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Latack, Janina C.; Gagen, Mary G. – 1982
Job loss is a stressful event, partially because of the obvious stress of economic deprivation. However, research shows that job loss also has psychological effects. The impact of losing a job has been investigated in terms of personality (self esteem, mental health, and affective states) and in terms of the transitional stages of reactions to job…
Descriptors: Career Education, Coping, Grief, Job Layoff
Luczcz, M. A. – 1982
Three experiments using the same overall design were conducted to address problems associated with repeated measurement designs employed to assess retention of information in complex pictures and to assess the developmental course of schemata-guided retention efforts. Forty-eight subjects, ages 6, 10, and 20 years, were shown scenes whose forms…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Pictorial Stimuli, Psychological Studies, Reading Research
Cross, Theodore P.; Saxe, Leonard – 1984
The psychological effects on viewers of the television film "The Day After," designed to dramatize the possibility of nuclear war and its horrible consequences, were examined by this study. Subjects were 435 residents of the Boston metropolitan area who were randomly sampled from area telephone directories and interviewed by telephone.…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Majority Attitudes, Mass Media Effects, Nuclear Warfare
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Fox, Harvey; Lefkowitz, Joel – Personnel Psychology, 1974
The goal of this investigation was to derive a common battery of tests for both whites and negroes, and utilizing, if possible, uniform selection standards. (Author)
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Performance Criteria, Predictive Validity, Psychological Studies
Macaulay, Jacqueline – 1977
This paper concerns the variety of responses women commonly make to provocation--to frustration, thwarting, hurt, deprivation, and other conditions which usually lead to some kind of emotional arousal, the experience of anger, and possibly aggression. Gender differences (culturally shaped) are reviewed where relevant, and a brief review of the…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Aggression, Emotional Response, Females
Hyde, Janet S.; Schuck, John R. – 1977
In response to Maccoby and Jacklin's (1974) conclusion that sex differences in aggression must be biological in origin, we suggest alternative social-learning mechanisms to explain the differences. These mechanisms include: (1) punishment for aggression increases aggression in boys, particularly because boys do not identify with the punisher; (2)…
Descriptors: Aggression, Child Psychology, Children, Developmental Psychology
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Remington, Roger W.; And Others – 1976
Using between subject designs, Tversky and Sherman (1975) and Weaver (1974) demonstrated that increases in the blank interval (offtime) separating two successive pictures leads to improved performance on retention tests. If this improvement results from active rehearsal strategies, subjects should be able to differentially rehearse pictures cued…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology, Memory, Pictorial Stimuli
Ghatala, Elizabeth S.; And Others – 1977
An analysis was performed of multiple-choice tests in terms of the frequency theory of recognition memory. High and low ability children listened to sentences under different instructional sets (imagery rating and sentence repetition) and were later tested with multiple-choice alternatives: (1) either identical or similar in meaning to the…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Intermediate Grades, Learning Processes, Multiple Choice Tests
Pace, Ann Jaffe – 1978
The relationship between children's knowledge of particular situations and their comprehension of stories about them was investigated. Children in kindergarten and grades two, four, and six heard stories about differentially familiar situations and then answered questions. "Scripts," characterizing knowledge about stereotypical events, were…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Context Clues
Hildyard, Angela – 1977
Forty-eight pupils from grades one, three, and five participated in a study of the extent to which children are able to use their prior knowledge and expectancies to aid them in integrating verbal material and in drawing appropriate inferences. Six stories were constructed for each of four inference levels, and 11 questions were prepared for each…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Context Clues
Restle, Frank, Ed.; And Others – 1975
The 13 chapters in this book are based on papers presented at the 1974 Indiana Cognitive/Mathematical Psychology Conference, at which contributors were asked to emphasize the relatively broad theoretical significance of their work, to incorporate the work of others, and to speculate about future developments. Topics covered include the nature and…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Decision Making
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Sutton-Smith, Brian – Urban Review, 1975
Argues that the area in which the artistic development of young children can be helped immediately, without awaiting teacher retraining in the various arts, is story telling: if children are continually asked to tell stories, and if delight is shown in their stories, then the stories improve; eventually children want to write them down. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Classroom Communication, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education
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Strickland, Bonnie R.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1975
Explains a study designed to consider the influence of positive and negative affect induced by cognitive mediation on behaviors thought to reflect depression. Concludes that results show fairly strong support for Velten's (1968) methodology and suggest that affect can be manipulated in the laboratory. (Author/EJT)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Measures, Behavior Patterns, College Students
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Notz, William W. – American Psychologist, 1975
Summarizes and discusses findings on two hypotheses predicting interaction between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation: extrinsic rewards are those which provide satisfaction independent of the actual activity itself and are controlled by someone other than the employee, whereas intrinsic rewards are those over which the employee has a high degree…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Motivation, Motivation Techniques, Psychological Studies
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Thompson, Vaida D. – Journal of Social Issues, 1974
Reviews theory and research on two issues which may be of concern to population planners: (1) are there likely to be shifts to the zero and one-child family; and (2) do children in single and two-child families differ from one another and from members of larger families in terms of psychological characteristics? (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Cultural Influences, Family Characteristics, Family Influence
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