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Effects of Weight-Related Cues on Smoking MotivationLopez, Elena Nicole 15 September 2004 (has links)
Smoking is now the leading cause of preventable death and disease in women. Understanding women's motivations to smoke is important in developing effective cessation and relapse prevention programs. Women, more so than men, appear to associate their smoking behavior to issues of weight. Although a general relationship between weight concerns and smoking has been found among women, a causal relationship had not been demonstrated. This study tested whether activation of negative body image cognitions would produce greater urges to smoke and whether the relationship would be moderated by trait body dissatisfaction and mediated by state body dissatisfaction.
A randomized 2 X 2 crossed factorial, within-subjects design (body image cues X smoking cues) was conducted with 62 female college smokers. The body image manipulation comprised an image of either a thin model or a neutral object, and the smoking manipulation comprised an image of either a smoking cue or a neutral object. Participants completed pre-intervention measures assessing smoking history and body image dissatisfaction. Urge to smoke, mood state, and weight and appearance satisfaction were assessed during the experiment. It was hypothesized that main effects on reported urge to smoke would be found for both manipulations, with body dissatisfaction moderating the body image manipulation. Results indicated that both smoking cues and thin model images increased reported urges to smoke. Additionally, in the absence of smoking cues, the effect of the body image manipulation was moderated by baseline body dissatisfaction, with those women with greater body dissatisfaction reacting more strongly to the thin model image. The effect on smoking urges by the body image manipulation was partially mediated by both state measures of affect and body satisfaction.
Thus,this study is the first to demonstrate through an experimental design that the presentation of images portraying thin women increased smoking urge, which is consistent with a causal influence of body image affecting their smoking motivation.
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空間注意力經由深度影響模稜運動知覺 / The effect of spatial attention on multistable motion perception via the depth mechanism孫華君, Sun, Hua Chun Unknown Date (has links)
Many studies have found that fixating or directing spatial attention to different regions can bias the perception of the Necker cube, but whether this effect of spatial attention is due to attended areas perceived as being closer have yet to be examined. This issue was directly investigated in this study. The stimulus used was the diamond stimulus, containing four occluders and four moving lines that can be perceived as coherent or separate motions. The results of Experiment 1 show that coherent motion was perceived more often under the attending-to-occluders condition than under the attending-to-moving-lines condition, indicating that spatial attention can bias multistable perception. The results of Experiment 2 show that the mean probability of reporting lines behind occluders in small binocular disparities was significantly higher under the attending-to-occluders condition than under the attending-to-lines condition, indicating that spatial attention can make attended areas look slightly closer. The results of Experiments 3 and 4 show that the effect of spatial attention on biasing multistable perception was weakened when there were binocular or monocular depth cues to define the depth relationship between the occluders and the lines. These results are all consistent with the notion that spatial attention can bias multistable perception through affecting depth perception, making attended areas look closer.
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Developing effective virtual simulations and serious games: the effect of background sound cues on visual quality perceptionRojas Gualdron, David Arnulfo 01 August 2012 (has links)
Virtual simulations and serious games (video game-based technologies applied to
teaching and learning) have been incorporated in the teaching and training curricula of a
large number of professions including medicine/surgery. Despite their benefits, there are
open, fundamental issues regarding simulation quality, multi-modal cue interaction, and
the resulting effect on visual quality perception and ultimately on knowledge transfer and
retention. Here the results of a series of seven studies that examined the effect of
background sound (contextually related and non-related with respect to the visual scene)
on the perception of visual quality (defined with respect to texture resolution, polygon
count) presented in stereoscopic and non-stereoscopic 3D. Results indicate that the
perception of visual quality is dependent on ambient (background) sound. The results of
these studies have implications for designers and developers of serious games who
typically strive for high quality virtual worlds despite the computational burden
associated with doing so. The results of these studies also bring us closer to
understanding the role of quality, multi-modal interactions, and their effect on visual
quality perception. This thesis is part of a larger effort in developing an understanding of
virtual environment rendering quality, multi-modal interactions, user-specific factors and
their effect on knowledge transfer and retention. / UOIT
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Evaluation Of Visual Cues Of Three Dimensional Virtual Environments For Helicopter SimulatorsCetin, Yasemin 01 September 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Flight simulators are widely used by the military, civil and commercial aviation. Visual cues
are an essential part of helicopter flight. The required cues for hover are especially large
due to closeness to the ground and small movements.
In this thesis, density and height parameters of the 3D (Three Dimensional) objects in the
scene are analyzed to find their effect on hovering and low altitude flight. An experiment is
conducted using a PC-based flight simulator with three LCD monitors and flight control set.
Ten professional military pilots participated in the experiment.
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Results revealed that object density and object height are effective on the horizontal and
vertical hovering performance. There is a peak point after which increasing the density does
not improve the performance. In low altitude flight, altitude control is positively affected by
smaller object height. However, pilots prefer the scenes composed of the high and mixture
objects while hovering and flying at low altitude. Distance estimation is affected by the
interaction of the object density and height.
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Angle Perception On Autostereoscopic DisplaysKaraman, Ersin 01 July 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Stereoscopic displays provide 3D vision usually with the help of additional equipment such as shutter glasses and head gears. As a new stereoscopic display technology, autostereoscopic 3D Displays provide 3D vision without additional equipment.
Previous studies of depth and distance estimation with autostereoscopic displays indicate the users do not exhibit better performance in 3D. Yet, they claim 3D displays provide higher immersiveness.
In this study, perception of the angle of a 3D shape is investigated by comparing 2D, 3D and Real perception cases. An experiment is conducted using an autostereoscopic 3D display. Forty people have participated in the experiment. They were asked to estimate the vertex angle and draw the projections of the object from two different viewpoints. It is found that users can better estimate the angles on a cone when viewed from the top on an autostereoscopic display. This may contribute positively to 3D understanding of the scene.
Results revealed that participants make more accurate angle estimation in autostereoscopic 3D displays than in traditional 2D displays. In general, the participants&rsquo / angle drawings were slightly higher than their angle estimations. Moreover, the participants overestimated 35, 65 and 90 degree angles and underestimated 115 degree angle in autostereoscopic 3D display.
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Examing the Antecedents of Online Disinhibition - the Roles of Internet Attributes and Psychological FactorsYan, Pei-rong 01 July 2009 (has links)
It can be observed that the anti-normative behaviors occur more frequently in Computer-Mediated-Communication than in face-to-face communication. Internet often let people feel less restraint to use rude or threatening language, leashing harsh criticisms, venting anger or hatred. Thus, the issues surrounding ¡§Toxic Disinhibition¡¨ have attracted more and more concern from society and academia.
Our empirical study tries to get the whole picture and proposed a more comprehensive model integrating diverse factors and involving the synthesis of different viewpoints. Accordingly, this paper proceeds to examine and integrate the two important aspects, (1) Internet attributes in which reduced social cue, social presence, controllability, and the fluidity of the identity and (2) psychological state, especially theories of deindividuation.Moreover, different from most prior researches, we consider deindividuation as an important mediating role, not just an antecedent of toxic disinhibition.
An empirical survey methodology is applied to test the research model and six hypotheses are developed in this study, and then we use PLS to analyze it. Our empirical results showed that the essential mediating role of deindividuation, also confirming the highly significant with toxic disinhibition. Moreover, we identify major factors that may affect deindividuation. We find that except for reduced social cue, reduced social presence, controllability and fluidity of identity also has significant impact on deindividuation, and then cause toxic disinhibition.
In sum, unlike much prior research that has focused on only a limited aspect of toxic disinhibition, we take integrated view and proposed a more comprehensive model therefore be useful to a better understanding of the nature of toxic disinhibition. And this study provides some suggestions for the online disinhibition research.
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The fleeting effects of retrieval cue attributes in the PIER2 memory model [electronic resource] / by Amie L. Wilbanks.Wilbanks, Amie L. January 2003 (has links)
Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 43 pages. / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Florida, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: Processing Implicit and Explicit Representations (PIER2) is a model of memory that makes predictions about memory performance based on the interaction of known and newly acquired information by studying how implicitly activated associates affect episodic memory. Nelson and Zhang (2000) found a significant effect of cue connectivity in a multiple regression analysis of the variables known to affect cued recall, but at that time no manipulational experiments had studied the cue connectivity effect in the laboratory. The present paper presents a series of three experiments designed to investigate the effect of cue connectivity in the context of the PIER2 memory model to determine the importance of this variable in the prediction of cued recall. / ABSTRACT: Results of the experiments were inconsistent, and a revised regression analysis performed on an updated version of Nelson and Zhang's (2000) cued recall database indicated that cue connectivity was no longer a significant predictor of cued recall performance. It was concluded that PIER2's equations do not need to be modified to include the influence of retrieval cue attributes. / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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Implicit Affect and Alcohol Outcome ExpectanciesRay, John M. 30 March 2010 (has links)
Expectancy theory provides a useful framework within which to examine the link between cognitive representations of anticipated alcohol related outcomes and affective processes that ought to shape behavior at the level of implicit, or automatic, processing. The role of affect in alcohol expectancies is an important one as it reflects the approach-avoid contingency associated with reward learning presumed to underlie addictive processes. This study examined the relationship between affect and expectancy operation by using suboptimally presented alcohol related cues to prime affectively congruent evaluations of otherwise unrelated targets. Hypotheses predicted that drinkers who reported higher positive and arousing expectancies for alcohol outcomes would make affective evaluations (but not semantic categorizations) more accurately when target stimuli were preceded with an alcohol picture or word prime. Analysis of drinking and expectancy variables revealed positive relationships between drinking frequency and social/physical pleasure expectancies, as well as tension reduction expectancies. No relationships were found between drinking quantity and expectancies. Evaluation response accuracy was not related to alcohol expectancies. Discussion centers on potential reasons for lack of findings, including experimenter error and design limitations.
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Pain as a motivator of smoking: Effects of pain induction on smoking urge and behaviorDitre, Joseph W 01 June 2006 (has links)
Tobacco smoking has been associated with the development, protraction, and exacerbation of chronically painful conditions. Conversely, there is reason to believe that smokers may be motivated to use tobacco as a means of coping with their pain. To date, no controlled, experimental studies have tested for a causal relationship between pain and smoking motivation. The primary aim of the current study was to test the hypothesis that laboratory-induced cold-pressor pain would enhance smoking motivation, as measured by self-reported urge to smoke and observation of immediate smoking behavior. The effect of a smoking cue was also tested. Smokers (n = 132) were randomly assigned to one of four conditions in this 2 (Pain Manipulation) X 2 (Smoking Cue Manipulation) crossed factorial between-subjects design. Results indicated that both pain induction and the presence of smoking cues increased urge ratings, and pain induction also produced a shorter latency to smoke. The relationship between pain and increased urge to smoke was partially mediated by pain-induced negative affect. This study provides the first experimental evidence that situational pain can be a potent motivator of smoking.
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"Provet berör ju betyget, och sen göra bra ifrån sig" : - en studie av hur elever i årskurs fem uppfattar bedömningMalmqvist, Jonas, Rohlin, Linnea January 2010 (has links)
"provet berör ju betyget, och sen göra bra ifrån sig" - en studie av hur elever i årskurs 5 uppfattar bedömning är en undersökning om hur elever erfar bedömning i klassrummet. Studiens syfte är att ta reda på elevers uppfattningar och upplevelser kring bedömning och i vilka situationer de ser sig bli bedömda. Vår problemformulering är * Hur erfar elever bedömning i klassrummet? Vår problemprecisering är * När i klassrummet uppfattar elever att de blir bedömda? * Hur upplever elever att bli bedömda? Undersökningen genomfördes med hjälp av en fokusgruppsintervju. Resultatet visar på skilda uppfattningar kring hur elever erfar bedömning. Studien har en fenomenografiskt inspirerad ansats. Intervjun visade att elever uppfattar prov, test, redovisning, tala högt i klassrummet och utvecklingssamtal som bedömningsformer med olika användningssyften.
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