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Humphreys, Lloyd G. – Intelligence, 1991
Cross-lagged methodology (CLM), which is virtually ignored by psychological researchers, is suggested for studies of causal relations in which controlled experimentation is unfeasible. The longitudinal facet in the design of CLM is highlighted. Advantages and limitations of the CLM are described. (SLD)
Descriptors: Causal Models, Correlation, Etiology, Inferences
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Edwards, Derek; Potter, Jonathan – Psychological Review, 1993
Recently, language has acquired theoretical importance as the medium of causal thinking. A discursive action model of description and attribution is presented that argues that causal attributions can be studied as social acts performed in discourse and not merely as cognitions about social acts that happen to be expressed in conversation. (SLD)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Causal Models, Cognitive Psychology, Language
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Naidoo, Anthony V.; Bowman, Sharon L.; Gerstein, Lawrence H. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1998
A model proposing that causality and work salience moderate the influence of gender, educational level, and socioeconomic status on career maturity was tested with 288 African-American students. Work salience had the strongest direct effect on career maturity. For these students home/family had higher salience than did work. (SK)
Descriptors: Black Students, Career Development, Causal Models, Demography
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House, Ernest R. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2001
Explores two issues that have strongly influenced much of what has happened in evaluation in recent decades. The quantitative-qualitative debate has been fueled by changes in theories of causation. The second issue, that of the fact-value dichotomy, can be dealt with through the realization that facts and values are not separate kinds of entities,…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Utilization, Futures (of Society)
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Peugh, James L.; Enders, Craig K. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2005
Beginning with Version 11, SPSS implemented the MIXED procedure, which is capable of performing many common hierarchical linear model analyses. The purpose of this article was to provide a tutorial for performing cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses using this popular software platform. In doing so, the authors borrowed heavily from Singer's…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Statistical Analysis, Causal Models, Structural Equation Models
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Cartier, Jennifer L.; Stewart, Jim; Zoellner, Brian – American Biology Teacher, 2006
In this article, the authors discuss their belief in organizing curricula around sets of causal models in order to provide students with opportunities not only to learn about the subject matter of particular disciplines, but also about how scientific knowledge is generated and justified. They describe a nine-week genetics course for high school…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Curriculum Development, Genetics, Science Education
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Galster, George; Temkin, Kenneth; Walker, Chris; Sawyer, Noah – Evaluation Review, 2004
The authors contribute to the development of empirical methods for measuring the impacts of place-based local development strategies by introducing the adjusted interrupted time-series (AITS) approach. It estimates a more precise counterfactual scenario, thus offering a stronger basis for drawing causal inferences about impacts. The authors…
Descriptors: Community Development, Evaluation Methods, Inferences, Housing
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Luhmann, Christian C.; Ahn, Woo-kyoung – Psychological Review, 2005
D. Hume (1739/1987) argued that causality is not observable. P. W. Cheng claimed to present "a theoretical solution to the problem of causal induction first posed by Hume more than two and a half centuries ago" (p. 398) in the form of the power PC theory (L. R. Novick & P. W. Cheng). This theory claims that people's goal in causal induction is to…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Causal Models, Reader Response, Misconceptions
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Friedman, William J. – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
Many transformations that take place over time can only occur in one temporal direction, and adults are highly sensitive to the differences between forward and backward presentations of such events. In seven experiments using two selective-looking paradigms, 4- and 8-month-olds were shown forward and backward videotapes of events involving the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Experiments, Infants, Adults
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Carilli, Anthony M.; Dempster, Gregory M. – Journal of Education for Business, 2003
The treatment of uncertainty in the business classroom has been dominated by the application of risk theory to the utility-maximization framework. Nonetheless, the relevance of the standard risk model as a positive description of economic decision making often has been called into question in theoretical work. In this article, the authors offer an…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Probability, Economics, Decision Making
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Lagnado, David A.; Sloman, Steven A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
How do people learn causal structure? In 2 studies, the authors investigated the interplay between temporal-order, intervention, and covariational cues. In Study 1, temporal order overrode covariation information, leading to spurious causal inferences when the temporal cues were misleading. In Study 2, both temporal order and intervention…
Descriptors: Time, Causal Models, Time Factors (Learning), Intervention
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Rutter, Michael – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2007
Daniel Offer's seminal writings in the 1960s led to a realization that normal adolescence was not characterized by turmoil and upheaval, the then prevailing view that derived from studies of clinical samples. In this paper, the research findings that have appeared over the last four decades are reviewed with respect to the overall features of…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Drug Abuse, Suicide, Schizophrenia
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Skalli, Ali – Economics of Education Review, 2007
Most of the studies that account for the endogeneity bias when estimating the returns to schooling assume that the relationship between education and earnings is linear. Studies that assume the latter relationship to be non-linear simply ignore the endogeneity bias. Moreover, they either assume an ad-hoc non-linear relationship or argue that…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Income, Correlation, Causal Models
Frazier, Patricia A.; Schauben, Laura J. – 1992
One factor related to postrape trauma is the survivor's belief about the cause of the rape. Most research to date on the relation between causal attributions and postrape recovery has been guided by a theoretical model which proposes that certain types of self-blame can be adaptive for survivors. Specifically, behavioral self-blame is thought to…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Causal Models, Females, Higher Education
Becker-Lausen, Evvie; And Others – 1992
Based on a review of prior research, a causal model was proposed to explain the relationship between child abuse, dissociation, depression, and revictimization. In the model, dissociation and depression were proposed as mediator variables, developing out of child abuse and leading to revictimization. Subjects were 301 male and female university…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Child Abuse, College Students, Depression (Psychology)
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