174,642 research outputs found
Personality predictors of levels of forgiveness two and a half years after the transgression
The aim of the present study was to explore whether the domains and facets of the five-factor model of personality predicted motivational states for avoidance and revenge following a transgression at a second temporal point distant from the original transgression. A sample of 438 university students, who reported experiencing a serious transgression against them, completed measures of avoidance and revenge motivations around the transgression and five-factor personality domains and facets at time 1, and measures of avoidance and revenge motivations two and a half years later. The findings suggest that neuroticism, and specifically anger hostility, predicts revenge and avoidance motivation
Harmonic Twistor Formalism and Transgression on Hyperk\"ahler manifolds
In this paper we continue our study of the fourth order transgression on
hyper\"ahler manifolds introduced in the previous paper. We give a local
construction for the fourth-order transgression of the Chern character form of
an arbitrary vector bundle supplied with a self-dual connection on a four
dimensional hyperk\"ahler manifold. The construction is based on the harmonic
twistor formalism. Remarkably, the resulted expression for the fourth order
transgression is given in terms of the determinant of the
-operator defined on fibers of the twistor fibration.Comment: 10pp., Late
A step too far? Leader racism inhibits transgression credit
Prior research established that when in-group leaders commit serious transgressions, such as breaking enforceable rules or engaging in bribery, people treat them leniently compared with similarly transgressive regular group members or out-group leaders (‘transgression credit’). The present studies test a boundary condition of this phenomenon, specifically the hypothesis that transgression credit will be lost if a leader's action implies racist motivation. In study 1, in a corporate scenario, a transgressive in-group leader did or did not express racism. In study 2, in a sports scenario, an in-group or out-group leader or member transgressed rules with or without a racist connotation. Both studies showed that in-group transgressive leaders lost their transgression credit if their transgression included a racial connotation. Wider implications for constraining leaders' transgressions are discussed
Transgression of D-branes
Closed strings can be seen either as one-dimensional objects in a target
space or as points in the free loop space. Correspondingly, a B-field can be
seen either as a connection on a gerbe over the target space, or as a
connection on a line bundle over the loop space. Transgression establishes an
equivalence between these two perspectives. Open strings require D-branes:
submanifolds equipped with vector bundles twisted by the gerbe. In this paper
we develop a loop space perspective on D-branes. It involves bundles of simple
Frobenius algebras over the branes, together with bundles of bimodules over
spaces of paths connecting two branes. We prove that the classical and our new
perspectives on D-branes are equivalent. Further, we compare our loop space
perspective to Moore-Segal/Lauda-Pfeiffer data for open-closed 2-dimensional
topological quantum field theories, and exhibit it as a smooth family of
reflection-positive, colored knowledgable Frobenius algebras
COMMUNICATION AND COORDINATION IN THE LABORATORY COLLECTIVE RESISTANCE GAME
This paper presents a laboratory collective resistance (CR) game to study how different forms of non-binding communication among responders can help coordinate their collective resistance against a leader who transgresses against them. Contrary to the predictions of analysis based on purely self-regarding preferences, we find that non-binding communication about intended resistance increases the incidence of no transgression even in the one-shot laboratory CR game. In particular, we find that the incidence of no transgression increases from 7 percent with no communication up to 25-37 percent depending on whether communication occurs before or after the leader’s transgression decision. Responders’ messages are different when the leaders can observe them, and the leaders use the observed messages to target specific responders for transgression.Communication, Cheap Talk, Collective Resistance, Laboratory Experiment, Social Preferences
Sade's Itinerary of Transgression
"I would like to address the nature of transgression and its logic or itinerary in Sade's work. If this task is somewhat speculative and incomplete, it perhaps mirrors the foundational incompleteness of the more than sixteen extant volumes of Sade's writings. For a more exhaustive, if not definitive, resolution of the very issue of transgression, the analysis would have to continue the debate between Derrida and Foucault over the validity of Bataille's celebrated account of transgression, which in turn draws upon the earlier work of Roger Caillois." (opening paragraph of the article
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