6,425 research outputs found

    Breccia dikes from the Beaverhead Impact structure, southwest Montana

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    While shatter cones are generally accepted as indicators of meteorite impact, older petrologic features are not widely recognized in the geologic community. Breccia dikes are one such feature. They are found in many large impact structures occurring over an area at least as extensively as shatter cones. Breccia dikes will survive moderate degrees of metamorphism and tectonism, unlike many other microscopic features (shocked quartz grains, high-pressure polymorphs, etc.) and even large-scale features such as annular or bowl-shaped topographic features. Thus, they are important diagnostic criteria, especially for large, poorly preserved impact structures. The Beaverhead Impact structure is a recently discovered, deeply eroded impact structure in southwestern Montana. The remains of the structure are delineated by the occurrence of shatter cones, found in an area greater than 200 sq km, occurring within the Cabin thrust plate, part of the Cretaceous Sevier fold and thrust system. The distribution of shatter cones is further truncated by Tertiary normal faults. The present remains represent an allochthonous fragment of a larger structure

    As diversity increases, people paradoxically perceive social groups as more similar

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    With globalization and immigration, societal contexts differ in sheer variety of resident social groups. Social diversity challenges individuals to think in new ways about new kinds of people and where their groups all stand, relative to each other. However, psychological science does not yet specify how human minds represent social diversity, in homogeneous or heterogenous contexts. Mental maps of the array of society’s groups should differ when individuals inhabit more and less diverse ecologies. Nonetheless, predictions disagree on how they should differ. Confirmation bias suggests more diversity means more stereotype dispersion: With increased exposure, perceivers’ mental maps might differentiate more among groups, so their stereotypes would spread out (disperse). In contrast, individuation suggests more diversity means less stereotype dispersion, as perceivers experience within-group variety and between-group overlap. Worldwide, nationwide, individual, and longitudinal datasets (n = 12,011) revealed a diversity paradox: More diversity consistently meant less stereotype dispersion. Both contextual and perceived ethnic diversity correlate with decreased stereotype dispersion. Countries and US states with higher levels of ethnic diversity (e.g., South Africa and Hawaii, versus South Korea and Vermont), online individuals who perceive more ethnic diversity, and students who moved to more ethnically diverse colleges mentally represent ethnic groups as more similar to each other, on warmth and competence stereotypes. Homogeneity shows more-differentiated stereotypes; ironically, those with the least exposure have the most-distinct stereotypes. Diversity means less-differentiated stereotypes, as in the melting pot metaphor. Diversity and reduced dispersion also correlate positively with subjective wellbeing.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Measuring public perceptions of sex offenders: reimagining the Community Attitudes Toward Sex Offenders (CATSO) scale

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    The Community Attitudes Toward Sex Offenders (CATSO) scale is an 18-item self-report questionnaire designed to measure respondents’ attitudes toward sex offenders. Its original factor structure has been questioned by a number of previous studies, and so this paper sought to reimagine the scale as an outcome measure, as opposed to a scale of attitudes. A face validity analysis produced a provisional three-factor structure underlying the CATSO: ‘punitiveness,’ ‘stereotype endorsement,’ and ‘risk perception.’ A sample of 400 British members of the public completed a modified version of the CATSO, the Attitudes Toward Sex Offenders scale, the General Punitiveness Scale, and the Rational-Experiential Inventory. A three-factor structure of a 22-item modified CATSO was supported using half of the sample, with factors being labeled ‘sentencing and management,’ ‘stereotype endorsement,’ and ‘risk perception.’ Confirmatory factor analysis on data from the other half of the sample endorsed the three-factor structure; however, two items were removed in order to improve ratings of model fit. This new 20-item ‘Perceptions of Sex Offenders scale’ has practical utility beyond the measurement of attitudes, and suggestions for its future use are provided

    Ethnic Identity and Ethnic Organizations: The Role of Self-Construal in the Psychological Well-Being of Migrants

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    This study attempted to highlight the role of ethnic organizations in maintaining the ethnic identity and self-construals of migrants and see whether such perpetuations were psychologically healthy or not in a contrasting culture. Two groups of migrants of Asian-Indian origin in the USA participated in the study, one group belonging to their respective ethnic organizations and the other group not belonging to any ethnic organization. Results indicated stronger ethnic identity and interdependent self-construal in members of ethnic organizations as compared to non-members. Self-construals were found to be significant moderators in the relationships between ethnic identity and well-being in members of ethnic organizations but not in non-members. Better well-being was seen in people who were engaged in their respective ethnic organizations and thereby still maintaining their home prototypical self-construal with strong ethnic identity. Non-members showed a match of self-construal to the host culture (independent) as well as weaker ethnic identity and poorer well-being, while the member group showed higher intergroup anxiety. Results were discussed in light of the debates on cultural diversity and role of ethnic organizations and social identity

    Structural history of continental volcanic arc rocks, eastern Sierra Nevada, California: A case for extensional tectonics

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    Mesozoic metavolcanic rocks forming part of the continental volcanic arc along the eastern Sierra Nevada near Mt. Goddard and in the Ritter Range show a complex history related to extensional tectonics. The rocks comprise a thick section of tuffs, breccias, lava flows, sills, and ash-flow tuffs deposited in a subaerial to subaqueous environment, with some subvolcanic sill-like plutons. Pb/U ages of the rocks in the Mt, Goddard area range from ca. 130–160 Ma, while rocks in the Ritter Range have a somewhat wider age range as reported previously. Repetition of the section occurs by faulting, and with the exception of parts of the mid-Cretaceous Minarets Caldera, all the volcanic rocks show a regional slaty cleavage which was subsequently crenulated and/or folded locally. The first cleavage has well-developed stretching lineations, and does not appear to have been associated with significant folding. Finite strain measurements show considerable variation both in magnitude and symmetry. The Mt. Goddard rocks, however, tend to show slightly higher overall strain magnitude and greater constrictional component than the Ritter Range for rocks of comparable age. Calculations based on the strain data suggest the Mt. Goddard section has been thinned by about 50% normal to bedding, much as that documented previously for rocks in the Ritter Range. Deformation within this part of the continental arc was originally thought to have formed by regional compression during the late Jurassic (Nevadan) orogeny. However, our study indicates that (1) parts of the deformed volcanic section are younger than late Jurassic, (2) Nevadan-age breaks in deposition are not present, (3) large-scale folds expected during a regional compression event are not common, and (4) the beds were tilted to a high dip prior to internal deformation. An extensional model is proposed in which beds were rotated to high tilts early in the deformation as a result of listric normal faulting. This normal faulting is thought to have occurred above a regional tumescence related to voluminous magmatism at depth, with preservation of the steeply tilted Goddard and Ritter sections being facilitated by their downward transport along the margins of rising plutons. Flattening and steeply plunging constrictional fabrics superimposed on the tilted sections are related to strain induced by high-level inflation of magma chambers and downward return flow of the keellike pendants. The main tectonic fabric shown by the continental volcanic arc rocks in the eastern Sierra Nevada is largely of Cretaceous age, rather than Jurassic (Nevadan) as originally supposed. In addition, the deformation, both rotation of beds and subsequent tectonite fabric, appears to be genetically related to the dynamic evolution of the magmatic arc, and not the result of an externally imposed tectonic event

    Breadwinning moms, caregiving dads: double standard in social judgments of gender norm violators

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    This study explores the role of gender ideologies in moderating social judgments of gender norm violators. Three hundred and eleven participants evaluated a male or a female target who was either a primary breadwinner or a primary caregiver. Attributions of personal traits, moral emotions and marital emotions were examined. Results showed that both traditional and egalitarian individuals applied a double standard when judging deviations from gendered family roles. However, and as predicted, traditional individuals evaluated the normative targets more favourably than the norm-violating targets, whereas egalitarians evaluated the norm-violating targets more favourably. These findings shed light on the important moderating role of gender ideologies and help account for the inconsistencies in previous findings regarding social judgments of gender norm violators

    Book Reviews

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