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141Autobiographical Memory in a Fire-Walking RitualJournal of Cognition and Culture 13 (1-2): 1-16. 2013.Anthropological theories have discussed the effects of participation in high-arousal rituals in the formation of autobiographical memory; however, precise measurements for such effects are lacking. In this study, we examined episodic recall among participants in a highly arousing fire-walking ritual. To assess arousal, we used heart rate measurements. To assess the dynamics of episodic memories, we obtained reports immediately after the event and two months later. We evaluated memory accuracy fr…Read more
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142Surveillance Capitalism or Information Republic?Journal of Applied Philosophy 39 (3): 421-440. 2022.Journal of Applied Philosophy, EarlyView.
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53Developmental curves for the portable rod-and-frame testBulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (2): 151-152. 1975.
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90Evaluating instruments for regulation of health care in the NetherlandsJournal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (3): 411-419. 2011.
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86Reducing interrater variability and improving health care: a meta‐analytical reviewJournal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (4): 887-895. 2012.
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42Investigating production system representations for non-combinatorial matchArtificial Intelligence 68 (1): 155-199. 1994.
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78Components of working memory predict symptoms of distressCognition and Emotion 24 (8): 1293-1303. 2010.Working memory (WM) is a cognitive system that allows us to select, organise, and integrate perceptual information with memories and current goal-directed intentions. As such, this system is central to day-to-day functioning and would be expected to be especially important in decision making and problem solving. We hypothesised that to the extent that individuals differ in WM capacity they would also be differentially vulnerable to the experience of depression and anxiety. Undergraduate students…Read more
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96Thinking in Opposites: An Investigation of the Nature of Man as Revealed by the Nature of ThinkingPhilosophical Review 64 (1): 123. 1955.
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81Evaluation of moral case deliberation at the Dutch Health Care Inspectorate: a pilot studyBMC Medical Ethics 17 (1): 31. 2016.BackgroundMoral case deliberation as a form of clinical ethics support is usually implemented in health care institutions and educational programs. While there is no previous research on the use of clinical ethics support on the level of health care regulation, employees of regulatory bodies are regularly confronted with moral challenges. This pilot study describes and evaluates the use of MCD at the Dutch Health Care Inspectorate.The objective of this pilot study is to investigate: 1) the curre…Read more
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5RezensionenReviewsNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 8 (1): 261-272. 2000.
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27Religion and ReligionsIn Peter Wong, Sherah Bloor, Patrick Hutchings & Purushottama Bilimoria (eds.), Considering Religions, Rights and Bioethics: For Max Charlesworth, Springer Verlag. pp. 233-240. 2019.Max Charlesworth’s work in the late 1990s on ‘the scandal of religious diversity’ raises serious questions that have not yet been sufficiently recognized and certainly not resolved. How does ‘religion’ as a universal or at least very widespread phenomenon relate to the concrete world religions as institutions? This and other issues raised by Charlesworth are explored here: Are diverse ‘revelations’ incommensurable or is this the result of linguistic and cultural difference? Does relabelling such…Read more
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38Chaucer's “house Of Fame”: The Poetics Of Skeptical Fideism (review)Speculum 50 (3): 717-719. 1975.
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37Mobilität im Forscherleben – Stabilität im Forscherreden?: Überlegungen zu Sprachgebrauch und Spracheinstellung von germanistischen Sprachwissenschaftler*innenZeitschrift Für Kultur- Und Kollektivwissenschaft 7 (2): 165-192. 2021.
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95The weirdest people in the world are a harbinger of the future of the worldBehavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (2-3). 2010.Although North American undergraduates represent about 0.2% of humanity, and a very unrepresentative subset, they actually provide an advance look at what humanity is becoming. In the face of globalization, this is all the more reason to study the wonderful variants of the human condition before they become homogenized
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164The domains of disgust and their origins: contrasting biological and cultural evolutionary accountsTrends in Cognitive Sciences 17 (8): 367-368. 2013.
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60Specific hungers and poison avoidance as adaptive specializations of learningPsychological Review 78 (6): 459-486. 1971.
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46Operation of the sympathetic magical law of contagion in interpersonal attitudes among AmericansBulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (4): 367-370. 1989.
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69General and specific abilities to recognise negative emotions, especially disgust, as portrayed in the face and the bodyCognition and Emotion 19 (3): 397-412. 2005.
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80More than modularity and metaphor: The power of preadaptation and accessBehavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (4): 290-291. 2010.Neural reuse demonstrates preadaptation. In accord with Rozin (1976), the process is an increase in accessibility of an originally dedicated module. Access is a dimension that can vary from sharing by two systems to availability to all systems (conscious access). An alternate manifestation is to reproduce the genetic blueprint of a program. The major challenge is how to get a preadaptation into a so that it can be selected for a new function
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97Feelings and the enjoyment of musicBehavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (5): 593-594. 2008.We wonder about tying the universal appeal of music to emotion as defined by psychologists. Music is more generally about feelings, and many of these, such as moods and pleasures, are central to the enjoyment of music and fall outside the domain of emotion. The critical component of musical feelings is affective intensity, resulting from syntactically generated implications and their outcomes
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50Conditioned opponent responses in human tolerance to caffeineBulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (2): 117-120. 1984.Regular coffee drinkers show tolerance to the salivation-inducing effects of caffeine. We present evidence indicating that this tolerance results from a conditioned inhibition of salivation, with coffee as the conditioned stimulus. The tolerance disappears when caffeine is presented in an unfamiliar vehicle, and inhibition of salivation occurs when coffee drinkers drink decaffeinated coffee. These two findings are predictions of a conditioned opponent view, which holds that stimuli associated wi…Read more
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91Explaining diversity and searching for general processes: Isn't there a middle ground?Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (1): 157-158. 1981.