Search results for "Choice Behavior"

showing 10 items of 110 documents

A diffusion model account of normal and impaired readers.

2004

Acquired aphasics and dyslexics with even very profound word reading impairments have been shown to perform relatively well on the lexical decision task (e.g., Buchanan, Hildebrandt, & MacKinnon, 1999), but direct contrasts with unimpaired participants data is often complicated by extremely long reaction times for patient data. The dissociation between lexical decision and word naming performance shown by these patients is of theoretical importance, and here we present an analysis of processing underlying the lexical decision task. We are able to determine what aspects of performance are affected by acquired aphasics in the lexical decision task. We fit lexical decision data from aphasic pa…

Dissociation (neuropsychology)Cognitive NeuroscienceDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyModels PsychologicalLexiconChoice BehaviorDyslexiaArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)NeurolinguisticsAphasiaDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyLexical decision taskmedicineAphasiaReaction TimeHumansLanguage disordercomputer.programming_languageCognitionmedicine.diseaseLinguisticsSemanticsStrokeNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingHealthBrain Damage ChronicLexicomedicine.symptomPsychologycomputerCognitive psychologyBrain and cognition
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Homeless Adults' Recovery Experiences in Housing First and Traditional Services Programs in Seven European Countries.

2020

Across Europe, as governments turn to housing-led strategies in attempts to reverse rising rates of homelessness, increasing numbers of Housing First (HF) programs are being implemented. As HF programs become more widespread, it is important to understand how service users experience them compared to the more prevalent traditional treatment-first approach to addressing long-term homelessness. Although there is a large body of research on service users' experiences of Housing First compared to treatment-first in North American contexts, comparatively less is known about how these two categories of homeless services are experienced in the European context. In a correlational and cross-section…

GerontologyAdultMaleHealth (social science)Housing Firstmedia_common.quotation_subjectService satisfactionConsumer choiceSatisfactionContext (language use)Community integrationChoice; Homelessness; Housing First; Housing quality; Recovery; SatisfactionChoice BehaviorHealthcare improvement science Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 18]03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultChoiceRecoveryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesQuality (business)Service userApplied Psychologymedia_commonAgedAged 80 and over030505 public healthbusiness.industryMental Disorders05 social sciences1. No povertyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHomelessnessHousing qualityMiddle AgedCommunity Mental Health ServicesEuropeCross-Sectional StudiesIll-Housed PersonsHousingFemaleHousing First0305 other medical sciencebusinessPsychologyAccommodation050104 developmental & child psychologyAmerican journal of community psychologyReferences
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The school nutrition environment and its association with soft drink intakes in seven countries across Europe - the ENERGY project

2014

The school is an important setting for promoting healthy eating especially at the transition from childhood to adolescence. This study contributes to the literature by describing practices within physical, political and sociocultural aspects of the school nutrition environment in seven countries across Europe based on questionnaires to the school management, and exploring their associations with soft drink consumption reported on questionnaires by 10-12 year olds. Several of the commonly self-reported practices could be supportive of a healthy diet (time to eat, access to water, restriction on marketing), but some practices were underutilized (i.e. discussion with stakeholders, healthy food…

GerontologyMaleHealth (social science)AdolescentEnergy (esotericism)Geography Planning and DevelopmentHealthy eatingCarbonated BeveragesChoice BehaviorFood SupplySurveys and QuestionnairesMedicineHumansAssociation (psychology)Sociocultural evolutionChildConsumption (economics)Schoolsbusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthFeeding BehaviorHealthy dietEuropeCross-Sectional StudiesChild PreschoolFemaleSoft drinkbusiness
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Gestational exposure to cocaine alters cocaine reward

2006

Exposure of the developing foetus to drugs of abuse during pregnancy may lead to persistent abnormalities of brain systems involved in drug addiction. Mice prenatally exposed to cocaine (25 mg/kg), physiological saline or non-treated during the last 7 days of pregnancy were evaluated in adulthood for the rewarding properties of cocaine (3, 25 and 50 mg/kg), using the conditioned place preference procedure. Dams treated with physiological saline gained significantly less weight over the course of gestation than controls; no other differences were observed in the maternal and offspring data. All the animals developed preference to 3 and 25 mg/kg of cocaine, but those treated prenatally with c…

Gestational exposureOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhysiologySocial EnvironmentChoice BehaviorCocaine-Related DisordersMiceCocaineRewardPregnancyOrientationConditioning PsychologicalAvoidance LearningmedicineAnimalsmedia_commonPharmacologyMotivationFetusPregnancyDose-Response Relationship DrugAddictionAssociation LearningBrainmedicine.diseaseConditioned place preferencePsychiatry and Mental healthPrenatal Exposure Delayed EffectsAnesthesiaGestationFemaleBrain stimulation rewardCuesPsychologyBehavioural Pharmacology
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Familiarity changes as a function of perceptual shifts.

2010

This experiment compares the yes-­no and forced recognition tests as methods of measuring familiarity. Participants faced a phase of 3 study-­test recognition trials in which they studied words using all the letters of the alphabet (overlapping condition, O), and an additional phase in which targets and lures did not share any letters (non-­overlapping condition, NO). Finally, subjects performed a forced-­choice task in which they had to choose one of two new words, each from one of the subsets (Parkin et al., 2001). Results in the NO condition higher than .50, showing their sensitivity to familiarity. When the letter set of the words for study in the third list of the NO condition was swit…

Linguistics and LanguageVerbal learningChoice BehaviorLanguage and LinguisticsPhoneticsHumansAttentionSet (psychology)General PsychologyRecognition memoryPsycholinguisticsRecallMemoriaCognitionPhoneticsRecognition PsychologyVerbal LearningPaired-Associate LearningTest (assessment)SemanticsPsicologiaPsychologyPsychological TheorySocial psychologyCognitive psychologyThe Spanish journal of psychology
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Transposed-letter and laterality effects in lexical decision.

2006

Two divided visual field lexical decision experiments were conducted to examine the role of the cerebral hemispheres in transposed-letter similarity effects. In Experiment 1, we created two types of nonwords: nonadjacent transposed-letter nonwords (TRADEGIA; the base word was TRAGEDIA, the Spanish for TRAGEDY) and two-letter different nonwords (orthographic controls: TRATEPIA). In Experiment 2, the controls were one-letter different nonwords (TRAGEPIA) instead of two-letter different nonwords (TRATEPIA). The effect of transposed-letter similarity was substantially greater in the right visual field (left hemisphere) than in the left visual field. Furthermore, nonwords created by transposing …

Linguistics and LanguageVisual perceptionCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingBrainExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionChoice BehaviorVocabularyLanguage and LinguisticsLateralization of brain functionFunctional LateralityVisual fieldSpeech and HearingPerceptionLateralityWord recognitionLexical decision taskHumansVisual FieldsPsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_commonBrain and language
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The effect of the emotive decisions in prospect theory.

2015

AbstractThe main purpose of this paper was to show that the certainty and reflection effects of prospect theory do not occur when stimuli have an affective value. To this end, 160 participants were asked to reply to a series of problems originally designed by Kahneman and Tversky (1979), but modified according to the contributions of Rottenstreich and Hsee (2001). The sample was divided into four experimental conditions, two in a gain situation and two in a loss situation. In both cases, affect-rich and affect-poor stimuli were applied in sure and probable alternatives. The findings showed that, in agreement with our hypotheses, the affective value of the stimuli altered the outcome predict…

Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomics BehavioralDecision MakingEmotionsUncertaintySample (statistics)CertaintyOutcome (game theory)Choice BehaviorLanguage and LinguisticsAffectEmotiveProspect theoryHumansPsychologyPsychological TheorySocial psychologyValue (mathematics)General Psychologymedia_commonCognitive psychologyThe Spanish journal of psychology
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Suspected motor problems and low preference for active play in childhood are associated with physical inactivity and low fitness in adolescence.

2011

Background This prospective longitudinal study investigates whether suspected motor problems and low preference for active play in childhood are associated with physical inactivity and low cardiorespiratory fitness in adolescence. Methodology/Principal Findings The study sample consisted of the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 (NFBC 1986) composed of 5,767 children whose parents responded to a postal inquiry concerning their children's motor skills at age 8 years and who themselves reported their physical activity at age 16 years. Cardiorespiratory fitness was measured with a cycle ergometer test at age 16 years. Odds ratios (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for the level o…

Longitudinal studymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPhysical fitnesslcsh:MedicineMotor ActivityChoice Behavior03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineLongitudinal StudiesProspective Studiesta315Prospective cohort studyChildlcsh:Scienceta515Motor skillFinland2. Zero hungerMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:RPediatrics and Child Health/Adolescent MedicineCardiorespiratory fitness030229 sport sciencesOdds ratiomedicine.diseaseObesityPediatrics and Child Health/Child DevelopmentPhysical FitnessPhysical therapyPublic Health and Epidemiology/Preventive Medicinelcsh:QPublic Health and Epidemiology/Exercise and SportsbusinessBody mass indexPublic Health and Epidemiology/Social and Behavioral Determinants of HealthDemographyResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Evolution of male and female choice in polyandrous systems

2017

We study the evolution of male and female mating strategies and mate choice for female fecundity and male fertilization ability in a system where both sexes can mate with multiple partners, and where there is variation in individual quality (i.e. in the availability of resources individuals can allocate to matings, mate choice and production of gametes). We find that when the cost of mating differs between sexes, the sex with higher cost of mating is reluctant to accept matings and is often also choosy, while the other sex accepts all matings. With equal mating costs, the evolution of mating strategies depends on the strength of female sperm limitation, so that when sperm limitation is stro…

Male0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMultiple PartnersEvolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectpolyandryBiologyChoice BehaviorModels Biological010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologysperm competitionSexual Behavior Animal03 medical and health sciencesmultiple matingsex rolesAnimalssexual selectionMatingSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologylisääntymiskäyttäytyminenEcologyReproductionGeneral MedicineFecunditylisääntyminenBiological EvolutionSpermatozoa030104 developmental biologySexual behaviorMate choicesukupuolivalintaparinvalintaSexual selectionpolyandriabehavior and behavior mechanismsta1181FemaleReproductionGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDemographyProceedings of the Royal Society B : Biological Sciences
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Women's preferences for men's facial masculinity are strongest under favorable ecological conditions

2019

AbstractThe strength of sexual selection on secondary sexual traits varies depending on prevailing economic and ecological conditions. In humans, cross-cultural evidence suggests women’s preferences for men’s testosterone dependent masculine facial traits are stronger under conditions where health is compromised, male mortality rates are higher and economic development is higher. Here we use a sample of 4483 exclusively heterosexual women from 34 countries and employ mixed effects modelling to test how social, ecological and economic variables predict women’s facial masculinity preferences. We report women’s preferences for more masculine looking men are stronger in countries with higher so…

Male0301 basic medicineAttractivenessFacial masculinityOffspringlcsh:MedicineEcological and Environmental Phenomena[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyPhysical strengthChoice BehaviorArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine5. Gender equalityHumansCross-culturallcsh:ScienceHeterosexualityMasculinityCultural CharacteristicsMultidisciplinaryEcologylcsh:RHuman development (humanity)Sexual dimorphism030104 developmental biologySocioeconomic FactorsFacePhysical Appearance BodySexual selectionlcsh:QFemalePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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