7,749 research outputs found

    Teaching statistics using dance and movement

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    Opinion piece regarding the Dancing Statistics project, focusing on rationale for, and response to the films

    Creativity, imagery and schizotypy: an exploration of similarities in cognitive processing

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    The aims of this thesis were twofold: the first was to develop a reliable and valid measure of the control of mental imagery, second was to explore the links between imagery, creativity and schizotypy. The Image Control and Recognition Task (ICRT) was developed because a reliable and objective measure of mental imagery control was lacking in the field. Two trend analyses (n = 29 and 31) found the tool to effectively measure individual differences in imagery control and the ability to reinterpret mental images. A series of related studies using over 300 participants investigated the construct validity and reliability of the ICRT and found that it provided an accurate measure of both mental imagery control and image recognition, and revealed these to be related, yet distinct dimensions of mental imagery. The tool may be used to indicate abilities on a number of imagery control abilities which appear to be related to enhanced creative performance, such as evocation, rotation, maintenance and transformation. An investigation with 96 psychology students looked into interrelationships between performance-based imagery control (ICRT), self-reported mental imagery abilities (vividness and control) and four dimensions of schizotypy (unusual experiences, cognitive disorganisation, introvertive anhedonia and impulsive nonconformity). A multiple regression found that mental imagery control, unusual experiences and cognitive disorganisation scores together predicted 28% of variance in creativity scores. The final study, which recruited 40 visual artists and 56 psychology students, investigated relationships between mental imagery control, incommodious schizotypal traits, and creative performance as measured by battery of creativity tasks and a self-report measure of creative achievement. Significant differences were revealed between the artist and non-artist groups in their creativity scores, but no significant differences were found between these groups on any index of schizotypy. Independent groups t tests showed that the visual artists had significantly more controlled mental imagery and enhanced recognition abilities when compared to the non-artist group. Multiple linear regression found that mental imagery control and unusual experiences scores, which included associated ratings of distress, distraction, and frequency, both explained variance in levels of creative achievement, suggesting that, together, magical ideation, unusual imaginal and perceptual experiences, and fantasy proneness, as well as the ability to control, manipulate, recombine, reinterpret and “play with” mental images is implicated in achieving “real-world” success in creative domains. Imagery control predicted 8% of the variance in the ability to conceive of conceptually unusual, and strikingly original alien creatures when assessed in experimental settings. The ability to control mental imagery shared predictive power with impulsive nonconformity in generating alternative uses for household objects explaining 10% of the variance. It appears that mental imagery abilities are implicated in creativity as the abilities required to control mental imagery were strongly related to higher performance on measures of divergent thinking, creative strengths, conceptual expansion, and creative achievement. The results support assertions that all constructs are multidimensional and related in differential ways, and tentatively point to the possibility that the associations between unusual experiences, mental imagery and enhanced creative achievement may be explained in terms of controlled and uncontrolled imagery, for indices of unusual experiences may indirectly represent levels of schizotypal imagery

    1949 survey of consumer finances: part VIII. distribution of consumer saving in 1948

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    Consumer surveys ; Consumer behavior ; Consumer credit

    Economic Impacts of Planned Transportation Investments in New Jersey

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    This report demonstrates that New Jersey's plans to invest in transportation infrastructure over the next decade will result in nearly 27,000 full-time jobs per year. It also shows that the state's transportation investments will generate economic impacts in the form of employment, income, gross domestic product, and state and local tax revenues. The report is the result of a joint study conducted by the Heldrich Center and the Center for Urban Policy Research at Rutgers University's Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy

    Stem and progenitor cells: Origins, phenotypes, lineage commitments, and transdifferentiations

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    Multipotent stem cells are clonal cells that self-renew as well as differentiate to regenerate adult tissues. Whereas stem cells and their fates are known by unique genetic marker studies, the fate and function of these cells are best studied by their prospective isolation. This review is about the properties of various highly purified tissue-specific multipotent stem cells and purified oligolineage progenitors. We contend that unless the stem or progenitor cells in question have been purified to near homogeneity, one cannot know whether their generation of expected (or unexpected) progeny is a property of a known cell type. It is interesting that in the hematopoietic system the only long-term self-renewing cells in the stem and progenitors pool are the hematopoietic stem cells. This fact is discussed in the context of normal and leukemic hematopoiesis

    An Undertaking Establishment as a Nuisance

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    FASB and the Currency Translation Bungle

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    The E. Donnall Thomas Lecture: Normal and Neoplastic Stem Cells

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    AbstractDr. Irving Weissman was the honored E. Donnall Thomas lecturer at the Tandem BMT Meetings, held on February 10, 2007, at Keystone, Colorado. Dr. Weissman has been a major player, and has provided us with enormous insight into many areas of biology, dating back to his high school days in Montana. He led an enormously productive career at Stanford University where he has taught us many lessons involving our understanding of lymphocyte homing, stem cell biology, both of the hematopoietic system and other types of stem cells, and also now, about cancer stem cells. Dr. Weissman has made enormous contributions to this burgeoning field that has provided us new insights and new opportunities for treatment strategies. In addition to a very productive laboratory career, he is also currently the director of both the Stem Cell Institute, as well as the Cancer Center at Stanford University. The following text is a modified transcribed version of the presentation made by Dr. Weissman

    Liability of Municipal Corporations for Nuisance

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