anthony R. Mcintosh, Natasha Raiah & Stephanie I. Hevenor - 2002 - In Donald T. Stuss & Robert T. Knight (eds.), Principles of Frontal Lobe Function. Oxford University Press.
  31.  32
    P53 and the defenses against genome instability caused by transposons and repetitive elements.Arnold J. Levine, David T. Ting & Benjamin D. Greenbaum - 2016 - Bioessays 38 (6):508-513.
    The recent publication by Wylie et al. is reviewed, demonstrating that the p53 protein regulates the movement of transposons. While this work presents genetic evidence for a piRNA‐mediated p53 interaction with transposons in Drosophila and zebrafish, it is herein placed in the context of a decade or so of additional work that demonstrated a role for p53 in regulating transposons and other repetitive elements. The line of thought in those studies began with the observation that transposons damage DNA and p53 (...)
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  32.  22
    Rehabilitation of Executive Functioning in Patients with Frontal Lobe Brain Damage with Goal Management Training.Brian Levine, Tom A. Schweizer, Charlene O'Connor, Gary Turner, Susan Gillingham, Donald T. Stuss, Tom Manly & Ian H. Robertson - 2011 - Frontiers Human Neuroscience 5.
  33.  13
    Which Way Is Up? Thomas S. Kuhn's Analogy to Conceptual Development in Childhood.Alexander T. Levine - 2000 - Science & Education 9 (1-2):107-122.
  34.  18
    Case vignette: premature surrender.H. T. Mermelstein, G. J. Annas & R. J. Levine - 1992 - Ethics and Behavior 2 (1):63-71.
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  35.  80
    Scientific progress and the Fregean legacy.Alexander T. Levine - 1999 - Mind and Language 14 (3):263–290.
    Twentieth century philosophy of science has been dominated by a view of language with a strong prejudice against psychology, even while empirical psychology has moved away from the nineteenth century philosophical psychology against which the prejudice was originally directed. This legacy is shown to dominate even in recent Kripke‐inspired efforts toward new theories of meaning. Its influence is argued to undermine prospects for making sense of such phenomena as scientific progress. Avoiding this consequence requires that we pursue a psychologically informed (...)
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  36.  7
    Excarations of the Godin Project: Second Progress Report.Denise Schmandt-Besserat, T. Cuyler Young & Louis D. Levine - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (1):61.
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  37.  38
    Simulated Mortality—We Can Do More.Andrew T. Goldberg, Benjamin J. Heller, Jesse Hochkeppel, Adam I. Levine & Samuel Demaria - 2017 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 26 (3):495-504.
    :High-fidelity simulation is a relatively new teaching modality, which is gaining widespread acceptance in medical education. To date, dozens of studies have proven the usefulness of HFS in improving student, resident, and attending physician performance, with similar results in the allied health fields. Although many studies have analyzed the utility of simulation, few have investigated why it works. A recent study illustrated that permissive failure, leading to simulated mortality, is one HFS method that can improve long-term performance. Critics maintain, however, (...)
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  38. False predictions about the detectability of unexpected visual changes: The role of metamemory and beliefs about attention in causing change blindness blindness.D. T. Levin, S. B. Drivdahl, N. Momen & M. R. Beck - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11:507-527.
  39. No pause for a brief disruption: Failures of visual awareness during ongoing events.Daniel T. Levin & D. Alexander Varakin - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (2):363-372.
    Past research has repeatedly documented the close relationship between visual attention and awareness. Most recently, research exploring change blindness, inattentional blindness, repetition blindness, and the attentional blink has converged on the conclusion that attention to one aspect of a scene or event may lead to a highly circumscribed awareness of only the specific information attended, while other information, even that which is spatially or temporally nearby can go completely unnoticed. In the present report, we extend these observations to the dynamic (...)
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  40. Interpreting the History of Science: A Psychologistic Approach.Alexander T. Levine - 1994 - Dissertation, University of California, San Diego
    The question, how is profound intellectual disagreement possible, even when addressed toward the paradigmatically reasonable activity of scientific communication, has generated a number of puzzling responses. On a response attributed to Thomas S. Kuhn, some episodes in the history of science don't allow for meaningful disagreement. In such situations, the adversaries talk at cross purposes until one side is either "converted" or dies off. ;This skeptical prospect has also been considered by those who study the differences between natural languages, and (...)
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  41.  40
    Concepts about agency constrain beliefs about visual experience.Daniel T. Levin - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2):875-888.
    Recent research exploring phenomena such as change blindness, inattentional blindness, attentional blink and repetition blindness has revealed a number of counterintuitive ways in which apparently salient visual stimuli often go unnoticed. In fact, large majorities of subjects sometimes predict that they would detect visual changes that actually are rarely noticed, suggesting that people have strong beliefs about visual experience that are demonstrably incorrect. However, for other kinds of visual metacognition, such as picture memory, people underpredict performance. This paper describes two (...)
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  42.  14
    Listening time and the short-term perceptual deprivation effect.Joseph R. Levine, Alice Pettit & Bruce T. Leckart - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (1):10-11.
  43. Novel approaches to the assessment of frontal damage and executive deficits.B. Levine, D. I. Katz, L. Dade, S. E. Black, D. T. Stuss & R. T. Knight - 2002 - In Donald T. Stuss & Robert T. Knight (eds.), Principles of Frontal Lobe Function. Oxford University Press.
  44.  12
    News books.T. W. Levin - 1895 - Mind 4 (16):549-550.
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  45.  25
    Optimistic metacognitive judgments predict poor performance in relatively complex visual tasks.Daniel T. Levin, Gautam Biswas, Joeseph S. Lappin, Marian Rushdy & Adriane E. Seiffert - 2019 - Consciousness and Cognition 74 (C):102781.
  46.  11
    Vii.--New books.T. W. Levin - 1896 - Mind (18):280-282.
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  47.  3
    Viii.—New books.T. W. Levin - 1894 - Mind 3 (12):558-560.
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  48.  5
    Viii.—New books.T. W. Levin - 1895 - Mind 4 (15):411-412.
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  49.  11
    Viii.—New books.T. W. Levin - 1897 - Mind 6 (4):567-568.
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  50. Violence: Mercurial Gestalt.T. Levin (ed.) - 2008
     
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