oaspa.org
OASPA’s response to the recent article in Science entitled “Who’s Afraid of Peer Review?” - OASPA
http://oaspa.org/response-to-the-recent-article-in-science
Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association. Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association. Membership Applications, Complaints and Investigations. Follow OASPA on Twitter. OASPA’s response to the recent article in Science entitled Who’s Afraid of Peer Review? October 4, 2013. Below is a statement from the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association (OASPA) in response to the recent sting that was reported in Science in an article entitled “Who’s Afraid of Peer Review? The greatest limitation of the sti...
scienceclarity.com
Useful links - William J. Matthews
http://www.scienceclarity.com/useful-links.html
William J. Matthews. For freely-available software to run psychology experiments, try PsychoPy. Is great for data analysis. And there is some useful help on using it for Psychology research. I sometimes use LaTeX. For document preparation, and Texmaker. Is helpful if you're a Windows user. For preparation and analysis of auditory stimuli, Audacity. Are both very useful and freely available. For image manipulation, I use Imagemagick. And for video editing virtualdub. Create a free website.
sas.upenn.edu
Jonathan Baron's Homepage
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~baron
School of Arts and Sciences. To meet or phone,. These pages are best viewed with Mozilla Firefox. I study how people think about moral questions, especially questions about public policy. Current topics of interest are the nature of individual differences in reflective and intuitive thinking, and the possible existence of naïve theories of the role of citizens in democracies, such as the idea that people should. Vote for their self-interest or for the interests of groups with which they identify. Mellers...
objektorient.blogspot.com
Objekt Orient: January 2011
http://objektorient.blogspot.com/2011_01_01_archive.html
Reducing People to Numbers since 2008. Sunday, January 30, 2011. Why the Pope Hates the Condom. 8222;Nun sag, wie hast du’s mit der Religion? Du bist ein herzlich guter Mann, allein ich glaub, du hältst nicht viel davon.“. 8211; Gretchen,. Faust: The First Part of the Tragedy. In J W. von Goethe's Faust,. Innocent Gretchen is seduced by Heinrich Faust, a depressed nihilist scholar in business with the devil. Before she gives in, she asks him. A question of vital importance for aroused Gretchen. That can ...
behaviouraldesign.com
Social behaviour |
http://www.behaviouraldesign.com/category/social-behaviour
Numbers don’t move us, emotions do. Millions of Indians don’t have access to clean water, sanitation, electricity, education, healthcare, banking. The list can go on. The ones with access to all of it, including myself, are aware of the fact that millions go without it everyday. Yet it hardly moves us to do anything about it. Source: Paul Slovic – “If I look at the mass I will never act”: Psychic numbing and genocide – Judgment and Decision Making. Vol 2, no. 2, April 2007, pp. 79-95. He seems like a goo...
behaviouraldesign.com
Human Brain |
http://www.behaviouraldesign.com/category/human-brain
Does it really take 21 days to form habits? In the preface to his 1960 book ‘Psycho-cybernetics’, Dr Maxwell Maltz, a plastic surgeon turned psychologist wrote:. So how long did it take to form a habit? On average it took 66 days until a habit was formed. And contrary to what’s commonly believed, missing a day or two didn’t much affect habit formation. Interestingly, there were quite large differences between individuals in how quickly automaticity reached its peak, although everyone repeated their chose...
behaviouraldesign.com
Sub-conscious |
http://www.behaviouraldesign.com/category/sub-conscious
Does it really take 21 days to form habits? In the preface to his 1960 book ‘Psycho-cybernetics’, Dr Maxwell Maltz, a plastic surgeon turned psychologist wrote:. So how long did it take to form a habit? On average it took 66 days until a habit was formed. And contrary to what’s commonly believed, missing a day or two didn’t much affect habit formation. Interestingly, there were quite large differences between individuals in how quickly automaticity reached its peak, although everyone repeated their chose...
behaviouraldesign.com
Persuasion |
http://www.behaviouraldesign.com/category/persuasion
What’s the best way of breaking a brand’s loyalty? All along marketers have believed that satisfied customers are loyal customers. All along marketers have believed that loyal customers mean profits for companies. But data by behavioural scientists are making us revisit established theories of consumer behavior and marketing. Another research by Szymanski and Henard reveals that on its own, satisfaction predicts very little of people’s behavior, perhaps as little as one-quarter. And its Part II. Habits c...
fox-lab.org
People – Fox Uncertainty Lab
http://fox-lab.org/people-2
UCLA Anderson School of Management. Decision Under Risk & Uncertainty. Choice Architecture & Behavioral Policy. Strategy, Negotiation, & Organizational Behavior. Craig R. Fox, Ph.D. I am the Harold Williams Chair in Management at the UCLA Anderson School. A professor of Strategy. And Co-Director of the UCLA Interdisciplinary Research Group in Behavioral Decision Making. I joined the UCLA faculty in 2003 after six years at the Fuqua School of Business. Where I remain an adjunct faculty member. In Istanbul...