Search results for "DISTINCTIVENESS"

showing 10 items of 22 documents

From Ethnic Law to Town Law: The Customs of the Kingdom of Sicily from the Twelfth to the Fifteenth Century

2016

The history of Sicily, the largest island of the Mediterranean, is notably distinct from the history of the rest of Italy. It is because of this distinctiveness that Sicily can serve as a paradigmatic example of a pluralist legal system, one with a mix of both personal-law and territorial-law rules. In the time period that I examine in this essay, customary law took several different forms. What legislation, private records, and judicial decisions all call »custom« plays three different roles: law of specific ethnic groups, rights and customary practices concerning real property, and the law of towns.

HistoryReal propertyFifteenthRegno di SiciliaMedioevo; Storia del diritto; Consuetudine; Regno di SiciliaEthnic groupJudicial opinionlcsh:LawLegislationlcsh:Political scienceStoria del dirittoConsuetudineKingdomSettore IUS/19 - Storia Del Diritto Medievale E ModernoGeographyMedioevoLawOptimal distinctiveness theoryMPIeRLawPeriod (music)lcsh:Jlcsh:K
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Discussion

1999

Homo sapiens L. has been described as the naked ape, and this nakedness undoubtedly constitutes one of the most striking differences in appearance between man and the apes. Nakedness has been attributed at various times to sexual selection [1], aquatic stage [2], hunting [3], cooling [4], sex [5], neoteny [6] and allometry [7], most proposed explanations logically revealing some aspect of the phenomenon. However, most fail to account for the distinctiveness of man's hairlessness among mammals of the same size. Unfortunately, fossils cannot help us to explain how denudation occurred, and how it helped hominids to survive. In this paper I will present an old hypothesis with a new point of vie…

Infectious DiseasesbiologyHomo sapiensHominidaeEvolutionary biologySexual selectionZoologyParasitologyOptimal distinctiveness theoryBiological evolutionAdaptationbiology.organism_classificationNeotenyInternational Journal for Parasitology
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Temporal stability and representational distinctiveness: Key functions of orthographic working memory

2011

A primary goal of working memory research has been to understand the mechanisms that permit working memory systems to effectively maintain the identity and order of the elements held in memory for sufficient time as to allow for their selection and transfer to subsequent processing stages. Based on the performance of two individuals with acquired dysgraphia affecting orthographic working memory (WM; the graphemic buffer), we present evidence of two distinct and dissociable functions of orthographic WM. One function is responsible for maintaining the temporal stability of letters held in orthographic WM, while the other is responsible for maintaining their representational distinctiveness. T…

MaleTime FactorsCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySemanticsworking memoryArticledysgraphiaworking memory; spelling; dysgraphia; orthographic representationsspellingArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)DysgraphiaDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineSelection (linguistics)HumansAgraphiaAgedSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaWorking memoryorthographic representationsOrthographic projectionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSemanticsSerial position effectMemory Short-TermNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAgraphiaOptimal distinctiveness theorymedicine.symptomPsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyCognitive Neuropsychology
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An empirical analysis of online price dispersion in the Italian airline industry

2015

Firms operating in the electronic marketplace set and adjust prices to affect demand and profitability. In service markets, such as airline markets, different prices are commonly offered by diverse firms to accommodate to a variety of market segments having particular sets of consumer attitudes. This variation in prices is the price dispersion and is based on market distinctiveness deriving from customer heterogeneity as well as the peculiar competition in the specific market arena. In this paper we use a panel dataset from the Italian airline market to investigate the role of competition and different online channels in the emergence of price dispersion. Specifically, we examine the unclea…

Marketingprice dispersionmedia_common.quotation_subjectairline industryeconometric analysis.price dispersion; online distribution channels; airline industry; econometric analysis.Management Information SystemsVariety (cybernetics)Competition (economics)CommerceMarket segmentationService (economics)Agency (sociology)Price dispersionProfitability indexOptimal distinctiveness theoryonline distribution channelBusinessBusiness and International ManagementIndustrial organizationmedia_common
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Changing the Corporate Elite? Not so Easy: Female Directorss Appointments Onto Corporate Boards

2013

Scholars have previously investigated country and organizational-level factors associated with the incidence of female directors on boards. These studies, however, cannot explain why, in countries with strong gender equality and pressure for female directorships, firms are still hesitant to promote new women to their boards. To address this issue we – in this study – introduce the cognitive and affective processes related to directors’ identification with the traditional corporate elite as an explanation for the slow organizational response to pressure for gender diversity on boards. We bridge the social identity and critical mass theory to further show how these responses may vary with the…

On boardGender equalityGender diversitybusiness.industryPolitical scienceInstitutional investorEliteAccountingOptimal distinctiveness theoryPublic relationsbusinessSocial identity theorySSRN Electronic Journal
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From the unity of sensible intuition to the sensible unity of intuition : revisiting the proof-structure of Kant?s B-Deduction argument

2019

The B-Deduction accounts for Kant’s utmost solution at safeguarding both the distinctiveness and a necessary relation between understanding and sensibility. I aim at proposing an original thesis to the debate on this solution: the B-Deduction argument profits from a methodology correlating the unity of sensible intuition to the sensible unity of intuition. At first, Kant’s definition of “transcendental cognition” is set forth. Secondly, an inquiry into the argument’s methodology is carried out. After that, the justification of the categories within the understanding’s domain is taken into account. Finally, the relation of the understanding to sensibility is brought into discussion.

PhilosophySensibilityOptimal distinctiveness theoryGeneral MedicineTranscendental numberEpistemologyIntuition
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Do symmetrical letter pairs affect readability?

2005

Our everyday experience shows that we have problems in recognizing objects which only differ in their symmetry properties (street signs with two arrows in different directions or mathematical signs such as 〈 and 〉). Perception is closely correlated with an inner comparison: the perceived object with its surrounding, the perceived object with former experience and so on. The brain has evolved different constancy abilities (e.g. colour constancy) and one of them is object constancy. This object constancy makes it possible to perceive an object regardless of its orientation in space. Symmetric letter pairs with different sound representations (such as 〈b〉 and 〈d〉) are, due to object constancy,…

Space (punctuation)Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectObject (philosophy)Language and LinguisticsLinguisticsWriting systemPerceptionOrientation (geometry)RunesOptimal distinctiveness theorySymmetry (geometry)media_commonMathematicsWritten Language and Literacy
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Solid ground makes solid understandings: does simple comparison paves the way for more complex comparisons ?

2021

In this experiment, we investigated the role of dimensional distinctiveness on the generalization of novel names for unfamiliar objects. In a comparison design, we manipulated the sequence of trials difficulty, starting either with more difficult trials or with easier trials. To achieve this, we manipulated the dimensional distinctiveness of the first comparison trials and of the, later, transfer trials. Results showed that high-distinctiveness (easy) stimuli increased children’s later performance in the low-distinctiveness (difficult) condition whereas low-distinctiveness early training led to no later improvement in easier trials. Last, a correct answer for the first trial in the first le…

TransferPreschoolerscognitive science[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/PsychologyGeneralizationDistinctivenessComparisonWord learningComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Towards Resilient Organisations and Societies? Reflections on the Multifaceted Nature of Resilience

2021

AbstractAs the chapters in this volume have shown, resilience is a multifaceted and malleable concept that can be fruitfully applied to a wide range of phenomena at all levels of society. At the same time, there is a distinct danger of concept stretching. In this concluding chapter, we look at both the extensiveness of the concept, reviewing the range of complementary concepts that have been engaged by the authors, and how it can be delimited to maintain conceptual distinctiveness and explanatory value. What is more, we provide some recommendations on how scholars working across disciplinary boundaries may go about unpacking resilience in and for organizations and societies.

Value (ethics)Optimal distinctiveness theoryEnvironmental ethicsSociologyResilience (network)DisciplineVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Statsvitenskap og organisasjonsteori: 240
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Generalizing novel names in comparison settings: Role of conceptual distance during learning and at test

2017

International audience; In a comparison setting (two stimuli), we tested 4- and 6-year-old children’s generalization of novel names for objects. We manipulated the semantic distance between the two learning items (e.g., two bracelets versus a bracelet and a watch), and the semantic distance between the learning items and the test items (e.g., a pendant versus a bow tie). We tested whether smaller semantic distance between learning items would lead to more taxonomic (vs. perceptual) choices at test, than broader semantic distance during learning, especially in the case of distant test stimuli. Results revealed main effects of learning distance, of generalization distance and that only childr…

[SCCO]Cognitive science[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyExecutive Functions[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/Psychology[ SCCO.PSYC ] Cognitive science/PsychologyDistinctiveness[ SCCO ] Cognitive scienceComparison[SCCO] Cognitive scienceConceptual development
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