43,235 research outputs found
Religion and reducing prejudice
Drawing on findings from the study of prejudice and prejudice reduction, we identify a number of mechanisms through which religious communities may influence the intergroup attitudes of their members. We hypothesize that religious participation could in principle either reduce or promote prejudice with respect to any given target group. A religious community’s influence on intergroup attitudes will depend upon the specific beliefs, attitudes, and practices found within the community, as well as on interactions between the religious community and the larger social environment in which it is embedded. Basing our proposals on findings from the literature on prejudice formation and prejudice reduction allows us to outline useful directions for future studies of religion and prejudice
Scenarios and research issues for a network of information
This paper describes ideas and items of work within the
framework of the EU-funded 4WARD project. We present
scenarios where the current host-centric approach to infor-
mation storage and retrieval is ill-suited for and explain
how a new networking paradigm emerges, by adopting the
information-centric network architecture approach, which
we call Network of Information (NetInf). NetInf capital-
izes on a proposed identifier/locator split and allows users
to create, distribute, and retrieve information using a com-
mon infrastructure without tying data to particular hosts.
NetInf introduces the concepts of information and data ob-
jects. Data objects correspond to the particular bits and
bytes of a digital object, such as text file, a specific encod-
ing of a song or a video. Information objects can be used
to identify other objects irrespective of their particular dig-
ital representation. After discussing the benefits of such an
indirection, we consider the impact of NetInf with respect
to naming and governance in the Future Internet. Finally,
we provide an outlook on the research scope of NetInf along
with items for future work
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Semantic memory redux: an experimental test of hierarchical category representation
Four experiments investigated the classic issue in semantic memory of whether people organize categorical information in hierarchies and use inference to retrieve information from them, as proposed by Collins & Quillian (1969). Past evidence has focused on RT to confirm sentences such as “All birds are animals” or “Canaries breathe.” However, confounding variables such as familiarity and associations between the terms have led to contradictory results. Our experiments avoided such problems by teaching subjects novel materials. Experiment 1 tested an implicit hierarchical structure in the features of a set of studied objects (e.g., all brown objects were large). Experiment 2 taught subjects nested categories of artificial bugs. In Experiment 3, subjects learned a tree structure of novel category hierarchies. In all three, the results differed from the predictions of the hierarchical inference model. In Experiment 4, subjects learned a hierarchy by means of paired associates of novel category names. Here we finally found the RT signature of hierarchical inference. We conclude that it is possible to store information in a hierarchy and retrieve it via inference, but it is difficult and avoided whenever possible. The results are more consistent with feature comparison models than hierarchical models of semantic memory
Matchmaking for covariant hierarchies
We describe a model of matchmaking suitable for the implementation of services, rather than their for their discovery and composition. In the model, processing requirements are modelled by client requests and computational resources are software processors that compete for request processing as the covariant implementations of an open service interface. Matchmaking then relies on type analysis to rank processors against requests in support of a wide range of dispatch strategies. We relate the model to the autonomicity of service provision and briefly report on its deployment within a production-level infrastructure for scientic computing
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