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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.
1

Dreaming as a mechanism for emotional handling : did dreams become more emotional after 9/11?

Palmenfelt, August January 2007 (has links)
<p>This study investigates the effects of traumatic experiences on emotional content of dreams. The theoretical framework of the present study is both the threat simulation theory and Hartmann’s theory of dreams as a mechanism for handling emotions after traumatic events. Both theories predict an increase in negative emotions after trauma but assign a different function for this increase. The subjects in this study (N = 16) were regularly writing dream diaries which after the 9/11 attack gave the researchers an unique opportunity to study the exact impact of events on dream content. Each subject’s ten last dreams before 9/11, and ten first dreams after 9/11, were analysed according to the emotional content. The results showed no significant differences in the number or tone of emotions in the before dreams compared to the after dreams. Possibly because none of the subjects experienced the event first hand.</p>
2

Ontogenetic and Gender Dimensions in a Normative Study of the Dreams of Canadians

Dale, Allyson January 2017 (has links)
The current dissertation examined gender, cultural, and ontogenetic dimensions in the dreams of Canadians. Normative studies in the United States, Europe, and other countries have documented normative data including gender differences and compared their findings to American data to investigate cultural differences. The purpose of the present study was to extend research of this nature by establishing normative data for Canadians. Furthermore, age differences in dreams have been mostly investigated for females, with only a few studies with males, and have used a variety of methodologies and age ranges. Another objective of this study was to document, for the first time, the ontogenetic pattern of the main dream content categories from adolescence to old age for males and females. The rigorous and detailed dream diary method was used to collect dreams which were analyzed using the Hall and Van de Castle method of content analysis. The first paper consisted of two dreams each from 150 male and female young adult Canadians, ages 18-24, totaling 600 dream reports. Findings provided support for the threat simulation theory as there were more negative than positive themes overall. Furthermore, dream gender differences were consistent with those in waking and the similarity of Canadian and American culture was reflected in dream imagery, supporting the continuity hypothesis of dream formation. The final two papers examined the ontogenetic patterns of dream content for females and males respectively. The second paper consisted of 75 females across 5 age groups from adolescence to old age (12-17, 18-24, 25-39, 40-64, and 65-85) and the third paper consisted of 50 males across the same age groups with the exception of 31 males in the oldest group (65-85). The ontogenetic patterns of dream content from adolescence to old age reflected waking developmental patterns as proposed by social theories, neurobiological research, and recognized features of aging, supporting the continuity hypothesis. In terms of the theoretical implications, this work provides support for the hypothesis of the threat simulation theory pertaining to the prevalence of negative content in dreams. It also provides support for the continuity between waking and dreaming hypothesis of dream formation. Implications of these findings regarding our understanding of the sources of dream formation are described. Finally, limitations and future directions, for research examining the evolution of gender differences across the lifespan, are discussed.
3

The Threat Simulation Theory and Dream Content Analysis on Traumatized Subjects

Redgård, Rickard January 2007 (has links)
<p>The present study set out to test some of the predictions made by the Threat Simulation Theory, which suggests an evolutionary source of dreaming (Revonsuo, 2000a). The qualitative content and frequency of threatening events in dreams were compared between traumatized Swedish subjects with experience of the tsunami-disaster in Southeast Asia in 2004 with Swedish subjects with no traumatic experiences. Only a few of the hypotheses were supported by the results. The results and unsupported hypotheses are discussed with focus on the Threat Simulation Theory, and alternative explanations are considered.</p>
4

Hranice fikce / The Borders of Fiction

SEVERA, Tomáš January 2015 (has links)
The submitted master's thesis focuses on issues of fiction. First, it pursues the competing definitions of the term itself in order to define it as non-referential sign afterwards. In chapters two to four it presents and comments three traditional approaches to fiction formal, semantic and pragmatic. In chapter five, which is the largest one of the entire work, it addresses in the writings of theorists who largely try to move around the presumed border between fictional and factual narration, usually represented by historiographical works. And finally in chapter six it deals with insights brought to the traditional theories of fiction by two versions of relatively new discipline the simulation theory.
5

Algunas reflexiones acerca de la simulación mental y la perspectiva de la primera persona

Brunsteins, Patricia 09 April 2018 (has links)
Suele considerarse a las teorías de la racionalidad, las teorías de la teoría y las teorías de la simulación mental como diversas estrategias de atribución mental, cada una de las cuales, desde una concepción tradicional, sería única y exhaustiva. En este trabajo examino algunas versiones de la teoría de la simulación mental y, particularmente, la perspectiva desde la cual estas describen la atribución mental. Finalmente, a partir de ciertas críticas, reformulo el sentido de la perspectiva de la primera persona que estas teorías, según mi parecer, detentan. Intento mostrar que una teoría de la atribución mental basada únicamente en la perspectiva de la primera persona no podría abarcar todos los casos de atribución mental y no sería una estrategia exhaustiva, única e independiente, quedando un espacio abierto para acudir a otras estrategias interpretativas.---Some Reflections on Mental Simulation and the First-Person Perspective”. It is usual to consider the theories of rationality, the theories of theory and the theories of mental simulation as diverse strategies of mental attribution, each one of which, from a traditional conception, would be unique and exhaustive. In this paper I examine some versions of the mental simulation theory and particularly the perspective whence they describe mental attribution. Finally, from certain critiques, I reformulate the sense of the first-person perspective that these theories, in my view, sustain. I attempt to show that a mental attribution theory based solely in the first-person perspective could not include all mental attribution cases and would not be an exhaustive strategy, unique and independent, leaving an open space for other interpretative strategies.
6

The Threat Simulation Theory and Dream Content Analysis on Traumatized Subjects

Redgård, Rickard January 2007 (has links)
The present study set out to test some of the predictions made by the Threat Simulation Theory, which suggests an evolutionary source of dreaming (Revonsuo, 2000a). The qualitative content and frequency of threatening events in dreams were compared between traumatized Swedish subjects with experience of the tsunami-disaster in Southeast Asia in 2004 with Swedish subjects with no traumatic experiences. Only a few of the hypotheses were supported by the results. The results and unsupported hypotheses are discussed with focus on the Threat Simulation Theory, and alternative explanations are considered.
7

Dreaming as a mechanism for emotional handling : did dreams become more emotional after 9/11?

Palmenfelt, August January 2007 (has links)
This study investigates the effects of traumatic experiences on emotional content of dreams. The theoretical framework of the present study is both the threat simulation theory and Hartmann’s theory of dreams as a mechanism for handling emotions after traumatic events. Both theories predict an increase in negative emotions after trauma but assign a different function for this increase. The subjects in this study (N = 16) were regularly writing dream diaries which after the 9/11 attack gave the researchers an unique opportunity to study the exact impact of events on dream content. Each subject’s ten last dreams before 9/11, and ten first dreams after 9/11, were analysed according to the emotional content. The results showed no significant differences in the number or tone of emotions in the before dreams compared to the after dreams. Possibly because none of the subjects experienced the event first hand.
8

A Problem Of Access: Autism, Other Minds, And Interpersonal Relations

Born, Ryan 14 December 2011 (has links)
Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASCs) are marked by social-communicative difficulties and unusually fixed or repetitive interests, activities, and behaviors (American Psychiatric Association, 2000). In this thesis, I review empirically and conceptually based philosophic proposals that maintain the social-communicative difficulties exhibited by persons on the autism spectrum result from a lack of capacity to understand other persons as minded. I will argue that the social-communicative difficulties that characterize ASCs may instead result from a lack of ability to access other minds, and that this lack of ability is due to a contingent lack of external resources.
9

PLANEJAMENTO DA CAPACIDADE DE PRODUÇÃO, EMPREGANDO SIMULAÇÃO COMPUTACIONAL E TEORIA DAS RESTRIÇÕES

Teixeira Neto, Garibaldi 23 September 2015 (has links)
Submitted by admin tede (tede@pucgoias.edu.br) on 2016-12-09T12:16:23Z No. of bitstreams: 1 GARIBALDI TEIXEIRA NETO.pdf: 1516545 bytes, checksum: 23fcb900cca46f3b3b38e4e063d2454e (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-12-09T12:16:23Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 GARIBALDI TEIXEIRA NETO.pdf: 1516545 bytes, checksum: 23fcb900cca46f3b3b38e4e063d2454e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-09-23 / This study presents a computer simulation model based on the theory of constraints, the simplified drum-lung-string method and system production to availability. The goal is to use these concepts to build a model of the production system of the searched company, replicate it on a simulation software, and perform interventions in resources with restraint in order to increase its capacity if the system does not meet the demand. The object of this study was a plant in the food industry, data collection related to the production system, was carried out from June 2012 to December 2013, and the simulation process was generated by the end of 2015. The results were reproduction of each of the production areas as well as the RRC and bottlenecks encountered in the production system. Still, interventions applied in the simulated model, were subsequently applied by the company. / Este trabalho apresenta um modelo de simulação computacional baseado na teoria das restrições, no método tambor-pulmão-corda simplificado e no sistema produção para disponibilidade. O objetivo é utilizar estes conceitos para construir um modelo do sistema produtivo da empresa pesquisada, replicá-lo em um software de simulação, e, realizar intervenções nos recursos com restrição afim de aumentar suas capacidades, caso o sistema não atenda à demanda. O objeto deste estudo foi uma fábrica do ramo alimentício, a coleta dos dados relacionadas ao sistema produtivo, foi realizada no período de junho de 2012 a dezembro de 2013, e o processo de simulação foi gerado até o final de 2015. Os resultados obtidos foram a reprodução de cada uma das áreas produtivas, bem como dos gargalos e RRC encontrados no sistema produtivo. Ainda, as intervenções aplicadas no modelo simulado, foram posteriormente aplicadas pela empresa.
10

Theories of Nightmares in Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology

Chamorro, Emilia January 2015 (has links)
Dreaming is a complex, multimodal and sequentially organized model of the waking world (Metzinger, 2003). Nightmares are a category of dreams involving threatening scenarios, anxiety and other negative emotions (Hartmann, 1998; Nielsen &amp; Levin, 2007). Dreams and nightmares are explored in this present thesis in the light of psychology and modern cognitive neuroscience as to their nature, function and neural correlates. The three main dream theories and their leading investigations are reviewed to evaluate their evidence and overall explanatory power to account for the function of dreams and nightmares. Random Activation Theories (RATs) claim dreams are biological epiphenomena and by-products of sleep underlying mechanisms (Crick &amp; Mitchison, 1983; Flanagan, 1995, 2000a, 2000b, Hobson &amp; McCarley, 1997). Mood regulation theories consider that the psychological function of dreams is to regulate mood and help with the adaptation of individuals to their current environment such as solving daily concerns and recovery after trauma exposure (Hartmann, 1996; Levin, 1998; Stickgold, 2008; Kramer, 1991a, 1991b, 2014). Threat Simulation Theories of dreams present the evolutionary function for dreaming as a simulating off-line model of the world used to rehearse threatening events encountered in the human ancestral environment (Revonsuo, 2000a). With the threat-simulation system, threats were likely to be recognized and avoidance skills developed to guarantee reproductive success. TST consider nightmares to reflect the threat-simulation system fully activated (Revonsuo, 2000a). Supported by a robust body of evidence TST is concluded to be the most plausible theory at the moment to account as a theoretical explanation of dreams and nightmares

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