Search results for " Behavioral sciences"

showing 4 items of 124 documents

Unfair play? Video games as exploitative monetized services: An examination of game patents from a consumer protection perspective

2019

Video games as a consumer product have changed significantly with the advent of in-game purchasing systems (e.g., microtransactions, ‘loot boxes’). This review examines consumer protections related to in-game purchasing by anticipating some of the potential design strategies that might contribute to higher risk consumer behavior. Attention was directed towards the analysis of patents for potential in-game purchasing systems, with 13 identified on Google Patents. The design features were analysed in relation to the consumer rights and guarantees described in the terms of use agreements of the patent assignees. The analysis revealed that some in-game purchasing systems could be characterized …

predatory monetization050801 communication & media studiesEntitlementBehavioral economicsvideo gamegaming disorder0508 media and communicationsGame designArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)microtransaction: Multidisciplinary general & others [H99] [Social & behavioral sciences psychology]MarketingVideo gameGeneral PsychologyConsumer behaviour05 social sciencesComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING:170106 - Health Clinical and Counselling Psychology [FoR]050301 educationConsumer protection: Multidisciplinaire généralités & autres [H99] [Sciences sociales & comportementales psychologie]Purchasingconsumer protectionHuman-Computer Interaction; Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous); General Psychology; Gambling; GamingHuman-Computer InteractionConsumer Bill of Rightsin-game purchasingBusiness0503 educationComputers in Human Behavior
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Selecting the special or choosing the common? A high-powered conceptual replication of Kim and Markus’ (1999) pen study

2022

Kim and Markus (1999) found that 74% of Americans selected a pen with an uncommon (vs. common) color, whereas only 24% of Asians made such a choice, highlighting a pronounced crosscultural difference in the extent to which people opt for originality or make majority-based choices. The present high-powered study (N = 729) conceptually replicates the results from Kim and Markus (1999; Study 3). However, our obtained effect size (r = .12) is significantly weaker than that of the original study (r = .52). Interestingly, given the globalization of mass media and the rapid economic progress of many Asian cultures during the last decades, a larger proportion of Chinese, but not American, participa…

replicationself-construalSocial PsychologyComputer sciencecollectivistuniquenessAMERICANCross-culturalComputational biologySocial and Behavioral SciencesSELFReplication (computing)CULTUREFOS: PsychologyVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Psykologi: 260individualisticCOGNITIONPsychologyMETAANALYSISVIVIDNESSADVERTISING APPEALSGENERATIONThe Journal of Social Psychology
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From Sequences to Variables : Rethinking the Relationship between Sequences and Outcomes

2021

Sequence analysis is increasingly used in the social sciences for the holistic analysis of life-course and other longitudinal data. The usual approach is to construct sequences, calculate dissimilarities, group similar sequences with cluster analysis, and use cluster membership as a dependent or independent variable in a regression model. This approach may be problematic, as cluster memberships are assumed to be fixed known characteristics of the subjects in subsequent analyses. Furthermore, it is often more reasonable to assume that individual sequences are mixtures of multiple ideal types rather than equal members of some group. Failing to account for uncertain and mixed memberships may l…

sequence analysisrepresentativenesslife-courseSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology|Children and Youthbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|SociologySocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociologyklusteritbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Sociology|Family Life Course and Societysekvenssianalyysianalyysibepress|Social and Behavioral SciencesklusterianalyysiSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciencestypologycluster analysis
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PERSOC: A Unified Framework for Understanding the Dynamic Interplay of Personality and Social Relationships

2011

The interplay of personality and social relationships is as fascinating as it is complex and it pertains to a wide array of largely separate research domains. Here, we present an integrative and unified framework for analysing the complex dynamics of personality and social relationships (PERSOC). Basic principles and general processes on the individual and dyadic level are outlined to show how personality and social relationships influence each other and develop over time. PERSOC stresses the importance of social behaviours and interpersonal perceptions as mediating processes organized in social interaction units. The framework can be applied to diverse social relationships such as first en…

social relations modelactual behaviourSocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectmediating processesSocial and Behavioral Sciencessocial relationshipsSocial relationFOS: PsychologyFriendshipddc:150personalityinterpersonal perceptionSocial relationshipPsychologyPersonalitySocial competenceInterpersonal perceptionInterpersonal interactionSocial organizationPsychologydevelopmentSocial psychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Personality
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