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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.
21

Influence of Implicit-Bias Training on the Cultural Competency of Police Officers

Whitfield, Marvin 01 January 2019 (has links)
Highly publicized media events involving African American men and the use of deadly force by police officers have occurred between 2013 and 2014. These events have emphasized the need to examine the influence of implicit bias training on police officers' decision-making processes. During the past two decades, Community Oriented Policing Services has invested several billion dollars in training programs designed to eliminate racial bias within the law enforcement community. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine how implicit-bias training influences the decision-making processes of police officers. More specifically, this study examined the perceptions of police officers regarding the practical value of implicit-bias training and how the training influences their cultural awareness, knowledge, and skills. An online questionnaire containing open-ended questions was administered to 32 sworn, full-time police officers who interact daily with members of diverse communities. The data were coded using evaluation coding, magnitude coding, and descriptive coding. This form of coding assisted in identifying attitudes and stereotypes as well as the impact of implicit bias training police officers' cultural awareness, knowledge, and skills. Participants reported that implicit bias training made them better prepared to manage their biases while interacting with diverse communities. The findings of this study will provide police agencies and law enforcement training facilitators with the tools they need to improve future training outcomes. Successfully training police officers on how to manage implicit bias during the decision-making process will reduce the potential for stereotyping.
22

Buffering preconscious stressor appraisal : the protective role of self-efficacy

Filtness, Timothy William January 2013 (has links)
Many cognitive resources contribute towards the appraisal of stressors. Of these, self-efficacy (SE) is widely acknowledged to play a significant role in protecting adolescents from the effects of stress (Bandura, 1997). This study investigated that relationship through the use of a quasi-experimental methodology (Cook & Campbell, 1979) utilising an untreated Control group of 44 adolescent, female participants and an Experimental group of 70 additional participants, all of whom were volunteers drawn from the Sixth Form of a single participating school. The members of both participant groups took part in two rounds of testing, between which the members of the Experimental group were exposed to a significant academic stressor (one or more public A-level examinations). During both test phases, all participants completed the 10- item Perceived Stress Scale self-report (Cohen & Williamson, 1988), the Examination Self-Efficacy Scale instrument (Schwarzer & Jerusalem, 1995) and a bespoke Implicit Association Test (Greenwald et al., 1998) designed to measure implicit stressor appraisal. Significant trends were identified by means of ANCOVA, correlation and regression analyses, and the resulting data were interpreted in terms of a dual process model of stress (Compas, 2004). Results not only concurred with those of previous studies (e.g. Betoret, 2006; Vaezi & Fallah, 2011) by demonstrating a strongly negative correlation between acute academic stress and academic SE, but provided new evidence to suggest that the ‘protective’ effect of SE occurs via a buffering mechanism at the level of preconscious stressor appraisals (Bargh, 1990), which limits the effect of acute stress exposure on preconscious stressor appraisals (e.g. Luecken & Appelhans, 2005).
23

Familiarity breeds consent : is structural facilitation evidence for the implicit knowledge of syntactic structures? /

Luka, Barbara J. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of Psychology and Dept. of Linguistics, June 1999. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
24

Assessing Implicit Leadership and Followership Theories

Bashore, Daniel 27 May 2020 (has links)
No description available.
25

Teoretiska perspektiv på implicit lärande

Håkansson, Fredrik January 2011 (has links)
Jag har märkt att mina elever har vissa kunskaper som de inte lärt sig under traditionella läroformer; i skolan eller någon annanstans. Det kan vara att de har en känsla för hur film eller musik är uppbyggd, vad som är en snygg bildkomposition, för hur språket talas eller skrivs, eller hur man ska bete sig i olika situationer. Utan att vi är medvetna om det verkar vi ha en intuition och magkänsla inför vissa företeelser i vår vardag. Vad är det då för typ av lärande som sker när vi inte tänker att vi lär oss och inte heller alltid vet att vi kan vissa saker? Vad vi har att göra med är alltså någon form av omedveten process; ett slags implicit lärande. Syftet med denna uppsatsen är att titta lite närmare på denna process; vad det finns skrivet och tänkt om denna form av lärande tidigare och vilka ytterligare frågor det kan väcka. Utifrån olika teoretiska resonemang görs ett försök att kartlägga ett implicit lärande som sker när vi inte försöker lära oss något; i en icke-intenderad process. Målet är att belysa läroprocessen utifrån a) samspelsprocessen (hur det sociala och kulturella kontexten påverkar vilka implicita schema vi bär på), b) den psykiska och mentala processen som sker vid implicit lärande, c) resultatet av processen/vad bär vi med oss och d) framplockningsprocessen (hur implicita kunskaper kan göras explicita). I ett avslutande stycke förs ett resonemang kring vilken typ av pedagogisk relevans forskning om implicit lärande kan tänkas ha och vilka vinster man eventuellt kunde göra genom mer forskning kring denna process.
26

Knowledge-driven Implicit Information Extraction

Perera, Pathirage Dinindu Sujan Udayanga 30 August 2016 (has links)
No description available.
27

Artificial grammar learning and the transfer of sequential dependencies

Tunney, Richard John January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
28

Would students' causal attributions and implicit theories of intelligence be mediated by teachers' feedback on their performance

Siu, Mei-ling, Jacqueline January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Educational Psychology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
29

Learning the structure of artificial grammars : computer simulations and human experiments

Boucher, Luke January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
30

A Step Before the First Step? Social Norms and Admitting Implicit Racial Prejudice

January 2018 (has links)
archives@tulane.edu / Conventional wisdom suggests people must be willing to admit a problem exists before they can hope to solve it. This may be especially true in the case of implicit prejudice. Unlike explicit prejudice, which is conscious and deliberate, implicit prejudice is often unconscious and counter to what people intend. In addition, implicit prejudice is undesirable and leads people to respond defensively when told they have such prejudice. In this dissertation, I investigated whether social norms that encourage people to admit prejudice and exert effort to control it can be used to increase people’s willingness to admit their own implicit prejudice. In three experiments, participants watched (Experiments 1 and 2) or read about (Experiment 3) other people’s reactions to implicit attitude feedback. Then, participants were told they have an implicit bias favoring Whites over Blacks and responded to questions assessing defensiveness and willingness to admit prejudice. Experiments 1 and 2 found that seeing others acknowledge prejudice decreased people’s defensiveness to feedback about their own implicit attitudes and increased willingness to admit personal prejudice. Experiment 3 manipulated social norms with summary information about a referent group and found that while learning most other people deny prejudice caused participants to believe denying was more normal, overall, the manipulation had little influence on defensiveness or willingness to admit prejudice. Together, these experiments suggest that social norms can influence people’s willingness to admit personally prejudiced implicit attitudes, but to be effective, the example set by others must be vivid. / 1 / Aaron Moss

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