• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 12
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 32
  • 32
  • 10
  • 10
  • 9
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 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

Um estudo das interdependencias cognitivas e sociais em escolares de diferentes idades por meio do jogo xadrez simplificado

Oliveira, Francismara Neves de 23 February 2005 (has links)
Orientador: Rosely Palermo Brenelli / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Educação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-04T16:31:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Oliveira_FrancismaraNevesde_D.pdf: 2908669 bytes, checksum: 03049cd69340736749d0f25cc3f1c9f5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2005 / Resumo: A presente pesquisa de abordagem qualitativa caracterizou-se como um estudo descritivo que objetivou estudar as condutas de escolares no jogo de regras Xadrez Simplificado relacionando-as à coordenação de perspectiva espacial e tomada de perspectiva social. Foram selecionados alunos de diferentes idades e diferentes séries de uma Escola Estadual de Londrina ¿ PR, organizados em 8 duplas sendo 2 da 1ª série, 2 da 3ª série, 2 da 5ª série e 2 da 7ª do ensino fundamental, totalizando 16 participantes. A coleta de dados foi realizada em sete sessões assim distribuídas: três sessões de aprendizagem do jogo Xadrez Simplificado; sessões avaliativas das condutas empregadas no jogo e em situações de jogo simuladas no tabuleiro e uma sessão para aplicação da prova piagetiana ¿O Relacionamento das Perspectivas¿ e uma sessão para aplicação de duas situações-problema propostas para verificar os níveis de Tomada de Perspectiva Social. Embasados no referencial teórico piagetiano e na compreensão de Selman sobre a perspectiva social, os dados foram analisados segundo categorias da dialética construtiva discutida por Piaget para avaliar as condutas apresentadas pelos participantes no jogo e nos níveis de Tomada de Perspectiva Social, analisados por Selman. Os resultados obtidos apontaram que o jogo Xadrez Simplificado permitiu compreender a interdependência entre as condutas apresentadas pelos participantes no jogo, o desenvolvimento da perspectiva espacial e os níveis de Tomada de Perspectiva Social em relações construtivas e integrativas. Indicaram também o jogo de regras Xadrez Simplificado como recurso possível para observar essas relações que revelam a operatoriedade crescente aplicada no jogo, indicando o desenvolvimento das condutas desde o egocentrismo e indiferenciação da perspectiva, até a reciprocidade mútua, tanto no que diz respeito à perspectiva espacial, quanto social, em escolares / Abstract: This descriptive qualitative research, has the object of studying the conduct of pupils in the game of Simplified Chess, relating it to the coordination of spacial coordination and to the Social Perspective Taking. The sixteen participants of different age from a state school in Londrina, Brazil were taken organized in eight pairs, being two from the first grade, two from the third grade, two from the fifth grade and two from the seventh grade of the elementary school. The data was collected in seven different sessions, as follows: three sessions for the learning of the Simplified Chess game; evaluation sessions of the conduct applied in the game and on-board simulated situations; and one session for the application of the Piagetian proof ¿The Relation of the Perspectives¿ and one session for the application of the two problem-solving situations aiming at verifying the levels of the Social Perspective Taking. Based on the Piagetian theoretical reference and on the comprehension of Selman about the Social Perspective, the data were analyzed according to constructive dialectics discussed by Piaget in order to evaluate the conducts presented by the participants in the game and in the levels of the Social Perspective Taking, analyzed by Selman. The results have shown that the Simplified Chess game allowed a comprehension of the interdependence among the conducts presented by the participants, the development of the spacial perspective and the levels of the Social Perspective Taking in constructive and integrative relations. Besides, they have also shown that the game of rules Simplified Chess can be used as a tool to observe these relations, revealing the growing operationality applied in the game and indicating the development of conducts from the egocentrism and nondifferentiation of the perspective to the mutual reciprocity, both in relation to the spacial and social perspective in pupils / Doutorado / Psicologia, Desenvolvimento Humano e Educação / Doutor em Educação
22

Interpersonal affective forecasting

Sanchez, Janice Lynn January 2014 (has links)
This thesis investigates individual and interpersonal predictions of future affect and explores their relation to implicit theories of emotion, prediction recall, debiasing, and focalism. Studies 1, 2, and 3 assessed affect predictions to upcoming reasoning tests and academic results, and Studies 4, 5, and 6 concerned predictions for self-identified events. The first study investigated the influence of implicit theories of emotion (ITE; Tamir, John, Srivastava, & Gross, 2007) on impact bias and prediction recall manipulating ITE between participant pairs who predicted and reported their affective reactions to feedback on a test of reasoning skills. Neither impact bias nor recalled predictions were affected by the manipulation. Recalled affect predictions differed from original affect predictions, but were not influenced by experienced affect. Study 2 further investigated the effects of target event timing on impact bias and affect prediction recall. The results showed no differences between individual and interpersonal impact biases across conditions. Again, recalled predictions differed from original predictions, and were not influenced by experienced affect. Study 3 investigated the influence of prior information about impact bias on interpersonal affective forecasting involving real-world exam results. The results demonstrated no differences in predictions due to information, however, significantly less unhappiness was predicted for participants’ friends compared to self-predictions. Study 4 examined the effect of different de-biasing information on affective predictions. The results demonstrated no differences in affective predictions by condition and found that participants’ ITE were not associated to affect predictions. Study 5 examined individual and interpersonal affect predictions using a between-subjects design in place of the within-subjects design. The results demonstrated no differences between the affect predictions made for self and for friends, and ITE were not associated with predictions. Study 6 examined the impact bias in interpersonal affective forecasting and the role of focalism. The results demonstrated distinctions between individual and interpersonal affecting forecasting with individual impact bias for positive reactions for negative events and individual and interpersonal reverse impact bias for calm emotional reactions to positive events. Immune neglect was found not to be associated with predictions. Overall, the studies found evidence for similar individual and interpersonal predictions which are resistant to influence.
23

Social traits and facial information : behavioral and neuronal evidence within the framework of phylogenetic and clinical studies / Traits sociaux et information facial : résultats comportementaux et neuronaux dans un cadre phylogénétique (singes) et clinique (Williams-Beuren syndrome)

Costa, Manuela 14 September 2016 (has links)
Les visages fournissent à l'observateur un ensemble d'informations physiques, émotionnelles et sociales qui déterminent la manière dont les gens interagissent entre eux. Grâce aux cette informations, un humain peut se faire rapidement une première impression. La capacité de former des jugements de nature sociale est au centre de ce travail de thèse ainsi qu'à la manière dont la fiabilité d'autrui peut-être détectée spontanément à partir d'un visage. J'ai employé des techniques de suivi du mouvement oculaire, d'électrophysiologie (EEG) et comportementales. Le but de l'étude 1 visait à déterminer si la capacité d'évaluer la confiance est universelle. J'ai teste si les singes peuvent montrer une préférence spontanée envers des visages humains inspirant confiance, comme il l'a été observé chez les humains. Chez les deux espèces le temps de regard étais supérieur pour les visages inspirant confiance par rapport à ceux n'inspirant pas confiance. Un autre ensemble d'études s'intéressait au syndrome de Williams-Beuren (WS). La pathologie dont une des caractéristiques est un comportement d'appétence sociale a été utilisée comme modèle neurobiologique humain afin d'étudier la capacité à détecter les informations sociales du visage. Les patients WS sont-ils capables de détecter la confiance à partir d'un visage? Comment les patients WS se représentent un visage qui inspire confiance? J'ai observé que les patients WS regardent moins longtemps les visages qui inspirent confiance, suggérant qu'ils ont une tendance à davantage faire confiance à tout le monde. Nos résultats démontrent aussi qu'en comparaison à un groupe sain, ils ne présentent pas une image stéréotypique d'un visage qui inspire confiance. Dans une dernière étude, j'ai cherché à savoir si les sources neuronales éléctrophysiologiques, en particulier dans les régions du sulcus temporal supérieur (240ms), pouvaient expliquer leur comportement. J'ai observé que l'activité de la source était modulée de manière significative par rapport à la proximité des yeux, comme dans le groupe control. Les résultats suggèrent la présence d'une voie rapide dans le cerveau qui joue le rôle fondamental de moduler les comportements d'approche et d'évitement et que cette voie peut être altérée chez des patients caractérisés par un comportement d'appétence sociale / Faces provide a complex set of physical, emotional and social information to the observer that determines how people will interact with others. From facial information, human subjects can form rapid, first impression judgments. The ability to create social judgments from faces is the core topic of this work. This thesis will focus on how social information and trust is spontaneously detected from faces. In my studies I used eye tracking procedure, electrophysiology (EEG) and behavioral measures. In a first experiment, I investigated the evolutionary origin of trustworthiness detection testing whether monkeys (Macaca Mulatta and Fascicularis) have a spontaneous preference towards trustworthy human faces, thus suggesting a capacity to detect facial cues similar to those used by humans. Using a preference visual paradigm we observed that both species spent more time looking at trustworthy faces than untrustworthy ones. I further conducted three studies with patients affected by Williams-Beuren syndrome (WS). This pathology can be considered a neurobiological human model for the overexpressed social behavior. Are Williams-syndrome patients able to detect trustworthiness from faces? How WS patients form the representation of trustable faces ? Using a preference visual paradigm I observed that WS patients looked less the trustworthy faces compared to control group. This implicit behavior supports patients’ tendency to trust everybody. In a second experiment using reverse correlation paradigm - the procedure pushes subjects to select from noise the facial features that they believe are important for a specific judgment – I found that at group level patients did not show a stereotypical image of trustworthy faces compared to healthy controls. In a final study I investigate whether electrophysiological brain sources, with particular attention to the source localized in the superior temporal sulcus, could explain patients’ behaviour. I found that the activity of a source localized in the STS at 240ms was significantly modulated by eye proximity as in the control group. Overall the results of this work suggests the presence of a fast route in the brain that plays the fundamental role of modulating approach/avoidance behavior. This route may be altered in patients characterized by an overexpressed social behavior
24

Soundtrack to the social world

McDonald, Brennan, Böckler, Anne, Kanske, Philipp 26 January 2023 (has links)
Music is a human universal and has the ability to evoke powerful, genuine emotions. But does music influence our capacity to understand and feel with others? A growing body of evidence indicates that empathy (sharing another’s feelings) and compassion (a feeling of concern toward others) are behaviorally and neutrally distinct, both from each other and from the social cognitive process theory of mind (ToM; i.e., inferring others’ mental states). Yet little is known as to whether and how these dissociable routes to feeling with and understanding others can be independently modulated. The goal of the current study was to investigate if emotional music has the potential to enhance social affect and/or social cognition. Using a naturalistic, video based paradigm which disentangles empathy, compassion, and ToM, we demonstrate selective enhancement of social affect through music during the videos. Specifically, we found enhanced empathy and compassion when emotional, but not when neutral music was present during videos displaying emotionally negative narrations. No such enhancement was present for ToM performance. Similarly, prosocial decision making increased after emotionally negative videos with emotional music. These findings demonstrate how emotional music can enhance empathic responding, compassion and prosocial decisions as well as contribute to the growing evidence for separable processes within the social mind.
25

Social Network Effects on Health and Emotional Wellbeing

Stanoi, Ovidia Andreea January 2024 (has links)
Humans’ social relationships determine to a large degree their trajectories in life. Despite strong evidence for the impact of interpersonal relations on wellbeing, the causal links between the two are not yet fully understood. This dissertation offers a new perspective on the mechanisms through which social ties influence negative (excessive drinking) and positive (participation in recreational activities) health behaviors. In three studies employing a unique combination of social network, fMRI, and experience-sampling methods, we propose that health decisions are the result of complex computations involving prior social experiences, perceived social norms, social comparison processes, and current feelings of connections. Each chapter of this dissertation discusses one of these three studies. Chapter 1 provides evidence that past social experiences shape valuations of new information by showing that pairs of students that drink often together tend to have more similar neural responses to novel alcohol cues in regions associated with affective self-generated thought. In addition, this Chapter suggests that researchers must consider the intricate interplay between individuals’ personal goals and their communities’ norms to understand the influence of social environments on neural representations. The degree to which students aligned their neural response patterns to alcohol with those of their peers depended on interactions between their individual motives for drinking and their group’s approval of this behavior. Chapter 2 presents novel findings that people spontaneously represent social information from multiple networks (e.g., popularity and leadership) at a neural level in social cognition (right TPJ, dmPFC) and valuation (vmPFC) regions. Importantly, individuals who display higher neural sensitivity to status differences are also more likely to align their drinking behavior with their group norms in daily life. Together, our results provide insight into the neural mechanisms through which social comparison processes shape conformity and suggest social cognition and valuation regions as important hubs orchestrating this process. While Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 focus on the influence of social ties on drinking, Chapter 3 discusses the protective role of close relations during difficult times. We provide evidence that close college friendships, even if afar, helped young adults cope with the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic. Follow-up between- and within-individual analyses reveal that this buffering effect could be explained by differences in the quality of online interactions (e.g., via phone, text messaging), instances of personal disclosure, and participation in enjoyable activities. All in all, this dissertation advances our understanding of why measures of social wellbeing are the best predictor of health trajectories in life, by highlighting the important role social ties play in shaping valuation of new information, guiding behavior to meet social goals, and protecting against stress by allowing people to engage in recreational activities.
26

Building common knowledge : a cultural-historical analysis of pedagogical practices at a rural primary school in Rajasthan, India

Rai, Prabhat January 2013 (has links)
The centralised control over curriculum framing and pedagogy, the generally poor quality of teaching with little sensitivity to children’s sociocultural environment; and very high drop out rates, even at the primary school level, are some of the challenges facing school education in many of the regions of India. However, one of the successful approaches to these challenges has been the Digantar school system, working in rural communities. The study is based in one Digantar School in Rajasthan and employs concepts derived from the Vygotskian tradition to interrogate the methods employed in Digantar school system. The study took Edwards’ (2010a, 2011, 2012) idea of common knowledge and Hedegaard’s (2008, 2012, 2013) idea of institutional demand in practices as conceptual lenses through which to investigate the components of the pedagogical practices that help Digantar teachers to align the motives of the school with those of the child in classroom activities. In doing so it analyses the institutional practices that lead to the development of common knowledge that in turn facilitates how teachers engage pupils as learners. Data were gathered over six months and comprised around 120 hours of school-based video data together with interviews and detailed observations with teachers and community members. Data were gathered in classrooms, teacher meetings, meetings between parents and teachers and at school-community meetings. Analyses focused on the construction of common knowledge and the use made of it by the school to achieve a mutual alignment of motives between the practices of the school with the community and the families. The study has revealed that teachers’ engagement with the knowledge and motives of other teachers and community members helped to create common knowledge, i.e. an understanding of what mattered for each participating group, which facilitated teaching-learning in the school. The analysis also points towards a form of democracy, which enhances children’s participation in their learning. It was found that building and sharing of common knowledge and creating a socially articulated ‘space of reasons’ (Derry 2008) produced a pedagogical model that engaged children in creating their social situation of development, seeking and recognising the curriculum demands being placed on them.
27

A secular mind : towards a cognitive anthropology of atheism

Lanman, Jonathan Andrew January 2010 (has links)
This thesis presents descriptive and explanatory accounts of both non-theism, the lack of belief in the existence of supernatural agents, and strong atheism, the moral opposition to such beliefs on the grounds that they are both harmful and signs of weak character. Based on my fieldwork with non-theist groups and individuals in the United States, United Kingdom, and Denmark, an online survey of over 3,000 non-theists from over 50 countries, and theories from both the social and cognitive sciences, I offer a new account of why nations with low economic and normative threats produce high levels of non-theism. This account is offered in place of the common explanation that religious beliefs provide comfort in threatening circumstances, which I show to be both anthropologically and psychologically problematic. My account centres on the role of threats, both existential and normative, in increasing commitment to ingroup ideologies, many of which are religious, and the important role of witnessing displays of commitment to religious beliefs in producing such beliefs in each new generation. In environments with low levels of personal and normative threat, commitment to religious ideologies decreases, extrinsic reasons for religious participation decrease, and superstitious actions decrease. Given the human tendency to believe the communications of others to the extent that they are backed up by action, such a decrease in displays of commitment to religious beliefs leads to increased non-theism in the span of a generation. In relation to strong atheism, I document a correlation, both geographical and chronological, between strong atheism and the presence of religious beliefs and demands in the public sphere. I then offer an explanation of this correlation based on the effects of threats against a modern normative order characterized by philosopher Charles Taylor as a system of mutual benefit and individual liberty.
28

Movement synchrony, social bonding and pro-sociality in ontogeny

Tuncgenc, Bahar January 2016 (has links)
Human sociality, with its wide scope, early ontogeny and pervasiveness across cultures, is remarkable from an evolutionary perspective. We form bonds with other individuals and live in large social groups. We help, empathise with and share our resources with others, who are unfamiliar and genetically unrelated to us. It has been suggested that interpersonal coordination and rhythmic synchronisation of movements may be one proximate mechanism that enables such widespread human sociality and facilitates cooperation. In the last decade, considerable research has examined the effect of movement synchrony on social bonding and cooperation. However, when this thesis started, there was virtually no experimental study investigating the ontogeny of the movement synchrony-social bonding link, which is proposed to have deep evolutionary roots and important, long-lasting consequences in social life. This thesis aims to investigate the effects of movement synchrony on social bonding and cooperative behaviour across different time points in ontogeny. Three experimental studies were conducted examining infancy, early childhood and middle childhood. Each study explored a different aspect of social bonding and cooperation based on the motor, social and cognitive developments that mark that age group. Study 1a found that at 12 months of age, infants prefer individuals who move in synchrony with them, when the individuals are social entities, but not when they are non-social. Study 1b showed no preferences for synchrony at 9 months in either social or non-social contexts, however. Study 2 revealed that in early childhood, performing synchronous movements actively with a peer facilitates helping behaviour among the children, as well as eye contact and mutual smiling during the interaction. Finally, Study 3 showed that the social bonding effects of movement synchrony applied to inter- group settings and that performing synchronous movements with out-groups increased bonding towards the out-group in middle childhood. This thesis followed an interdisciplinary, integrative and naturalistic approach, where (i) literature from a wide range of disciplines motivated and guided the present research; (ii) links between motor, social and cognitive aspects of development, which are often investigated separately, are formed; and (iii) the experiments were designed in ways that represent the real-life occurrences of the investigated phenomena. The current findings provide the first substantial evidence that movement synchrony facilitates social bonding and cooperation in childhood and thereby provides a foundation for future research.
29

Exploring the potential of an inventory based on social cognitive career theory to assess preparedness for the postsecondary transition

Douglas, Walter January 2016 (has links)
Background. The study was prompted by observation that failure to obtain a positive postsecondary destination is significantly more prevalent in young people living in areas of greater social deprivation, and in males rather than females. Previous studies have shown that this could be linked to differences in social cognitive factors. However, these studies have been mainly correlational and no comprehensive assessment instrument was found to assess preparedness for the postsecondary transition. Aims. The present study examines senior high school student’s perceptions of the personal, behavioural and environmental factors that affect them as they prepare to leave school. It reveals the structure of these factors and how they vary with regard to social deprivation and gender. Sample. The participants were 1044 senior high school students (573 males and 471 females) who attended six urban high schools. Method. A pre-empirical, 50-item assessment instrument was constructed based on the literature review to identify the wide range of factors previously shown to be relevant to achievement of a positive postsecondary destination. This was then administered to participants. Results. Factor analysis indicated that young people’s perceptions about leaving school were best represented by thirteen factors. An ANOVA model indicated that young people living in areas of higher deprivation reported significantly lower levels of positive postsecondary destination self-efficacy belief, less experience of vicarious career success, less performance of career development tasks, greater perception of career barriers, greater endorsement of a fixed career mindset, and fewer career scaffolding attachments. Males, compared to females, reported less experience of past career success, and fewer career scaffolding attachments. However, despite being at greater risk of a negative postsecondary destination, males reported higher levels of positive postsecondary destination self-efficacy belief, greater experience of positive career-related emotional arousal, greater ability to set career goals, and greater levels of career optimism. Conclusion. Twelve significant main effects on the measured social cognitive factors have the potential to contribute to an explanation of why failure to obtain a positive postsecondary destination is more prevalent in young people living in areas of greater social deprivation, and in males rather than females. A new assessment instrument has been produced to inform an ongoing exploratory process to design, target and evaluate educational interventions to improve postsecondary destinations for all. Increasing internal consistency, external validity and generalisability of findings are all desirable. Some future interventions are proposed on the basis of the results, including greater use of positive career role models in career development programmes, career mindset retraining for high school students, and psycho-education on attachment-fostering behaviours for parents and professionals.
30

Opvoedkundig-sielkundige riglyne vir die hantering van portuurgroepdruk

Schuld, Nicoleen 06 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Summary in English and Afrikaans / This study analyses the adolescent's peer pressure and the handling thereofby the adolescent, the parents, teachers and educational psychologist. The literature confirms that peer pressure is a multidimensional phenomenon. Certain factors such as the parent's behavioural- and cognitive functioning, the adolescent's social competence and susceptibility to peer pressure influence his compliance to peer pressure. Processes such as identification, internalization, modelling and coercion are involved in this compliance. The implementation of a mentor system and suggested program at school and the teaching of social-, decisionmaking, problemsolving- and selfassertiveness skills will help the adolescent to use peer pressure positively. The educational psychologist can support the adolescent and parents through individual, family and group therapy. / Hierdie studie handel oor die ontleding van portuurgroepdruk by die adolessent en die hantering daarvan deur die adolessent self, die ouers, onderwysers en opvoedkundige sielkundige. Die literatuur bevestig dat portuurgroepdruk 'n komplekse fenomeen met verskeie dimensies is. Verskeie faktore soos die ouers se gedrags- en kognitiewe funksionering, die adolessent se sosiale bekwaamheid en sy vatbaarheid vir portuurgroepdruk bei:nvloed sy toegewing aan portuurgroepdruk. Prosesse soos identifikasie, internalisasie, modellering en dwang is by die toegewing aan portuurgroepdruk betrokke. 'n Voorgestelde program vir die skool, die implementering van 'n portuurmentorprogram en die onderrig van sosiale-, besluitnemings-, probleemoplossings- en selfgeldingsvaardighede kan die adolessent help om portuurgroepdruk te gebruik. Die opvoedkundige sielkundige kan die ouer en adolessent deur individuele-, gesins- en groepterapie bystaan. / Educational Studies / M. Education (Guidance)

Page generated in 0.071 seconds