Results for 'subjective measures'

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  1. Consciousness, introspection, and subjective measures.Maja Spener - 2020 - In Uriah Kriegel (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Consciousness. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter discusses the main types of so-called ’subjective measures of consciousness’ used in current-day science of consciousness. After explaining the key worry about such measures, namely the problem of an ever-present response bias, I discuss the question of whether subjective measures of consciousness are introspective. I show that there is no clear answer to this question, as proponents of subjective measures do not employ a worked-out notion of subjective access. In turn, (...)
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  2. Are subjective measures of well-being ‘direct’?Erik Angner - 2011 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (1):115-130.
    Subjective measures of well-being—measures based on answers to questions such as ‘Taking things all together, how would you say things are these days—would you say you're very happy, pretty happy, or not too happy these days?’—are often presented as superior to more traditional economic welfare measures, e.g., for public policy purposes. This paper aims to spell out and assess what I will call the argument from directness: the notion that subjective measures of well-being better (...)
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  3.  63
    Subjective measures of consciousness in artificial grammar learning task.Michał Wierzchoń, Dariusz Asanowicz, Borysław Paulewicz & Axel Cleeremans - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (3):1141-1153.
    Consciousness can be measured in various ways, but different measures often yield different conclusions about the extent to which awareness relates to performance. Here, we compare five different subjective measures of awareness in the context of an artificial grammar learning task. Participants expressed their subjective awareness of rules using one of five different scales: confidence ratings , post-decision wagering , feeling of warmth , rule awareness , and continuous scale . All scales were equally sensitive to (...)
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  4.  47
    Subjective measures of unconscious knowledge of concepts.Eleni Ziori & Zoltán Dienes - 2006 - Mind and Society 5 (1):105-122.
    This paper considers different subjective measures of conscious and unconscious knowledge in a concept formation paradigm. In particular, free verbal reports are compared with two subjective measures, the zero-correlation and the guessing criteria, based on trial-by-trial confidence ratings (a type of on-line verbal report). Despite the fact that free verbal reports are frequently dismissed as being insensitive measures of conscious knowledge, a considerable bulk of research on implicit learning has traditionally relied on this measure of (...)
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  5. Subjective measures of unconscious knowledge.Z. Dienes - 2008 - In Rahul Banerjee & Bikas K. Chakrabarti (eds.), Models of Brain and Mind: Physical, Computational, and Psychological Approaches. Elsevier.
  6.  92
    Optimizing subjective measures of consciousness.Morten Overgaard, Bert Timmermans, Kristian Sandberg & Axel Cleeremans - 2010 - Consciousness and Cognition 19 (2):682-684.
    Dienes and Seth (2010) conclude that confidence ratings and post-decision wagering are two comparable and recommendable measures of conscious experience. In a recently submitted paper, we have however found that both methods are problematic and seem less suited to measure consciousness than a direct introspective measure. Here, we discuss the methodology and conclusions put forward by Dienes and Seth, and why we think the two experiments end up with so different recommendations.
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  7.  43
    Subjective measures of awareness and implicit cognition.Richard J. Tunney & David R. Shanks - 2003 - Memory and Cognition 31 (7):1060-1071.
  8.  45
    Subjective measures of implicit knowledge that go beyond confidence: Reply to Overgaard et al.☆.Zoltán Dienes, Ryan B. Scott & Anil K. Seth - 2010 - Consciousness and Cognition 19 (2):685-686.
    Overgaard, Timmermans, Sandberg, and Cleeremans ask if the conscious experience of people in implicit learning experiments can be explored more fully than just confidence ratings allow. We show that confidence ratings play a vital role in such experiments, but are indeed incomplete in themselves: in addition, use of structural knowledge attributions and ratings of fringe feelings like familiarity are important in characterizing the phenomenology of the application of implicit knowledge.
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  9.  57
    Subjective measures of well-being: A philosophical investigation.Erik Angner - manuscript
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  10. Subjective measures of well-being: Philosophical perspectives.Erik Angner - 2009 - In Harold Kincaid & Don Ross (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Economics. Oxford University Press. pp. 560--579.
     
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  11. Assumptions of subjective measures of unconscious mental states: Higher order thoughts and bias.Zoltán Dienes - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (9):25-45.
    This paper considers two subjective measures of the existence of unconscious mental states - the guessing criterion, and the zero correlation criterion - and considers the assumptions underlying their application in experimental paradigms. Using higher order thought theory the impact of different types of biases on the zero correlation and guessing criteria are considered. It is argued that subjective measures of consciousness can be biased in various specified ways, some of which involve the relation between first (...)
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  12.  32
    Assumptions of a subjective measure of consciousness: Three mappings.Zoltán Dienes & Josef Perner - 2004 - In Rocco J. Gennaro (ed.), Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness: An Anthology. John Benjamins. pp. 56--173.
  13.  58
    Semantics for Subjective Measures of Perceptual Experience.Pessi Lyyra - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
  14. The Philosophical Foundations of Subjective Measures Of Well-Being.Erik Angner - 2008 - In Luigino Bruni, Flavio Comim & Maurizio Pugno (eds.), Capabilities and Happiness. Oxford University Press.
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  15.  6
    Use of Repeated Within-Subject Measures to Assess Infants’ Preference for Similar Others.Amir Cruz-Khalili, Katrina Bettencourt, Carolynn S. Kohn, Matthew P. Normand & Henry D. Schlinger - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  16.  25
    Objective and subjective measures of distractibility.S. V. Austin & D. R. Hemsley - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 12 (3):182-184.
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  17.  9
    Measuring the Cognitive Workload During Dual-Task Walking in Young Adults: A Combination of Neurophysiological and Subjective Measures.Isabelle Hoang, Maud Ranchet, Romain Derollepot, Fabien Moreau & Laurence Paire-Ficout - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Background: Walking while performing a secondary task walking) increases cognitive workload in young adults. To date, few studies have used neurophysiological measures in combination to subjective measures to assess cognitive workload during a walking task. This combined approach can provide more insights into the amount of cognitive resources in relation with the perceived mental effort involving in a walking task.Research Question: The objective was to examine cognitive workload in young adults during walking conditions varying in complexity.Methods: Twenty-five (...)
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  18.  47
    The evolution of eupathics: The historical roots of subjective measures of well-being.Erik Angner - manuscript
  19.  11
    Gender Differences in Objective and Subjective Measures of ADHD Among Clinic-Referred Children.Ortal Slobodin & Michael Davidovitch - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  20.  14
    A genealogy of the scalable subject: Measuring health in the Cornell Study of Occupational Retirement (1950–60).Tiago Moreira - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (2):128-153.
    Increased use of scales in data-driven consumer digital platforms and the management of organisations has led to greater interest in understanding social and psychological measurement expertise and techniques as historically constituted ‘technologies of power’ in the making of what Stark has labelled the ‘scalable subject’. Taking a genealogical approach, and drawing on published and archival data, this article focuses on self-rated health, a scale widely used in population censuses, national health surveys, patient-reported outcome measurement tools, and a variety of digital (...)
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  21.  48
    The Measurement of Subjective Probability.Edward J. R. Elliott - 2024 - Cambridge University Press.
    Beliefs come in degrees, and we often represent those degrees with numbers. We might say, for example, that we are 90% confident in the truth of some scientific hypothesis, or only 30% confident in the success of some risky endeavour. But what do these numbers mean? What, in other words, is the underlying psychological reality to which the numbers correspond? And what constitutes a meaningful difference between numerically distinct representations of belief? In this Element, we discuss the main approaches to (...)
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  22.  42
    Valuing future cash flows with non separable discount factors and non additive subjective measures: conditional Choquet capacities on time and on uncertainty. [REVIEW]Robert Kast & André Lapied - 2010 - Theory and Decision 69 (1):27-53.
    We consider future cash flows that are contingent both on dates in time and on uncertain states. The decision maker (DM) values the cash flows according to its decision criterion: Here, the payoffs’ expectation with respect to a capacity measure. The subjective measure grasps the DM’s behaviour in front of the future, in the spirit of de Finetti’s (1930) and of Yaari’s (1987) Dual Theory in the case of risk. Decomposition of the criterion into two criteria that represent the (...)
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  23. The measurement-theoretic argument against subjective measures of well-being: A philosophical evaluation.Erik Angner - 2005 - Dissertation, University of Pittsburgh
  24.  18
    The Measurability of Subjective Animal Welfare.Heather Browning - 2022 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 29 (3-4):150-179.
    One of the most challenging questions surrounding subjective animal welfare is whether these states are measurable: that is, is subjective welfare an appropriately quantifiable target for scientific enquiry and ethical and deliberative calculation? The availability of several different types of measurement scale raises important questions regarding whether subjective experience has the right properties to be meaningfully represented on the types of scale required for different applications. This methodological question has so far received scant attention in the animal (...)
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  25. 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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  26.  48
    The problem of animal subjectivity and its consequences for the scientific measurement of animal suffering.Françoise Wemelsfelder - 1999 - In Francine L. Dolins (ed.), Attitudes to animals: views in animal welfare. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 37--53.
  27. Different subjective awareness measures demonstrate the influence of visual identification on perceptual awareness ratings.Michał Wierzchoń, Borysław Paulewicz, Dariusz Asanowicz, Bert Timmermans & Axel Cleeremans - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 27:109-120.
  28.  18
    Subjectively expected utility theory and subjects' probability estimates: Use of measurement-free techniques.Thomas S. Wallsten - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 88 (1):31.
  29.  56
    Measuring subjective visual perception in the nonhuman primate.David A. Leopold, Alexander Maier & Nikos K. Logothetis - 2003 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (9-10):115-130.
    Understanding how activity in the brain leads to a subjective percept is of great interest to philosophers and neuroscientists alike. In the last years, neurophysiological experiments have approached this problem directly by measuring neural signals in animals as they experience well-defined visual percepts. Stimuli in these studies are often inherently ambiguous, and thus rely upon the subjective report, generally from trained monkeys, to provide a measure of perception. By correlating activity levels in the brain to this report, one (...)
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  30.  11
    Subjective Universality of Great Novelists as an Artistic Measure of History’s Advance towards Actualising Kant’s Vision of Freedom.Bojan Kovačević - 2018 - Filozofija I Društvo 29 (4):567-585.
    The main idea behind this article is that in order to understand themeaning that Kant’s political philosophy is rendered to by the givensocio-historical context of a community we need to turn for help toartistic genius whose subjective “I” holds a general feeling of the worldand life. It is in this sense that authors of great novels can help us in twoways. First, their works summarise for our imagination artistic truth aboutman’s capacity for humanity, the very thing that Kant considers (...)
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  31.  28
    Subjective Outcomes Measurement and Regulatory Oversight for Deep Brain Stimulation in Parkinson's Disease.Ghislaine Mathieu, Emily Bell & Eric Racine - 2011 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 2 (1):16-18.
  32.  85
    Subjective decoherence in quantum measurements.Thomas Breuer - 1996 - Synthese 107 (1):1 - 17.
    General results about restrictions on measurements from inside are applied to quantum mechanics. They imply subjective decoherence: For an apparatus it is not possible to determine whether the joint system consisting of itself and the observed system is in a statistical state with or without interference terms; it is possible that the apparatus systematically mistakes the real pure state of the joint system for the decohered state. We discuss the relevance of subjective decoherence for quantum measurements and for (...)
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  33.  7
    Measuring Online Wellbeing: A Scoping Review of Subjective Wellbeing Measures.Zhen Xin Ong, Liz Dowthwaite, Elvira Perez Vallejos, Mat Rawsthorne & Yunfei Long - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    With the increasing importance of the internet to our everyday lives, questions are rightly being asked about how its' use affects our wellbeing. It is important to be able to effectively measure the effects of the online context, as it allows us to assess the impact of specific online contexts on wellbeing that may not apply to offline wellbeing. This paper describes a scoping review of English language, peer-reviewed articles published in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsychInfo between 1st January 2015 and (...)
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  34.  14
    Subjective universality of great novelists as an artistic measure of history’s advance towards actualising Kant’s vision of freedom.Bojan Kovacevic - 2018 - Filozofija I Društvo 29 (4):567-585.
    The main idea behind this article is that in order to understand the meaning that Kant?s political philosophy is rendered to by the given socio-historical context of a community we need to turn for help to artistic genius whose subjective?I? holds a general feeling of the world and life. It is in this sense that authors of great novels can help us in two ways. First, their works summarise for our imagination artistic truth about man?s capacity for humanity, the (...)
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  35.  19
    Measuring executive function in control subjects and TBI patients with question completion time.David L. Woods, E. William Yund, John M. Wyma, Ron Ruff & Timothy J. Herron - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  36.  6
    Measurement of a subjective aspect of learning.D. M. Johnson & C. Rhoades - 1941 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 28 (1):90.
  37.  11
    Subject, Object, and Measurement.R. Haag - 1973 - In Jagdish Mehra (ed.), The physicist's conception of nature. Boston,: Reidel. pp. 691--696.
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  38. A measurement of subjective colour of Benham type on a luminous screen.T. Hasegawa & S. Fujinami - 2004 - In Robert Schwartz (ed.), Perception. Malden Ma: Blackwell. pp. 63-63.
     
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  39.  13
    A Measure of Subjective Information.Rulon Wells - 1965 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 30 (2):244-245.
  40. If I Could Talk to the Animals: Measuring Subjective Animal Welfare.Heather Browning - 2019 - Dissertation, Australian National University
    Animal welfare is a concept that plays a role within both our moral deliberations and the relevant areas of science. The study of animal welfare has impacts on decisions made by legislators, producers and consumers with regards to housing and treatment of animals. Our ethical deliberations in these domains need to consider our impact on animals, and the study of animal welfare provides the information that allows us to make informed decisions. This thesis focusses on taking a philosophical perspective to (...)
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  41. Moving Beyond Compliance: Measuring Ethical Quality to Enhance the Oversight of Human Subjects Research.Holly Taylor - 2007 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 29 (5).
    A robust measure of whether local oversight of human subjects research is achieving the ethical goals of research oversight has never been developed. Assessing whether the local review process is achieving the ethical goals of research oversight will allow institutions to monitor their own human subjects protection programs and guide the investment of funds to improve performance. Without a measure of ethical quality, institutions, institutional review boards, regulators, and the public have no way of knowing if the intent of regulations (...)
     
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  42.  36
    Measuring the Horizon: Objectivity, Subjectivity and the Dignity of Human Personal Identity.Francis J. Ambrosio & Elisabetta Lanzilao - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (4):32.
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  43.  9
    Measuring souls: Psychometry, female instruments, and subjective science, 1840–1910.Cameron B. Strang - forthcoming - History of Science:007327531984706.
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  44.  21
    What Makes Behavioral Measures of Consciousness Subjective and Direct?Jakub Jonkisz - 2022 - Philosophy of Science 89 (4):683-700.
    This article addresses two issues: the distinction between objective and subjective measures and the directness of such measures. It is argued that the distinction is unambiguous only when based on a methodological criterion rather than a semantic one. Different senses of directness are discussed: metaphysical, methodological, semantic, and causal.
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  45.  22
    Selecting a subjective health status measure for optimum utility in everyday orthopaedic practice.David A. McQueen, Michael J. Long & John R. Schurman - 2005 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 11 (1):45-51.
  46.  44
    TMS effects on subjective and objective measures of vision: Stimulation intensity and pre- versus post-stimulus masking.Tom A. de Graaf, Sonja Cornelsen, Christianne Jacobs & Alexander T. Sack - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1244-1255.
    Transcranial magnetic stimulation can be used to mask visual stimuli, disrupting visual task performance or preventing visual awareness. While TMS masking studies generally fix stimulation intensity, we hypothesized that varying the intensity of TMS pulses in a masking paradigm might inform several ongoing debates concerning TMS disruption of vision as measured subjectively versus objectively, and pre-stimulus versus post-stimulus TMS masking. We here show that both pre-stimulus TMS pulses and post-stimulus TMS pulses could strongly mask visual stimuli. We found no dissociations (...)
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  47.  26
    Priming honesty reduces subjective bias in self-report measures of mind wandering.Melaina T. Vinski & Scott Watter - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (1):451-455.
    Using self-report as a measure of conscious experience has been a point of contention in mind wandering research. Whereas prior work has focused on the introspective component of self-report validity, the current research introduces an honesty prime task to the current paradigm in order to assess the role of goal states and social factors on self-report accuracy. Findings provide evidence for an inflated report of mind wandering frequency arising from demand characteristics, intensified by the divergent properties of the subjective (...)
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  48. The Politics of Happiness: Subjective vs. Economic Measures as Measures of Social Well-Being.Erik Angner - 2009 - In Lisa Bortolotti (ed.), Philosophy and Happiness. New York: pp. 149-166.
  49.  34
    Validation of Subjective Well-Being Measures Using Item Response Theory.Ali Al Nima, Kevin M. Cloninger, Björn N. Persson, Sverker Sikström & Danilo Garcia - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  50.  12
    The effect of subjective awareness measures on performance in artificial grammar learning task.Ivan I. Ivanchei & Nadezhda V. Moroshkina - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 57:116-133.
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