82 research outputs found
Review Section : Nature/Nurture Revisited I
Biologically oriented approaches to the study of human conflict have thus far been limited largely to the study of aggression. A sample of the literature on this topic is reviewed, drawing upon four major approaches: comparative psychology, ethology (including some popularized accounts), evolutionary-based theories, and several areas of human physiology. More sophisticated relationships between so-called "innate" and "acquired" determinants of behavior are discussed, along with the proper relevance of animal behavior studies for human behavior. Unless contained in a comprehensive theory which includes social and psychological variables, biolog ically oriented theories (although often valid within their domain) offer at best severely limited and at worst highly misleading explanations of complex social conflicts. The review concludes with a list of several positive contributions of these biological approaches and suggests that social scientists must become more knowledgeable about them.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68270/2/10.1177_002200277401800206.pd
Automatic visual bias of perceived auditory location
Studies of reactions to audiovisual spatial conflict (alias "ventriloquism") are generally presented as informing on the processes of intermodal coordination. However, most of the literature has failed to isolate genuine perceptual effects from voluntary postperceptual adjustments. A new approach, based on psychophysical staircases, is applied to the case of the immediate visual bias of auditory localization. Subjects have to judge the apparent origin of stereophonically controlled sound bursts as left or right of a median reference line. Successive trials belong to one of two staircases, starting respectively at extreme left and right locations, and are moved progressively toward the median on the basis of the subjects' responses. Response reversals occur for locations farther away from center when a central lamp is flashed in synchrony with the bursts than without flashes (Experiment 1), revealing an attraction of the sounds toward the flashes. The effect cannot originate in voluntary postperceptual decision, since the occurrence of response reversal implies that the subject is uncertain concerning the direction of the target sound. The attraction is contingent on sound-flash synchronization, for early response reversals did no longer occur when the inputs from the two modalities were desynchronized (Experiment 2). Taken together, the results show that the visual bias of auditory localization observed repeatedly in less controlled conditions is due partly at least to an automatic attraction of the apparent location of sound by spatially discordant but temporally correlated visual inputs.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
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The violent frontline: space, ethnicity and confronting the state in Edwardian Spitalfields and 1980s Brixton
This article discusses in comparative terms the relationship between space, ethnic identity, subaltern status and anti-state violence in twentieth century London. It does so by comparing two examples in which the control of the state, as represented by the Metropolitan Police, was challenged by minority groups through physical force. It will examine the Spitalfields riots of 1906, which began as strike action by predominantly Jewish bakers and escalated into a general confrontation between the local population and the police, and the Brixton riots of 1981, a response to endemic police harassment of mainly Caribbean youth and long-term economic discrimination in that area of South London. It will begin by dissecting the association of physical metropolitan space with the diasporic ‘other’ in the Edwardian East End and post-consensus South London, and how this ‘othering’ was influenced both by the state and the anti-migrant far right. It will then interrogate the difficult relationship between the Metropolitan Police and Jewish and Caribbean working class communities, and how this deteriorating relationship exploded into in extreme violence in 1906 and 1981. The article will conclude by assessing how the relationships between space, identity and violence influenced long-term national and communal narratives of Jewish and Caribbean interactions with the British state
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