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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
321

Conscious Anxiety, Conscious Repression and Ego-strength as Related to Dream Recall, Content and Vividness

Newbold, David 01 May 1980 (has links)
Subjects' reported dream recall frequency, dream content and vividness or recall were discussed and examined in relation to sex of the subject and MMPI Conscious Anxiety, Conscious Repression and Ego-strength scores. Fifty-three Utah State University students, who volunteered to participate in a study of dreaming behavior, were administered the MMPI and asked to complete a dream log diary. The dream log required a daily recording of total number of dreams recalled, the number of vividly and vaguely recalled dreams and a rating of each dream in one of four dream content-process categories. Content-process categories included pleasurable, working, conflict and disorganized/frightening dreams. Relationships and possible interaction effects for the variables measured were tested for significance. No significant relationship was found between Conscious Anxiety, Conscious Repression or Ego-strength and dream recall frequency, sex of the subject, percentage of vivid dreams recalled, or percent of dreams recalled in the positive (pleasurable and working dreams) versus negative (conflict and disorganized/frightening) categories. Several significant differences were found, however, between the percentage of dreams reported in dream content-process categories for male subjects when analyzed according to higher-lower MMPI scale score categories and higher-lower dream recall level. Results of subcategory analysis tended to support an interaction between anxiety, repression and dream process consistent with the continuity and adaptive theories of dreaming. Male subjects with higher Conscious Anxiety reported a significantly greater percent of disorganized/frightening dreams. Higher anxiety tended to produce a higher percentage of working dreams as long as repression of threatening material was low enough to permit the recall of more emotion-laden dream processes. There was also a significant interaction between reported precent of pleasurable dreams, recall level and repression, which was explained as possibly indicating that pleasurable dreams may serve as an escape of integrating process for high repression male subjects. Results of analysis for female subjects indicated that higher recall subjects reported a significantly higher percent of disorganized dreams, which is consistent with the salience theory of recall. Recalled dream processes seemed to be not as strongly tied to personality variables for female subjects. Contentless dreams have been proposed in previous research to reflect repression by the subject. Results showed no significant difference between higher and lower repression subjects on the number of contentless dreams reported.
322

Use of the Transactional Analysis Ego State Concept to Measure Client Change in Psychotherapy

Emerson, Judith 01 May 1990 (has links)
Although transactional analysis (TA) theory has been used by psychotherapists since its introduction by Eric Berne in the 1960s, the ego state functioning constructs, a seminal part of the theory, have not been adequately validated. Previous research has focused on whether therapy using TA methodology works. This study tested the TA ego state constructs by measuring client change occurring during psychotherapy and comparing those changes with predictions from the TA theory. Fifty-six subjects, who were clients at a university counseling center in the Rocky Mountain region of the United States, were tested before and after therapy using two standardized instruments, the Adjective Check List (ACL) and the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) and client and therapist global ratings of success of therapy. Critical Parent, Nurturing Parent, Adult, and Adapted Child ego state scores from the ACL all changed in the predicted directions and reached statistical significance. Free Child ego state score changes did not reach statistical significance. Ego state scores correlated with BSI Global Severity Index in predicted directions and all correlations except Critical Parent were statistically significant. Changes in ego state scores did not correlate with client and therapist ratings of success with one exception--Nurturing Parent was related to Client ratings of success. Changes in ego state scores did not correlate with subject pretest symptomatology, number of sessions, or the therapist's level of experience. Limitations of the study and recommendations for further research are discussed.
323

Adults as Students: Ego Development and the Influence of the Academic Environment

Leonetti, Shannon Moon 01 January 1989 (has links)
This study was based on the premise that one outcome of education is ego development. The research was based on Jane Loevinger's theory that ego development is the central frame-of-reference through which people view themselves and their relationships with others. The study looked for evidence of ego development in adult students and for contributing factors, including academic environments. It compared the ego levels of students aged 35 to 55 at two higher education institutes and some experiences that are common to most colleges. The variables compared were based on Loevinger's levels of ego development and theories of academic environments of Moos, Pace, and Knefelkamp. The variables used were: ego development, type of school, background characteristics, relations with faculty, enthusiasm about school, opinions about academic environment and estimates of gains. The study was done in two stages. Five hundred forty students responded to a questionnaire on background characteristics and selected portions of Pace's Measuring the Quality of College Student Experiences. From this group, 150 students were mailed Loevinger's Sentence Completion Test and 85 were returned. Study findings provided an opportunity to expand the knowledge about the ego levels of adult students. Statistical analyses included chi-square and ANOVA. No statistically significant change in ego levels was found. No statistically significant differences were found between the ego levels of the students by schools or background characteristics. There were differences in how the two total populations responded to the questionnaire about school, environment and personal gains. Students attending the small liberal arts college indicated that they were more enthusiastic about college, felt that their school placed a stronger emphasis on both the subjective and objective outcomes of college. These students felt that their school placed a higher emphasis on interpersonal relationships. The students from the small liberal arts college were more likely to say that they had gained the most personally. Personal gains included development of values and standards, understanding of self, and the ability to work with others. These are characteristics that are indicative of ego growth. Recommendations included additional research into maximizing developmental environments of adult students and faculty education on adult development and learning styles.
324

Modeling Spatiotemporal Pedestrian-Environment Interactions for Predicting Pedestrian Crossing Intention from the Ego-View

Chen, Chen (Tina) 08 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / For pedestrians and autonomous vehicles (AVs) to co-exist harmoniously and safely in the real-world, AVs will need to not only react to pedestrian actions, but also anticipate their intentions. In this thesis, we propose to use rich visual and pedestrian-environment interaction features to improve pedestrian crossing intention prediction from the ego-view.We do so by combining visual feature extraction, graph modeling of scene objects and their relationships, and feature encoding as comprehensive inputs for an LSTM encoder-decoder network. Pedestrians react and make decisions based on their surrounding environment, and the behaviors of other road users around them. The human-human social relationship has al-ready been explored for pedestrian trajectory prediction from the bird’s eye view in stationary cameras. However, context and pedestrian-environment relationships are often missing incurrent research into pedestrian trajectory, and intention prediction from the ego-view. To map the pedestrian’s relationship to its surrounding objects we use a star graph with the pedestrian in the center connected to all other road objects/agents in the scene. The pedestrian and road objects/agents are represented in the graph through visual features extracted using state of the art deep learning algorithms. We use graph convolutional networks, and graph autoencoders to encode the star graphs in a lower dimension. Using the graph en-codings, pedestrian bounding boxes, and human pose estimation, we propose a novel model that predicts pedestrian crossing intention using not only the pedestrian’s action behaviors(bounding box and pose estimation), but also their relationship to their environment. Through tuning hyperparameters, and experimenting with different graph convolutions for our graph autoencoder, we are able to improve on the state of the art results. Our context-driven method is able to outperform current state of the art results on benchmark datasetPedestrian Intention Estimation (PIE). The state of the art is able to predict pedestrian crossing intention with a balanced accuracy (to account for dataset imbalance) score of 0.61, while our best performing model has a balanced accuracy score of 0.79. Our model especially outperforms in no crossing intention scenarios with an F1 score of 0.56 compared to the state of the art’s score of 0.36. Additionally, we also experiment with training the state of the art model and our model to predict pedestrian crossing action, and intention jointly. While jointly predicting crossing action does not help improve crossing intention prediction, it is an important distinction to make between predicting crossing action versus intention.
325

Athletic Identity and Ego Identity Status as Predictors of Psychological Health among Intercollegiate Athletes

Soto, William 13 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
326

Unsupervised Learning for Structure from Motion

Örjehag, Erik January 2021 (has links)
Perception of depth, ego-motion and robust keypoints is critical for SLAM andstructure from motion applications. Neural networks have achieved great perfor-mance in perception tasks in recent years. But collecting labeled data for super-vised training is labor intensive and costly. This thesis explores recent methodsin unsupervised training of neural networks that can predict depth, ego-motion,keypoints and do geometric consensus maximization. The benefit of unsuper-vised training is that the networks can learn from raw data collected from thecamera sensor, instead of labeled data. The thesis focuses on training on imagesfrom a monocular camera, where no stereo or LIDAR data is available. The exper-iments compare different techniques for depth and ego-motion prediction fromprevious research, and shows how the techniques can be combined successfully.A keypoint prediction network is evaluated and its performance is comparedwith the ORB detector provided by OpenCV. A geometric consensus network isalso implemented and its performance is compared with the RANSAC algorithmin OpenCV. The consensus maximization network is trained on the output of thekeypoint prediction network. For future work it is suggested that all networkscould be combined and trained jointly to reach a better overall performance. Theresults show (1) which techniques in unsupervised depth prediction are most ef-fective, (2) that the keypoint predicting network outperformed the ORB detector,and (3) that the consensus maximization network was able to classify outlierswith comparable performance to the RANSAC algorithm of OpenCV.
327

A study of ego development of behavior problem adolescents in three types of school organization /

Walker, Clifford A. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
328

Cognitive Complexity, Perspective Taking, and Moral Reasoning in Depression

Jackson, Daniel Wayne 08 1900 (has links)
The relationships of cognitive complexity, social perspective taking, and moral reasoning have been primarily examined in children or juveniles. Little work has been done to study their relationships in the late adolescent and young adult college student population. Additionally, the research to date has only examined relationships among pairs of these constructs. There has been no attempt to assess the combined relationship of cognitive complexity and role-taking skills to moral reasoning at any developmental level. Therefore, there are two purposes in this study. First, to test the theory of ego function regression in depression on cognitive developmental concepts related to interpersonal functioning. Second, the study will determine the individual as well as combined relationships of cognitive complexity and social perspective taking to moral judgment in a late adolescent to young adult college student population.
329

Estado de Flow y la Orientación a la Meta (Ego, Tarea) en deportistas extremos / Flow State and Goal Orientation in extreme athletes

Carhuayo Puma, Selena Stephany 25 September 2020 (has links)
La investigación, tuvo como objetivo determinar si existe relación entre las variables del Estado de Flow y Orientación a la Meta en deportistas extremos. El estudio empleó una metodología de tipo correlacional (Hernández, Fernández y Baptista, 2014), cuya población estuvo conformada por 198 participantes (124 hombres y 74 mujeres) con edades que fluctuaron entre 18 y 60 años. Los instrumentos aplicados fueron el “Flow State Scale (FSS)” de Jackson y Marsh (1966) validado por Shimokawa (2008) y para evaluar la Orientación a la Meta se empleó “Task and Ego Orientation in Sport Questionnaire (TEOSQ)” de Duda y Nicholls (1989), a partir de la traducción de Balaguer, Castillo y Tomás (1996) y adaptado al contexto peruano por Reyes-Bossio (2010). Los resultados demostraron que el estado de Flow se correlaciona significativamente con la variable Orientación a la Meta y al mismo tiempo con sus dimensiones Ego y Tarea. / The main aim of research is to determine the existing relationship between the variables, Flow State, and Goal Orientation in extreme athletes. The research is of correlational type (Hernández, Fernandez and Baptista, 2014), the population is made up of 198 participants (124 men and 74 women) with ages that fluctuated between 18 and 60 years. The instruments applied were the “Flow State Scale (FSS)” of Jackson and Marsh (1966) validated by Shimokawa (2008) and to evaluate Goal Orientation, the “Task and Ego Orientation in Sport Questionnaire (TEOSQ)” by Duda and Nicholls (1989) was used, based on the translation by Balaguer, Castillo and Tomas (1996) and adapted to the Peruvian context by Reyes-Bossio (2010). The results showed that the Flow state is significantly correlated with the Goal Orientation variable and at the same time with its Ego and Task dimensions. / Tesis
330

Conjoint Marital Therapy: Proxy Voice Intervention and Softening in the Context of Couple Enactments

Seedall, Ryan B. 19 August 2004 (has links) (PDF)
This study evaluated the effectiveness of proxy voice intervention, embedded within couple enactments, on client-perceived softening. During enactments, direct couple interaction is the focus while the therapist coaches from the periphery. In the context of an enactment, the therapist may use proxy voice when partners appear to be distressed and expressing themselves in terms of secondary emotions by modeling appropriate attachment and self-concept expression. The primary research question was whether therapist use of proxy voice in an enactment would be more likely to bring about softening effects, or whether use of proxy voice was counter-intuitive to enactment conceptualization and would bring about effects related to struggle (e.g. withdrawal or negativity). The review of literature sets forth (1) enactments as common factors; (2) enactments conceptually and operationally; (3) proxy voice in the context of enactments; and (4) the effects of proxy voice on softening versus withdrawal or negativity. Proxy voice occurred 42 times in nine research sessions where proxy voice was delivered repeatedly in a 20-30 minute enactment episode. Results indicated that proxy voice was significantly (both statistically and clinically) associated to softening while dissimilarly linked with withdrawal or negativity. Results also suggested that proxy voice may be used to dampen volatility and foster couple softening during enactment in the following ways: (1) proxy voice temporarily increases the structure of the couple interaction, thereby allowing the therapist to dampen reactivity and model healthy expression before returning to direct couple interaction; (2) proxy voice is a hypothesis of softer emotions that fits the clients' experiences, helps them to feel validated, and encourages them to consider something in a newer, softer way; and (3) proxy voice taps into foundational relationship dynamics surrounding self-concept and attachment experiences that "propel" interaction processes but remain outside conscious awareness or explicit expression for the couple. These preliminary findings suggest that proxy voice intervention embedded within a fluid, carefully delineated, and discriminating model of enactments effectively facilitates essential elements of couple interaction (expression of primary affect, and self-concept and attachment threats) while promoting self-reliant couple interaction and increased couple softening.

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