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Decolonizing visualities: changing cultural paradigms, freeing ourselves from Western-centric epistemes.Ka Zenzile, Mawande 24 January 2020 (has links)
In this study, I hope to challenge the absolute belief in academia, which assumes that the perception of reality or visualities; in terms of culture, nature, truth and so on, by definition should be understood according to the Western philosophical character and genealogy as developed from a positivist paradigm. It seems to me, that the dominant methodological frameworks as I know them now, tacitly follow this scientific, quantitative, material, mechanical, positivist paradigm that draws from Western philosophical development and positions, pervasively held as the only basis for knowledge production. In turn, this philosophical position delegitimises any other epistemologies or methodological frameworks from elsewhere. In many cases, the methods of teaching and assessing subscribe, impose and perpetuate these same protocols as the only recognised epistemological and methodological approaches for critical inquiry inside tertiary educational institutions. By far, fine art as a discipline has inherited this epistemological position. To define this field in the context of decolonisation (meaning the undoing of colonisation), it requires us to look beyond disciplinary knowledge. This research is primarily an epistemological critique; and does not simply seek to “Africanise” the study of art, but to condemn the pervasive institutionalised cultural dominance. To frame my discourse, I have adopted an anti-colonial perspective, and a qualitative method to help define this phenomenon through a wide range of techniques. These include grounded theory; propositional logic; case study, narrative inquiry and auto-ethnography as possible tool for collecting, coding and analysing of data.
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On the Learning Difficulty of Categories Defined over Five Binary DimensionsDoan, Karina-Mikayla C. January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Negative RememberingKapucu, Aycan 01 January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
ABSTRACT NEGATIVE REMEMBERING SEPTEMBER 2007 AYCAN KAPUCU, B.A., BOGAZICI UNIVERSITY ISTANBUL M.S., UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST Directed by: Professor Caren M. Rotello Three experiments investigated the use of recall-to-accept and recall-to-reject processes in recognition and remember-know decisions. In all three experiments, participants studied a mixed list of singular and plural words. During the recognition test, participants made old-new confidence ratings and remember-know judgments for studied items, lures that were similar to studied items, and new lures. Old-similar ROC curves were constructed from the confidence ratings and found to be linear, consistent with the use of a high-threshold recollective process. The ROC intercepts and remember response rates converged on the same estimates of the amount of recollection for both positive (recall-to-accept) and negative (recall-to-reject) decisions.
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The Effects of Blocked and Random Word Lists on the Production of False MemoriesWilliams, Melonie 01 January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
This study separated participants into four different conditions based on a 2 (blocked or random study trials) x 2 (blocked or random test trials) between-subjects design. Using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm the researcher investigated whether or not false memories were produced at the time of study or the time of test. According to the paradigm, participants who view a series of categorical words (mad, fear, hate, rage, temper) are thought to semantically associate critical lures (anger), as a part of the list presented, more frequently than participants who see a string of unrelated terms. The production of false memory is commonly accredited to the priming effect and the relationships among categorical terms. The current study explored whether manipulating blocked versus random word lists had an effect on false memory rates and further examined the conditions under which false memories are produced, in order to gain a better understanding of the phenomenon. Participants' responses were assessed based on their recall under either blocked or random conditions in both the study and test phases. Using measures of recognition and reaction time (RT), the results indicate that false memories are created primarily during original study and not during · the test of recognition. However, although the highest rates of false memories occurred during the blocked-study condition, the fastest reaction times for false memories were seen during blocked-test. These findings can contribute to the theoretical understanding of the origin of false memory. After comparing false memory rates and reaction times, concluding whether or not the mind exclusively produces these memories during the encoding process has yet to be determined.
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Java programming paradigm comprehensibility: Procedural versus ReactiveLundberg, Mattis, Österdahl, Pontus January 2021 (has links)
Software developers spend more time on reading than writingcode. Comprehensible code therefore has the potential tosignificantly improve software development andmaintenance by lowering the time needed for understandingexisting code. Previous research suggest that the choice ofProgramming paradigm may affect code comprehension. Thepresent study evaluates if a positive effect of ReactiveProgramming on comprehension can be attested incomparison to Procedural Programming. We let human testsubjects solve bugs in code-snippets of commonfunctionalities implemented either according to ReactiveProgramming or Procedural Programming in the Javalanguage and RxJava, its ReactiveX implementation. Thecomprehensibility of the code is measured by the test subjects’time consumption, with lower values indicating highercomprehensibility and higher values lowercomprehensibility.Within this study we also study the effect of prior knowledgeof reactive programming, and background in programming,on the results, by having test subjects from two groups: (1)software students with experience in Reactive Programming,and (2) experienced software developers and engineers withless experience in Reactive Programming.All tests took part in a tool of our design, the CodeComparator.Our results show that reactive puzzles are solved faster,suggesting higher comprehensibility, although highdispersion in solvability time, especially for the proceduralsolutions, make it difficult to assess the validity of this timedifference. The positive effect is notable in the student groupwhereas we cannot conclude if the other group solves reactiveor procedural puzzles faster
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Geography, Land Values, and Municipal Taxation: A Spatial Paradigm for the Estimation and Reclamation of RentSpinney, Jamie 10 1900 (has links)
<P> This dissertation provides an investigation into the confluence of three
basic themes; geography, land values, and municipal taxation. This research
examines the role of geography as it applies to addressing the inherent structural
problems of the municipal property tax system, which result in inequities in
municipal tax burdens. These structural problems are caused, in part, because
traditional specifications of mass appraisal models are unable to sufficiently
incorporate the impact of geography and because the property tax system is based
more heavily on the value of capital improvements, such as buildings, than the
value of land. Convincing evidence suggests a municipal taxation system based
more heavily on the value of land could help mitigate many negative
consequences of the property tax; thus, this research examines a spatial paradigm
for the estimation of urban land values in order to study the short-run implications
of transitioning to a land value tax system. </p> <P> After reviewing geography's contribution to the professional practice of
real estate appraisal, this dissertation describes a spatial decision support system
(SDSS) that was used to extract and validate sales of vacant land from the
population of real estate transactions that occurred in Hamilton, Ontario between
1995 and 2004. Vacant land transaction prices were used to explore the spatial
dynamics of land price appreciation and depreciation rates, investigate the
potential for spatial models to improve the accuracy and fairness of mass
appraisal, and to simulate the spatial distribution of shifting tax liabilities for
residential land uses under the property tax and land value tax systems in order to
examine their relationship to area-based deprivation indices. Results suggest there
remains much potential for geography to make significant contributions to
assessment practice, municipal taxation, and urban planning. Furthermore, there is
much potential for land value taxation to contribute to equitable and sustainable
cities. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Examining The Hypocrisy Paradigm As An Intervention For Modifying High-risk Alcohol Use Behaviors Among College StudentsHammons, Mary 01 January 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to examine the hypocrisy paradigm as an experimental alcohol intervention to determine if participants who complete the hypocrisy paradigm will experience a significant reduction in the number of negative consequences associated with their alcohol use, quantity and frequency of alcohol use, and average and peak eBAC compared to college students in the control condition. Participants were 53 college students randomly assigned to an experimental hypocrisy paradigm intervention or a control condition. Contrary to prediction, the hypocrisy paradigm was not found to be significantly different than the control condition. Exploratory analyses examining within-group differences were conducted. All outcome measures decreased from pre-intervention to follow-up within the hypocrisy paradigm condition. Future directions and implications are discussed.
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Engineering A New Form Of Enclosure: International Convergence In Gmo RegulationAltif, Jessica 01 January 2010 (has links)
As society begins to recognize its impact on ecological systems, the belief that modern political institutions can offer a sense of control and certainty, as well as protect the health of its citizens, is increasingly questioned. In an era of uncertainty, faith in science and technology to alleviate industrial impacts on the environment is often embraced by policymakers yet questioned by the public who see the authoritative role of the sciences in the political sphere as contributing to global risk. The development of biotechnology, specifically genetically modified food, places an anthropocentric focus on resolving and/or adapting to environmental degradation, further reflecting an adherence to the dominant social paradigm to address the consequences of modernization. In order to explicate the dualism of human/nature relations inherent in biotechnology, the focus of this research provides an exploration into two competing paradigms of genetically modified organism (GMO) regulatory policy: scientific rationality and social rationality. Through a careful examination of the evolution of GMO regulation in the United States and the European Union, the precarious relationships between science and politics and progress and precaution reveal an actual convergence instead of divergence between these two actors in the international system. Although existing literature proclaims a division between the values and ethics of U.S. and EU environmental policy, the end result of this comparison in GMO regulation illustrates that in both the risk assessment and precautionary approaches, nature is still viewed as an instrument for advancing enclosure of the commons.
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Joseph Roth's Feuilletons as Historiographical Paradigmdu Laney, Michael Anthony 04 May 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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A New Paradigm: The Cemetery for the 21st CenturyLang, Giovanna Carlini 29 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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