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Patients' perceptions preceding and following a bronchoscopy and thoracotomyCooper, Sally-Ann January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Some factors influencing adherence or non-adherence to treatment with patients on prophylactic tuberculosis medicationsShahan, Marilyn Rae, 1936- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Level of willingness as related to renal diseaseShangreaux, Donna Rae, 1935- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparison of individual and group administration of the Cattell Culture Fair Intelligence Scale and the Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children in a deliquent populationIreland, John Frederick, 1946- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Relationships between attitudes, knowledge and compliance to a medication regimenGiss, Marilyn Scott January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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The relationships between manifest anxiety, life style alterations and demographic variables in wives of men experiencing myocardial infarctionLarter, Mariella Harris January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of emotions in dyadic negotiation : an empirical studyButt, Arif Nazir January 2003 (has links)
This study examines the effects of performance feedback on negotiator emotions, interpersonal influence, negotiator behavior, and negotiation outcomes. A model based on the role of emotions in dyadic negotiation is proposed that comprises relationships amongst variables before, during, and after negotiation. This model is based on four major elements: namely, cognitive appraisal, emotional specificity, emotional flux, and interpersonal influence, and their influence on negotiator behavior and negotiation outcomes. / A 2 x 4 x 4 (Negotiation Role x Feedback Conditions for the Negotiator x Feedback Conditions for the Counterpart) experimental study was designed to examine the effects of performance feedback during negotiation in a simulation based on an employment contract negotiation. The experiment consisted of two negotiation tasks that were completed sequentially. The emotions of the participants were manipulated after Task 1 by providing them four types of performance feedback in Task 1. These feedbacks were based on two valences (success or failure) and two agency attributes (other locus of responsibility or self locus of responsibility). / Four hundred and fourteen participants from executive and academic programs at a Pakistani university took part in this study. The data were analyzed using general linear models, linear multiple regressions, and Pearson correlational analysis to test: (1) the arousal of negotiator emotions after Task 1 as a result of appraisal of the performance feedback, (2) the influence of negotiator emotions on negotiator behavior during Task 2, (3) the interpersonal influence of counterpart emotions and behavior during Task 2 on negotiator behavior in Task 2, (4) the effect of negotiator behavior in Task 2 on negotiation outcomes, (5) the effect of negotiation outcomes on post-negotiation emotions and the desire for future interaction. / The results supported the hypothesized relationships in the proposed model. The treatment effect was successful in producing the four factors of emotions: namely, anger, guilt-shame, gratitude, and pride-achievement emotions, corresponding to the four types of performance feedback. The negotiator behavior was predicted by these emotions along with counterpart emotions and behavior according to the proposed model. The negotiation outcomes were related to negotiator and counterpart behaviors. Negotiator satisfaction was the main predictor of post-negotiation emotions and the desire for future interaction, although economic negotiation outcomes played some role as well.
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Implicit memory for music : factors affecting musical priming and their time coursesHutchins, Sean. January 2008 (has links)
This thesis investigates implicit memory for music, as measured by repetition priming: a processing benefit for previously encountered items. Although repetition priming has been documented in many domains, including language, visual perception, and environmental sounds, it has not yet been demonstrated in music, a domain replete with pitch repetition. A novel methodology is presented in which participants sang back the final tone of a short melody. Experiments presented in Chapter 2 show that participants were faster to sing back a target tone when it was a repetition of a previous melodic tone than when it was not, and this effect was greatest when the repetition was closest to the target. These studies also showed a benefit for expected tonic tones, which were manipulated independently of the repetition effect. Chapter 3 presents a new analysis method for measuring response latencies in sung tones. A time-frequency representation that optimizes the tradeoff between time and frequency for each point in time yielded a measurement of singers' time to reach a target frequency, which takes into account both speed and accuracy of the vocal productions. The time-frequency measurement, applied to the data presented in Chapter 2, showed longer times to reach target frequency for higher pitches, as well as larger effects of tonal priming than were attained through traditional response latency measures. The experiments in Chapter 4 examine the time course of the effects of repetition and tonality. The singing-back paradigm used in Chapter 2 also was used with the additional manipulation of stimulus tempo. These studies implicated interference rather than decay as the cause of the decreased repetition priming effect. Stimulus tempo manipulations showed separate time courses for repetition and tonal priming. Together, these studies provide the first evidence of repetition priming in music, document its interaction with other factors including tonality and pitch height, and describe its time course. The findings are discussed in terms of sensory and cognitive theories of priming.
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Mother’s resistance to the Western dominant discourse on motheringHorwitz, Erika 05 1900 (has links)
This qualitative study was undertaken for the purpose of answering the following two
research questions: (a) What is the personal meaning and experience of mothering for women
who feel they are actively resisting the Western dominant discourse on mothering?, and (b) How
are these personal meanings and experiences grounded in the participants' personal contexts as
well as in dominant and alternative discourses and discursive practices? Fifteen women ranging
in age from 23 to 46 years, who self identified as actively resisting the dominant discourse, were
interviewed about their mothering experiences. Their interviews were transcribed and analyzed
following a critical interpretive approach (Cushman, 1995; Packer & Addison, 1989). In
answering the first research question three themes were identified: (a) resisting is rewarding and
liberating, (b) resisting entails juggling and balancing, (c) resisting entails cognitive work,
refraining, and reconciling. Although acknowledging the pragmatic and cognitive challenges
inherent in so doing, the women in the study experienced a sense of empowerment and pride in
their choice to resist.
In answering the second question, participants' identified concrete structural barriers to
their efforts to mother differently and acknowledged the importance of supportive partners,
friends, extended family members, education, financial resources, and flexible employment as
critical in their efforts to resist having their own needs completely subjugated to those of their
children. Participants drew on the discourses of feminism, achievement, individualism,
collectivity, self-care, science, attachment, and alternative medicine in supporting their efforts to
resist. They positioned themselves as caring responsible mothers, independent women,
educated/professionals, critical thinkers, and activists. The findings suggest that in positioning
themselves in opposition to the dominant, 'selfless mother' discourse, the participants were faced with negotiating between multiple and often contradictory discourses. In particular, the women
in the study struggled to negotiate between the selfless mother and the individual rights/self
actualization discourses. Furthermore, the findings suggest that the perception of resistance may
be as important in engendering a sense of agency for women who mother, as the actual
manifestation of resistance in their mothering practices. These findings are discussed in terms of
their implications for research, theory, and clinical practice.
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The meaning of stealing as lived in women with bulimia nervosaMcLagan, Beverley May 11 1900 (has links)
An exploratory case study using multiple cases
investigated the question "What is the meaning of
stealing in eating disordered women?" Seven women
diagnosed with bulimia nervosa participated in in-depth
interviews about this experience. The findings of these
interviews revealed commonalities and variations in the
patterns and dynamics of both stealing and bulimia.
Important information emerged about this experience
regarding restrictive family patterns, participants'
reactions to these restrictions through stealing and the
parallel restrictions and reactions of the bulimic
behaviours they later imposed upon themselves.
These results add new and in-depth information to
the few existing quantitative studies and clinical
knowledge addressing stealing in bulimic women.
Recommendations for future research and implications for
clinical practice were presented.
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