FY86 Year-End Repot for Project 5720 - Software Center General Support

1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith A. Clapp
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miharu Nakanishi ◽  
Taeko Nakashima ◽  
Yukako Yamaoka ◽  
Keiko Hada ◽  
Hideaki Tanaka

2010 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
pp. 447-448
Author(s):  
Cindy Hamon-Hill ◽  
John Barresi

AbstractWe focus on the role that motor mimicry plays in the SIMS model when interpreting whether a facial emotional expression is appropriate to an eliciting context. Based on our research, we find general support for the SIMS model in these situations, but with some qualifications on how disruption of motor mimicry as a process relates to speed and accuracy in judgments.


Author(s):  
Jesús Glaz-Fontes

Amid increasing expectations for socioeconomic relevance, higher education confronts, in many countries, a similar set of challenges: declining general-support levels linked with more performance-based funding, expanded enrollment demand, an increasingly knowledge-based and global economy, and a more intense managerialism. While giving unprecedented centrality to academic work, deteriorating conditions of work and of increased accountability has placed more performance pressure on the faculty.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Mueller ◽  
Ann R. Tickamyer

Understanding rural resident support for various forms of natural resource related economic development has been a common research topic in rural sociology. However, the vast majority of research has only evaluated support for one form of natural resource use at a time. The little research that has explored support for a wide variety of uses has found that residents are likely to support many of the suggested forms of development. We assessed rural resident support for seven forms of natural resource development: commercial logging, natural gas, mining, real estate, wind energy, tourism, and outdoor recreation. Using social exchange theory, this study examines the influence of perceived impacts of development, industry trust, and perceived industry power on general support for the seven forms of natural resource-related economic development using a fixed effects generalized linear model among a sample of residents of rural Pennsylvania communities. Additionally, we use mixed logit discreet choice modeling to evaluate the drivers of relative support, meaning a stated preference for one form of development over other possible options. The drivers of general support and relative support were similar, with trust in industry and impacts to quality of life emerging as the primary drivers of both.


The Geologist ◽  
1860 ◽  
Vol 3 (02) ◽  
pp. 55-62
Author(s):  
George C. Roberts

Coral-Hunting in the debris of a Wenlock-shale quarry ranks high— to my thinking—amongst the pleasures of geology. And, indeed, has no insignificant place among its wonders. For to any one not conversant with zoophytic life, it is hard to believe that the rugged corals that lie strewn about the quarry, once held sensitive masses of life—that from every pore tiny arms waved to and fro in the water to entangle the lesser creatures they lived on; and that the animal— that slight thread of jelly-like substance, filling each tube, was at once a limb of the body and an independent creature, contributing, while attached, to the general support, and being able, if severed from the mass, to lead a separate existence and be itself the parent of others. The Wenlock series of the Upper Silurians have been rightly regarded as the metropolis of its zoophytic life, for both in variety and number, corals culminated in the seas of that age. Of these species, “so far removed from existing ones as to be quite unknown in modern seas, all with rare exceptions, dying out at the close of the Palæozoic epoch.” I will essay a familiar sketch.


1972 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leon N. Karadbil ◽  
Sean P. Foohey ◽  
Douglas E. Smith ◽  
Jerry L. Buffay

1996 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue Bradbury ◽  
L S. O'Brien ◽  
Michael Göpfert

A postal survey was conducted among doctors practising psychiatry in the Mersey Region to ascertain attitudes, beliefs and practice with regard to psychotherapy, achieving a response rate of over 60%. There was a surprising absence of very strong feelings for or against psychotherapy which was not seen as a powerful treatment modality. There was little knowledge of the facilities provided by the regional service, and no general support for their expansion. The role of training in psychotherapy and its significance in light of guidelines for general trainees ore discussed. A need is recognised for greater awareness and contact between psychiatrists and the psychotherapy service.


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