1,463 research outputs found
Senses of Sen: Reflections on Amartya Senâs Ideas of Justice
This review essay explores how Amartya Senâs recent book, The Idea of Justice, is relevant and important for the development and assessment of transnational theories and applications to transnational justice and legal education programs. The essay captures a trans-jural dialogue of multinational scholars and teachers, discussing Senâs contributions to moral justice theory (criticizing programs for âtranscendental institutionalismâ (like Rawlsian theory) and instead focusing on âcomparative broadeningâ including empirical, relative, and comparative assessments of programs to ameliorate injustice in the world in its comparative concreteness (as in Indian social justice theory and Adam Smithâs Theory of Moral Sentiments and related work). The authors are professors in the transnational legal education program, the Center for Transnational Legal Studies, sponsored by over 25 different law schools, located in London. They teach courses in a wide variety of subjects, including comparative legal theory, constitutional law, business and legal ethics, moral and legal philosophy, international and comparative law, capital markets and business law, emergency powers, international dispute resolution and a variety of other common and civil law subjects
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Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard Colleg
People are less susceptible to illusion when they use their hands to communicate rather than estimate
When we use our hands to estimate the length of a stick in the MĂŒller-Lyer illusion, we are highly susceptible to the illusion. But when we prepare to act on sticks under the same conditions, we are significantly less susceptible. Here, we asked whether people are susceptible to illusion when they use their hands not to act on objects but to describe them in spontaneous co-speech gestures or conventional sign languages of the deaf. Thirty-two English speakers and 13 American Sign Language signers used their hands to act on, estimate the length of, and describe sticks eliciting the MĂŒller-Lyer illusion. For both gesture and sign, the magnitude of illusion in the description task was smaller than the magnitude of illusion in the estimation task and not different from the magnitude of illusion in the action task. The mechanisms responsible for producing gesture in speech and sign thus appear to operate not on percepts involved in estimation but on percepts derived from the way we act on objects
Unpacking the Ontogeny of Gesture Understanding: How Movement Becomes Meaningful Across Development
Gestures, hand movements that accompany speech, affect children\u27s learning, memory, and thinking (e.g., GoldinâMeadow, 2003). However, it remains unknown how children distinguish gestures from other kinds of actions. In this study, 4â to 9âyearâolds (n = 339) and adults (n = 50) described one of three scenes: (a) an actor moving objects, (b) an actor moving her hands in the presence of objects (but not touching them), or (c) an actor moving her hands in the absence of objects. Participants across all ages were equally able to identify actions on objects as goal directed, but the ability to identify emptyâhanded movements as representational actions (i.e., as gestures) increased with age and was influenced by the presence of objects, especially in older children
From principles to action: Applying the National Research Council's principles for effective decision support to the Federal Emergency Management Agency's watch office
AbstractThe National Research Council (NRC) proposed six principles for effective decision support in its 2009 report Informing Decisions in a Changing Climate. We structured a collaborative project between the Federal Emergency Management Agency Region R9 (FEMA R9), the Western Region Headquarters of the National Weather Service (WR-NWS), and the Climate Assessment of the Southwest (CLIMAS) at the University of Arizona around the application of the NRC principles. The goal of the project was to provide FEMA R9's Watch Office with climate information scaled to their temporal and spatial interests to aid them in assessing the potential risk of flood disasters. We found that we needed specific strategies and activities in order to apply the principles effectively. By using a set of established collaborative research approaches we were better able to assess FEMA R9's information needs and WR-NWS's capacity to meet those needs. Despite our diligent planning of engagement strategies, we still encountered some barriers to transitioning our decision support tool from research to operations. This paper describes our methods for planning and executing a three-party collaborative effort to provide climate services, the decision support tool developed through this process, and the lessons we will take from this deliberate collaborative process to our future work and implications of the NRC principles for the broader field of climate services
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Does linguistic input play the same role in language learning for children with and without early brain injury?
Children with unilateral pre- or perinatal brain injury (BI) show remarkable plasticity for language
learning. Previous work highlights the important role that lesion characteristics play in explaining
individual variation in plasticity in the language development of children with BI. The current study
examines whether the linguistic input that children with BI receive from their caregivers also contributes
to this early plasticity, and whether linguistic input plays a similar role in children with BI as it does in
typically developing (TD) children. Growth in vocabulary and syntactic production is modeled for 80
children (53 TD, 27 BI) between 14 and 46 months. Findings indicate that caregiver input is an equally
potent predictor of vocabulary growth in children with BI and in TD children. In contrast, input is a more
potent predictor of syntactic growth for children with BI than for TD children. Controlling for input,
lesion characteristics (lesion size, type, seizure history) also affect the language trajectories of children
with BI. Thus, findings illustrate how both variability in the environment (linguistic input) and variability
in the organism (lesion characteristics) work together to contribute to plasticity in language learning
Cognitive demands of face monitoring: Evidence for visuospatial overload
Young children perform difficult communication tasks better face to face than when they cannot see one another (e.g., Doherty-Sneddon & Kent, 1996). However, in recent studies, it was found that children aged 6 and 10 years, describing abstract shapes, showed evidence of face-to-face interference rather than facilitation. For some communication tasks, access to visual signals (such as facial expression and eye gaze) may hinder rather than help childrenâs communication. In new research we have pursued this interference effect. Five studies are described with adults and 10- and 6-year-old participants. It was found that looking at a face interfered with childrenâs abilities to listen to descriptions of abstract shapes. Children also performed visuospatial memory tasks worse when they looked at someoneâs face prior to responding than when they looked at a visuospatial pattern or at the floor. It was concluded that performance on certain tasks was hindered by monitoring another personâs face. It is suggested that processing of visual communication signals shares certain processing resources with the processing of other visuospatial information
Gesture analysis for physics education researchers
Systematic observations of student gestures can not only fill in gaps in
students' verbal expressions, but can also offer valuable information about
student ideas, including their source, their novelty to the speaker, and their
construction in real time. This paper provides a review of the research in
gesture analysis that is most relevant to physics education researchers and
illustrates gesture analysis for the purpose of better understanding student
thinking about physics.Comment: 14 page
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