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differences in learning style preferences, environmental press perceptions, and job satisfaction between surgical intensive care and general surgical unit nursesNelson, Julia Ellen, 1959- January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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South African children's understandings and perceptions of 'rich' and 'poor' : a sociocultural perspective.Du Toit, Megan. January 2012 (has links)
Given the focus on cognitive-developmental trends in how children understand rich and poor, many researchers have developed a concern that research has ignored the influences of children's contexts. For this reason this study aimed to build on previous research (particularly that by Leahy, 1981, and by Bonn et al.,1999) by combining the cognitive-developmental model with the need to recognize contextual influences inherent in children's understandings of social constructs, while relating this to a theoretical framework which can provide a more thorough picture of the way in which children understand rich and poor. This was done using a qualitative interpretive design. Specifically this involved a combination of focus groups and drawing activities with a group of 20 South African children from a local government, former model C, primary school located in a relatively lower socioeconomic area in Pietermaritzburg, in which their perspectives and understandings of socioeconomic status were explored. In applying the sociocultural approach in data analysis, Rogoff's (1995, 1998) notion of the sociocultural three planes of analysis were used to examine how the children's accounts reflect the personal, interpersonal, and contextual factors. Within each of these planes, the principles and methods of a sociocultural discourse analysis using interpretive repertoires was applied, with a focus on the respective level. Results revealed that while the trends in the children's ideas were consistent with Leahy's (1981) cognitive developmental trends, the particular ideas expressed by the children were embedded and predominantly informed by the social and cultural context of the interpersonal group, their everyday lives, and South African society. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2012.
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The disobedient naïve psychologist : deviating from predicted attributions in a social context.Naidoo, Evasen. January 2009 (has links)
Classical attribution theorists developed models of causal attribution that reflected their belief that people were primarily interested in attribution accuracy. These models did not consider contextual factors such as relationships and societal norms which resulted in the emergence of several empirical puzzles many of which are related to the use of consensus information. This study investigates whether the puzzle of the differential treatment of consensus information can be solved if it is assumed that people are primarily concerned with social features of the attribution setting rather than strict attribution accuracy. This study experimentally tests the role of key aspects of the social context such as the impact of social strategies in Kelley’s model of attribution to explore whether some of its empirical anomalies could have their origins in the social aspects of attribution in research contexts. The study found that participants were 2.63 times more likely to provide ‘inaccurate’ responses when there was a risk that the accurate answer would be socially disruptive. Findings from this study suggest that participants prioritise the implications of the social context over attribution accuracy. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
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Children's self-esteem and their perceptions of prejudice, social satisfaction and status.Slepica, Marcela. January 1998 (has links)
The recent social and political changes in South Africa are having a profound effect on social
relations in South Africa, and it seems appropriate to study the attitudes of children and their
perceptions of racial and gender relations. This study attempts to explore self-esteem,
perceptions of social satisfaction, status and prejudice in relation to race and gender.
The sample consists of 444 Black and White children aged 12/13 years and 14/15 years. The
children were from schools in an urban area (Pietermaritzburg) in Kwa-Zulu, Natal. Three
instruments were administered: The Culture-Free Self-Esteem Inventory, the Social Status
Technique and the Social Distance Scale.
A review of theoretical considerations of prejudice, self-esteem and social identity theory is
provided. Statistical analysis indicated the following findings: there is no difference in
assessed self-esteem between the races although boys exhibited a more positive self-esteem
than girls. Black children showed more positive levels of self-esteem on the academic and
parent-related sub-scales, while White children showed a more positive social self-esteem.
With regard to social satisfaction and preference, all children identified Whites as being the
most satisfied and having the most status. With the exception of Black boys, all children
perceive that girls have more satisfaction and status than boys. There is a clear difference
between boys and girls with girls showing a strong bias towards their own gender in the
preference and satisfaction questions but not on the identification question. In relation to
identification, children showed a clear own-group identification. On the Social Distance
Scale, Black children were more prejudiced than White children, and were most prejudiced
towards the Afrikaans speaking group. Boys also were more prejudiced than girls.
The findings are discussed in relation to the theoretical perspectives and to previous findings.
A critique of the study and recommendations for future research are included. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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You will do better if I watch : anonymity, indentifiability and audience effects in a stereotype threat situation.Forbes, Jared Daryn. January 2009 (has links)
The current study examined stereotype threat or lift (STL) in terms of various elements of social identity theory. STL occurs when a negative stereotype (or positive stereotype) about a group leads to a decrease (or increase) in performance on a task that the group identifies with. The primary focus was the relationship between STL and identifiability, whereby identifiability refers to whether one views one‟s self as an individual or as an anonymous part of a social group. The study examined STL in relation to humanities and science students‟ ability to recognise patterns using two short forms of the Raven‟s Advanced Progressive Matrices (APM) which was developed. The students completed matrices under two conditions; anonymity and visibility to an audience (in-group, out-group and experimenter). When visible, participants performed significantly better than when anonymous, regardless of the STL condition. When examining in-group identification, participants with high in-group identification experienced traditional STL effects while participants with low in-group identification experienced a reversal in effects. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
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Epistemic reasoning and adolescent egocentrism among adolescent boys with behavioral disorders and their peers without behavioral disordersBeaudoin, Kathleen Mary 05 1900 (has links)
A number of investigations have been conducted to examine social cognition
and psychopathology among adolescents, yet little is known about the social cognitive
reasoning of adolescents identified as having severe behavioral disorders. The
purpose of the present study was to explore the social cognitive reasoning of
adolescent boys with behavioral disorders in comparison to their peers without
behavioral disorders. Group differences were examined with respect to epistemic
reasoning and the dimensions of adolescent egocentrism. In addition, the relation
between social cognition and social relationships was investigated. Finally, the
relation between social cognition and psychopathology was explored.
Thirty-one adolescent boys with behavioral disorders and 32 of their peers
without behavioral disorders (matched forage, race, and SES) participated in the
study. All participants were individually administered measures designed to assess
epistemic reasoning, imaginary audience and personal fable ideation (i.e.,
invulnerability, omnipotence, personal uniqueness), and personal-intimacy and groupintegration
with peers and family. In addition, boys with behavioral disorders
completed a measure of internalizing, externalizing, and total problem behaviors.
Teacher-ratings of problem behaviors were also completed for each participant in the
study.
Results revealed that adolescent boys with behavioral disorders were lower in
epistemic reasoning than were adolescent boys without behavioral disorders. Groups
were not found to differ with respect to imaginary audience or personal fable ideation.
For boys with behavioral disorders, no relation was found between social cognition
and social relationships. In contrast, for boys without behavioral disorders, personal
uniqueness was negatively related to group-integration with peers and omnipotence
was positively related to group-integration with family. Social cognitive reasoning was
found to predict self-reported problem behaviors for boys with behavioral disorders
and teacher-re ported problem behaviors for boys without behavioral disorders.
Overall, these results suggest the importance of epistemic reasoning in understanding
the relation between social cognition and psychopathology.
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The social psychological consequences of being a victim of discriminationRuggiero, Karen M. January 1993 (has links)
This thesis describes a program of research aimed at examining the social psychological consequences of being a victim of discrimination. An experimental paradigm was developed to determine if, and to what extent, disadvantaged group members perceive the discrimination that confronts them. Women were asked to react to negative feedback after receiving information about the probability that they had been discriminated against. When discrimination was made ambiguous, subjects minimized their personal experience with discrimination and attributed their failure to themselves. A second experiment investigated the role of perceived control as a potential cause of minimization of personal discrimination. The results indicated that disadvantaged group members were reluctant to blame their performance on discrimination because in so doing, they were placing control for their outcomes in the hands of others rather than themselves. The findings are discussed in terms of their implications for the on-going victimization of disadvantaged group members.
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Interpersonal perception: don't worry, be happyGibson, James Edward Morgan 16 February 2010 (has links)
Three studies tested two hypotheses stemming from Gifford's (2004) social evaluation theory (SET) using Kenny's (1994) social relations model. SET proposes that others are judged as potential need satisfiers (e.g., perceived as potential friends, bosses, mentors, etc.). The first hypothesis proposes that others will be perceived as enemies and opponents in non-optimal social situations. The second hypothesis proposes that social success will be positively correlated with judgmental accuracy. Participants responded to a variety of personality questionnaires, which included the Ten-Item Personality Inventory (Gosling, Rentfrow, & Swann, 2003), the Big Five (IPIP, 2005), the sub-scale measuring satisfaction with social life taken from the Extended Satisfaction with Life Scale (Alfonso, Allison, Rader, & Gorman, 1996), Positive Relations with Others Scale (Ryff & Keyes, 1995), and the Need to Evaluate Scale (Jarvis & Petty, 1996), and then worked in a round-robin fashion on either a competitive or cooperative task. Participants then rated one another on dimensions of personality and needs assessment satisfiers (e.g., whether they and others felt like friends, bosses, mentors, etc.). Distributions of rating variances differed depending on whether participants were rating needs or personality
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Perceived social function and childhood depression :Burlock, Amanda. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (MPsy(Clinical))--University of South Australia, 2002.
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The influence of past experience on the process of perspective takingGerace, Adam January 2009 (has links)
Perspective taking, the main cognitive component of empathy, is considered within the psychological literature to be a significant part of human interaction. Despite extensive investigation into the outcomes of this construct, the process by which people take another's psychological point of view has received comparatively little attention. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate in three studies what the individual does when attempting to take the perspective of another person. The first study investigated the particular strategies which individuals use when engaging in perspective-taking behaviours. Dominant themes to emerge from this qualitative assessment of the perspective-taking process were the use of self- (e.g., switching places) and other-information (e.g., targets personal characteristics), of which the former appears to play the central role. Further elements of the perspective-taking process were also identified with the self-information theme. Of these, having experienced a situation similar to that of a target (similar past experience) was found to be a particularly strong aspect of the perspective-taking process and subsequently informed the rationale for the remaining two studies. In view of the findings from Study 1, the second study tested whether past experiences made it easier for participants to take the perspective of another person in a new, but similar situation and the extent to which other aspects, such as switching places with the target, made the perspective-taking process less effortful. Results revealed that similar past experience was the strongest predictor of the ease of the perspective-taking task. Moreover, the extent to which similar past experience increased ease of the perspective-taking process was moderated by the extent to which the participant reflected on that past experience. The final study in this thesis picked up the notion of reflection and examined whether increasing the extent to which an individual engages in self-reflection leads to a concomitant increase in the tendency to take another perspective and the ease with which this can be accomplished. After completion of an intervention program which had a strong focus on self-reflection and understanding of self, there was a noticeable trend for participants to improve on their capacity for self-reflection. The findings also revealed that individuals with a tendency to self-reflect in an insightful and non-ruminative manner demonstrated a similarly high level of general perspective-taking propensity and ease of perspective taking. The studies support the vital role of reflection on similar past experience to that of a target when engaging in perspective taking. This research underscores the importance of examining perspective taking as a process.
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