1,352 research outputs found

    I still think it was a banana:memorable lies and forgettable truths

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    Interpersonal influences on cognition can distort memory judgements. Two experiments examined the nature of these ‘social’ influences, and whether their persistence is independent of their accuracy. Experiment 1 found that a confederate’s social proximity, as well as the content and the confidence of their utterances, interactively modulate participants’ immediate conformity. Notably, errant confederate statements that ‘lied’ about encoded material had a particularly strong immediate distorting influence on memory judgements. Experiment 2 revealed that these ‘lies’ were also memorable, continuing a day later to impair memory accuracy, while accurate confederate statements failed to produce a corresponding and lasting beneficial effect on memory. These findings suggest that an individual’s ‘informational’ social influence can be selectively heightened when they express misinformation to someone who suspects no deceptive intent. The methods newly introduced here thus allow multiple social and cognitive factors impinging on memory accuracy to be manipulated and examined during realistic, precisely controlled dyadic social interactions

    Delicate Maps

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    The 'Text/Context' Controversy and the Emergence of Behavioral Approaches in Folklore

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    Article

    The Death of an American College: A Retrospective Look

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    The longue durée of colonial violence in Latin America

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    "There can be no doubt that physical violence was a constant feature of Spanish and Portuguese colonialism in Latin America. Far from being uniform, however, the form and extent of colonial violence varied considerably between different regions and time periods. The paper discusses these differences and relates them, among other things, to the character of the native societies as well as to the different systems of economic exploitation the colonizers used. In another section, the patterns of violent protest against colonial rule will be discussed where periods of relative 'peacefulness' alternated with times of massive violence. Beyond this, it is argued that alliances between Europeans and indigenous groups played an important role in the establishment and preservation of colonial rule. Emphasizing native complicity in the colonial system by no means absolves Europeans from their responsibility for colonialism in Latin America as such or, more specifically, for the bulk of colonial violence. However, in view of the fact that the Spanish and Portuguese remained a small minority throughout most of Latin America up to the end of the colonial period, this aspect seems crucial to the understanding of how colonialism was possible at all. In a concluding section the long term consequences of the colonial violence and its legitimizing ideal after independence will be discussed." (author's abstract

    Suffering in Medical Contexts: Laughter, Humor, and the Medical Carnivalesque

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    This article argues that a primary context for medical humor is a culture of suffering that permeates the medical profession and suggests that this laughter–suffering connection is part of a broader phenomenon called the medical carnivalesque that is found in medical culture

    The Economic Contribution of West Virginia\u27s Forest Products Industry

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    The hardwood forests that cover West Virginia have historically been an important resource to the state. The turbulent economic conditions resulting from the U.S. housing market collapse of the mid-2000s and subsequent economic recession have cause immense disruptions in the country’s forest products industry (FPI). An assessment of the economic contribution of the state’s FPI and the 7 major forest product sectors which comprise it was completed using the input-output economic modeling software IMPLAN with 2017 data. The historical contribution of the state industry was then assessed and compared for the years 2006, 2010, 2015, and 2017 to examine the changes in the industry’s contributions among these years. Finally, an assessment of the FPI’s economic contribution in five separate regions of the state for the years 2006 and 2017 was performed. As of 2017, the West Virginia FPI directly contributed 2.2billioninoutput,10,198jobs,2.2 billion in output, 10,198 jobs, 750.5 million in gross state product (or value added), and 404.5millioninemployeecompensationtothestateeconomy.Intermsoftotalcontributionstothebroadereconomy,theindustrysupported404.5 million in employee compensation to the state economy. In terms of total contributions to the broader economy, the industry supported 3.4 billion in output, 19,219 jobs, 1.4billioningrossstateproduct,and1.4 billion in gross state product, and 764.4 million in employee compensation. In 2017, the primary solid wood products sector was found to be the largest individual FPI sector in terms of direct contributions of output, jobs, and employee compensation while the logging sector was the largest in terms of value added. In 2006, the West Virginia FPI directly contributed 2.8billioninoutputandover15,000jobs,whilesupporting2.8 billion in output and over 15,000 jobs, while supporting 3.7 billion in total output and nearly 21,000 jobs in the broader state economy. Immense decreases in industry contribution were found in both the direct and total contributions of the industry from 2006 to 2010. The largest percentage decreases between these years were experienced in the secondary solid wood products and wood furniture sectors. Between 2010 and 2015, the industry direct contributions rose by all measures except employee compensation, which continued to fall by 1.5 percent of its 2010 level of $395 million. Increases in indirect and induced contributions of the industry, however, resulted in increasing total contributions of all measures. Between 2015 and 2017, all measures of direct contributions of the industry increased, but failed to rise to their previous 2006 levels of any measure analyzed. This was also found to be the case of the FPIs in the five regions of the state that were analyzed. The Highlands region, comprised of 11 counties in the eastern portion of the state was, by far, the largest contributor to the state’s FPI in both 2006 and 2017. By 2017, the region provided more than half of the statewide industry’s direct contributions of output in the logging and primary and secondary solid wood products sectors. The North Central region of the state, meanwhile, experienced most of the largest losses in direct and total contribution of the state from 2006 to 2017. As of 2017, the West Virginia FPI remains a key industry for the state as total industry contributions accounted for 2.2 percent of all jobs and 1.8 percent of gross state product. While these shares are still below 2006 values, they were seen to have increased from 2010 to 2015 and 2015 to 2017. However, the inability of the FPI throughout the state to return to 2006 levels of direct contributions suggest long-term industry trends such as the continued offshoring of value- added forest products sectors and increased industry automation are still putting negative pressure on direct industry growth. Additionally, new challenges the industry faces may be diminishing industry contributions such as the uncertainty about the future availability of the foreign markets and competition for labor from new industries. In order to meet these challenges, it is recommended that state and federal policymakers, developmental authorities, and other industry interests make a concerted effort to grow the state FPI through targeted growth of the industry’s secondary solid wood products and wood furniture sectors. Though these sectors experienced some of the most severe decreases in direct contributions over the years analyzed, as of 2017, they were still large contributors the state’s overall FPI. These sectors require more highly skilled labor and were found to contribute a large number of jobs and high employee compensation relative to their output. Growth in these sectors would not only support value- added wood products manufacturing jobs but would also increase economic activity between FPI sectors within the state and decrease the industry’s reliance on exporting its primary forest products out of state. Secondly, these efforts should be targeted in the Southern and Highlands region of the state, in which the FPI was found to fare relatively better over the years analyzed. The FPI presents immense opportunity to provide badly-needed jobs in these regions and serve to induce further growth in industry activity throughout the state
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