1,112 research outputs found

    Evidence of the validity and accuracy of the Brazilian social attitude of students scale towards politics

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    Objetivou-se apresentar as evidĂȘncias de validade e confiabilidade de uma escala brasileira para medir atitudes polĂ­ticas de estudantes brasileiros de nĂ­vel superior ante seus comportamentos polĂ­ticos. O estudo teve uma amostra de abrangĂȘncia nacional (N = 445), com estudantes brasileiros oriundos de distintos estados. Os resultados indicaram uma estrutura empĂ­rica sustentĂĄvel (teste de Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin - KMO = 0,81), com indicadores psicomĂ©tricos considerados adequados Ă  mensuração das atitudes polĂ­ticas. TrĂȘs fatores empĂ­ricos foram identificados: grau de conhecimento sobre polĂ­tica (15 itens, cargas fatoriais entre 0,31 e 0,82, alfa = 0,82, eigenvalue = 5,07 e variĂąncia explicada = 18,78 %), afetos relativos Ă  polĂ­tica (7 itens, cargas fatoriais entre 0,41 e 0,58, alfa = 0,72, eigenvalue = 3,17 e variĂąncia explicada = 11,73 %) e intençÔes de comportamento polĂ­tico (2 itens, cargas fatoriais entre 0,70 e 0,72, alfa = 0,80, eigenvalue = 1,8 e variĂąncia explicada = 6,8 %). Conclui-se que os resultados fortalecem a estrutura fatorial original da escala e mostram sua utilidade para a identificação de atitudes sociais ante comportamentos polĂ­ticos.El objetivo de la presente investigaciĂłn fue presentar las pruebas de confiabilidad y validez de una escala brasileña para medir las actitudes polĂ­ticas de los estudiantes universitarios brasileños ante su comportamiento polĂ­tico. El estudio contĂł con una muestra nacional (N = 445) de estudiantes brasileños de diferentes Estados. Los resultados indicaron una estructura empĂ­rica sustentable (KMO = .81), con indicadores psicomĂ©tricos que se consideran adecuados para la mediciĂłn de las actitudes polĂ­ticas. EspecĂ­ficamente, se identificaron tres factores empĂ­ricos: nivel de conocimiento sobre la polĂ­tica (15 Ă­tems, cargas factoriales entre .31 y .82, alfa = .82, eigenvalue = 5.07 y varianza explicada = 18.78 %), sentimientos acerca de la polĂ­tica (7 Ă­tems, factoriales de .41 y .58, alfa = .72, eigenvalue = 3.17 y varianza explicada = 11.73 °/o) e intenciones del comportamiento polĂ­tico (2 Ă­tems, factoriales de .70 y .72, alfa = .80, eigenvalue = 1.8 y varianza explicada = 6.8 %). Se llegĂł a la conclusiĂłn de que los resultados apoyan la estructura factorial original de la escala y muestran su utilidad en la identificaciĂłn de las actitudes sociales ante la conducta polĂ­tica.The objective of this study was to present the validity and reliability evidences of a Brazilian scale to measure the political attitudes of Brazilian higher education students regarding their political behavior. The study had a nationwide sample (N = 445), with Brazilian students from different states. The results indicated a sustainable empirical structure (KMO = 0.81), with psychometric indicators considered adequate to the measurement of political attitudes. Three empirical factors were identified: degree of political knowledge (15 items, factorial loads between 0.31 and 0.82, alpha = 0.82, eigenvalue = 5.07 and explained variance = 18.78%), feelings about politics (7 items, factorial loads between 0.41 and 0.58, alpha = 0.72, eigenvalue = 3.17 and explained variance = 11.73%) and intentions of political behavior (2 items, factorial loads between 0, 70 and 0.72, alpha = 0.80, eigenvalue = 1.8 and explained variance = 6.8%). It is concluded that the results strengthen the original factorial structure of the scale and show its utility for the identification of social attitudes regarding political behaviors

    Behavioral Priming: It's All in the Mind, but Whose Mind?

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    The perspective that behavior is often driven by unconscious determinants has become widespread in social psychology. Bargh, Chen, and Burrows' (1996) famous study, in which participants unwittingly exposed to the stereotype of age walked slower when exiting the laboratory, was instrumental in defining this perspective. Here, we present two experiments aimed at replicating the original study. Despite the use of automated timing methods and a larger sample, our first experiment failed to show priming. Our second experiment was aimed at manipulating the beliefs of the experimenters: Half were led to think that participants would walk slower when primed congruently, and the other half was led to expect the opposite. Strikingly, we obtained a walking speed effect, but only when experimenters believed participants would indeed walk slower. This suggests that both priming and experimenters' expectations are instrumental in explaining the walking speed effect. Further, debriefing was suggestive of awareness of the primes. We conclude that unconscious behavioral priming is real, while real, involves mechanisms different from those typically assumed to cause the effect

    Priming moral self-ambivalence heightens deliberative behaviour in self-ambivalent individuals

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    Background: Recent work on cognitive-behavioural models of obsessive-compulsive disorder has focused on the roles played by various aspects of self-perception. In particular, moral self-ambivalence has been found to be associated with obsessive-compulsive phenomena. Aims: In this study we used an experimental task to investigate whether artificially priming moral self-ambivalence would increase participants' deliberation on ethical problems, an index that might be analogous to obsessive-compulsive behaviour. Method: Non-clinical participants completed two online tasks designed to prime either moral self-ambivalence, general uncertainty, or neither. All participants then completed a task requiring them to consider solutions to moral dilemmas. We recorded the time participants took to respond to the dilemmas and the length of their responses; we then combined these variables to create a measure of deliberation. Results: Priming moral self-ambivalence led to increases in deliberation, but this was only significant among those participants who scored highly on a baseline measure of moral self-ambivalence. Priming general uncertainty had no significant effect upon deliberation. Conclusions: The results suggest that moral self-ambivalence may play a role in the maintenance of obsessive-compulsive behaviour. We propose that individuals who are morally self-ambivalent might respond to situations in which this ambivalence is made salient by exhibiting behaviour with obsessive-compulsive characteristics. These findings have implications for the incorporation of ideas about self-concept into theories of obsessive-compulsive disorder

    Assessing the automaticity of moral processing: Efficient coding of moral information during narrative comprehension

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    A long-standing theoretical debate concerns the involvement of principled reasoning versus relatively automatic intuitive-emotional processing in moral cognition. To address this, we investigated whether the mental models formed during story comprehension contain a moral dimension and whether this process is affected by cognitive load. A total of 72 participants read stories about fictional characters in a range of moral situations, such as a husband being tempted to commit adultery. Each story concluded with a “moral” or “immoral” target sentence. Consistent with a framework of efficient extraction of moral information, participants took significantly longer to read immoral than moral target sentences. Moreover, the magnitude of this effect was not compromised by cognitive load. Our findings provide evidence of efficient coding of moral dimensions during narrative comprehension and demonstrate that this process does not require cognitively intense forms of principled reasoning

    Posture as Index for Approach-Avoidance Behavior

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    Approach and avoidance are two behavioral responses that make people tend to approach positive and avoid negative situations. This study examines whether postural behavior is influenced by the affective state of pictures. While standing on the Wiiℱ Balance Board, participants viewed pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant pictures (passively viewing phase). Then they had to move their body to the left or the right (lateral movement phase) to make the next picture appear. We recorded movements in the anterior-posterior direction to examine approach and avoidant behavior. During passively viewing, people approached pleasant pictures. They avoided unpleasant ones while they made a lateral movement. These findings provide support for the idea that we tend to approach positive and avoid negative situations

    Characterization of a single-use stirred-tank bioreactor vessel for microcarrier-based adherent cell culture processes using experimental and computational fluid dynamics studies

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    Renewed interest in microcarrier-based processes for the large-scale culture of adherent cells for vaccine and cell therapy applications drives the need for effective, high-throughput, single-use, process development tools that can be translated successfully into industrial-scale systems. The automated ambr250¼ platform is one such technology, operating at a volume between 100 – 250mL and which is both high-throughput and single-use. The ambr250 has demonstrated significant success for suspension-based mammalian cell culture applications. However, no studies have been reported investigating microcarrier-based processes for the culture of adherent cells. With any cell culture process, the fluid dynamics characteristics of the bioreactor must be sufficiently well understood to enable successful scale-up to larger scale bioreactors. With microcarriers, there is an additional challenge as the fluid dynamics must take into account the presence of the particulate solid phase. A critical aspect for cell cultivation on microcarriers is the minimum agitator speed required to achieve complete microcarrier suspension, NJS. Under these conditions, the surface area of the attached cells is available for transfer of nutrients (including oxygen) to the cells and metabolites from them, whilst higher speeds hardly increase these transport processes and may lead to damaging fluid dynamic stresses being generated1. This suspension condition can be studied experimentally if equipment is specially modified to make easy visual observation of the two-phase flow in the bioreactor which during actual culture is very difficult. Therefore, it is extremely beneficial to both measure NJS and then to compare the measured values with predictions based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) in order to validate the latter. Once validated, CFD modelling is a very useful tool for analysing flow patterns, mixing time, mean and local specific energy dissipation rates and other parameters important for scale up in order to optimise the overall bioreactor geometry. In addition to the above fluid dynamic aspects, cell culture studies was also performed in parallel to analyse the cell growth at and around the minimum speed for microcarrrier suspension, NJS and the results were compared to the culture performance in well-characterised traditional spinner flask bioreactors2.The CFD and experimental results with the single-use ambr250 bioreactor will be discussed in detail along with their scale-up implications. References 1. Nienow, A. W., Coopman, K., Heathman, T. R. J., Rafiq, Q. A. and C. J. Hewitt (2016). “Bioreactor Engineering Fundamentals for Stem Cell Manufacturing”. In: “Stem Cell Manufacturing”, (Eds. J.M.S. Cabral, C.L. de Silva, L. G. Chase and M. M. Diogo), Elsevier Science, Cambridge, USA; Chapter 3, pp 43 – 76. 2. Rafiq, Q. A., Brosnan, K. M., Coopman, K., Nienow, A. W. and Hewitt, C.J. (2013) Culture of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Microcarriers in a 5 L Stirred-Tank Bioreactor. (with Q. A. Rafiq, K. M. Brosnan, K

    Characterization of a single-use stirred-tank bioreactor vessel for microcarrier-based adherent cell culture processes using experimental and computational fluid dynamics studies

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    Renewed interest in microcarrier-based processes for the large-scale culture of adherent cells for vaccine and cell therapy applications drives the need for effective, high-throughput, single-use, process development tools that can be translated successfully into industrial-scale systems. The automated ambr250¼ platform is one such technology, operating at a volume between 100 – 250mL and which is both high-throughput and single-use. The ambr250 has demonstrated significant success for suspension-based mammalian cell culture applications. However, no studies have been reported investigating microcarrier-based processes for the culture of adherent cells. With any cell culture process, the fluid dynamics characteristics of the bioreactor must be sufficiently well understood to enable successful scale-up to larger scale bioreactors. With microcarriers, there is an additional challenge as the fluid dynamics must take into account the presence of the particulate solid phase. A critical aspect for cell cultivation on microcarriers is the minimum agitator speed required to achieve complete microcarrier suspension, NJS. Under these conditions, the surface area of the attached cells is available for transfer of nutrients (including oxygen) to the cells and metabolites from them, whilst higher speeds hardly increase these transport processes and may lead to damaging fluid dynamic stresses being generated1. This suspension condition can be studied experimentally if equipment is specially modified to make easy visual observation of the two-phase flow in the bioreactor which during actual culture is very difficult. Therefore, it is extremely beneficial to both measure NJS and then to compare the measured values with predictions based on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) in order to validate the latter. Once validated, CFD modelling is a very useful tool for analysing flow patterns, mixing time, mean and local specific energy dissipation rates and other parameters important for scale up in order to optimise the overall bioreactor geometry. In addition to the above fluid dynamic aspects, cell culture studies was also performed in parallel to analyse the cell growth at and around the minimum speed for microcarrrier suspension, NJS and the results were compared to the culture performance in well-characterised traditional spinner flask bioreactors2.The CFD and experimental results with the single-use ambr250 bioreactor will be discussed in detail along with their scale-up implications. References 1. Nienow, A. W., Coopman, K., Heathman, T. R. J., Rafiq, Q. A. and C. J. Hewitt (2016). “Bioreactor Engineering Fundamentals for Stem Cell Manufacturing”. In: “Stem Cell Manufacturing”, (Eds. J.M.S. Cabral, C.L. de Silva, L. G. Chase and M. M. Diogo), Elsevier Science, Cambridge, USA; Chapter 3, pp 43 – 76. 2. Rafiq, Q. A., Brosnan, K. M., Coopman, K., Nienow, A. W. and Hewitt, C.J. (2013) Culture of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Microcarriers in a 5 L Stirred-Tank Bioreactor. (with Q. A. Rafiq, K. M. Brosnan, K

    “The mind Is willing, but the flesh Is weak”: The effects of mind-body dualism on health behavior

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    Beliefs in mind-body dualism—that is, perceiving one’s mind and body as two distinct entities—are evident in virtually all human cultures. Despite their prevalence, surprisingly little is known about the psychological implications of holding such beliefs. In the research reported here, we investigated the relationship between dualistic beliefs and health behaviors. We theorized that holding dualistic beliefs leads people to perceive their body as a mere “shell” and, thus, to neglect it. Supporting this hypothesis, our results showed that participants who were primed with dualism reported less engagement in healthy behaviors and less positive attitudes toward such behaviors than did participants primed with physicalism. Additionally, we investigated the bidirectionality of this link. Activating health-related concepts affected participants’ subsequently reported metaphysical beliefs in mind-body dualism. A final set of studies demonstrated that participants primed with dualism make real-life decisions that may ultimately compromise their physical health (e.g., consuming unhealthy food). These findings have potential implications for health interventions
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