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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.
31

Interpretation of Nonverbal Expression of Emotion in Relation to Schizotypal Characteristics

Bell, Emily K. 01 January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
32

Deficits in Emotional Experience, Perception, and Clarity in Pre-Schizotypal Individuals

Karcher, Nicole Renee 01 January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
33

Predicting Personality Type from Writing Style

Gottigundala, Tanay 01 December 2020 (has links) (PDF)
The study of personality types gained traction in the early 20th century, when Carl Jung's theory of psychological types attempted to categorize individual differences into the first modern personality typology. Iterating on Jung's theories, the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) tried to categorize each individual into one of sixteen types, with the theory that an individual's personality type manifests in virtually all aspects of their life. This study explores the relationship between an individual's MBTI type and various aspects of their writing style. Using a MBTI-labeled dataset of user posts on a personality forum, three ensemble classifiers were created to predict a user's personality type from their posts with the goal of outperforming existing research as well as outperforming the test-retest reliability of online questionnaire-based personality assessments. With the increasing amount of textual data available today, the creation of an accurate text-based personality classifier would allow for user experience designers and psychologists to better tailor their services for their users.
34

Who Will Be Successful in The Gig Economy: Adaptability, Generations, Gender, Marriage, and Children

Parker, Lianne 01 January 2017 (has links)
The Gig-Economy is an alternative way of describing a world where long-term employees turn into short-term independent contractors in charge of their own careers. The cross-sectional half of the current study will gather data from multiple generations of professionals and emerging professionals that assesses their career adaptabilities, gender, marital status, presence of children, and preference for the Gig Economy. Previous research has not analyzed these factors in combination with each other. The Millennial participants from the cross-sectional portion of the study will be tested once every five years as they progress through their careers on these same measures. Millennials will have more career adapt abilities than other generations, and will prefer the Gig Economy more than other generations. However, females will prefer the Gig Economy more than men, as it provides for more flexibility. Those who are married and especially those with children will prefer the Gig Economy more than those who are unmarried or without children. The information from the current study will be helpful to anyone currently working in or about to start working. It will allow career counselors information with which to best guide Millennials and all those struggling to find their way in the Gig Economy.
35

The development of family counselors during internship: A multiple case study using constructive developmental theory

Kaiser, Donna Hines 01 January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
36

Personality Traits as Factors in Speech Proficiency

Dudley, H. Haddon 01 January 1941 (has links)
No description available.
37

Selling and the Salesman: Prediction of Short-Term Success, Personality Changes, and Cognitive Dissonance

Turnbull, Allen anderson 01 January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
38

The relationship of personality to ability-achievement of college freshmen

Cooper, Carolyn I. Allen, -1942 01 January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
39

Skin Reactivity, Allergic Diagnosis and Personality

McCollum, Richard Herbert 01 January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
40

Indicators of Anxiety on Bender Records: A Correlational Study

Dooley, Kevin 01 August 1977 (has links)
Since the Bender's growth in popularity as a tool for assessing organic brain damage, other factors have been shown to influence the accuracy of design reproductions. Mental deficiency, cultural background, early age and :ex are among those factors. Attempts to demonstrate the effect: of personality traits have been few, but supportive. Research into the influence of personality on Bender performance has largely been group comparison designs. The degree of overlap found among groups has reduced the degree of confidence with which the results can be applied to individual performance:. The present study used a correlational approach to determine how validly State and/or Trait Anxiety can be predicted from Bender records. Results indicated significantly more positive correlations than chance between 22 of the Bender deviations and deviations scored for severity and both the State and Trait Anxiety measures. This supported the hypothesis that Bender deviations are affected by the presence of anxiety. A factor analysis of the Bender records did not produce any robust factors, probably because of the high sample homogeneity with respect to their Bender performance. Alpha coefficients were increased from those obtained on the Deviation Total and Deviation Severity scales by selecting two subscales from each, based on the item-total coefficients of the deviations. Correlations consequently increased with State and Trait Anxiety on three of the four subscales. Lastly, a step-wise multiple regression procedure was applied to both the Deviation Total and Deviation Severity scale to obtain multiple Rs with :State and Trait Anxiety. Adding deviations continued to increase the multiple R of the lists through eight to thirteen steps. Corrections for the small sample size estimated the possible shrinkage of the multiple Rs. Discussion focused on finding no correlations between are, sex and Bender performance, as expected. It also stressed some of the procedural flaws and data assumptions, most noticeable of which was the need for a more reliable Bender scoring blank for further research. Finally, it was concluded that the results supported the hypothesis that Bender deviations are influenced by anxiety. However, the results further pointed out that Bender deviations, as presently defined, are affected by other factors as well. It was therefore cautioned that sender reproductions should be considered only a rough predictor of the presence and extent of anxiety in an individual.

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