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The effects of problem contents and one's scientific background on the detection of correlations and the assessment of their
strength were studied using a task that required active data search, assessment of the strength of a correlation, and monetary
valuation of the correlation's predictive utility. Participants (N = 72) who were trained either in the natural sciences or in the social sciences and humanities explored data sets differing
in contents and actual strength of correlation. Data search was consistent across all variables: Participants drew relatively
small samples whose relative sizes would favor the detection of a correlation, if one existed. In contrast, the assessment
of the correlation strength and the valuation of its predictive utility were strongly related not only to its objective strength,
but also to the correspondence between problem contents and one's scientific background: When the two matched, correlations
were judged to be stronger and more valuable than when they did not. 相似文献
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Ariella Friedman Yael Tzukerman Hana Wienberg Judith Todd 《Psychology of women quarterly》1992,16(4):513-525
Previous research has described an apparent shift in perceived interpersonal power towards equality between men and women later in life. This study investigated (a) whether the "shift in power with age" would appear in the Israeli kibbutz, (b) the role of the "parental emergency" in the shift, and (c) whether changes in behaviors or attitudes best account for the shift. One hundred twenty younger and older Israeli women and men, half from the city and half from the kibbutz, wrote TAT stories, which were then rated for overall power of the female and male characters, their power strategies, and their motives. A shift in perceived power with age was found in both the city and the kibbutz. Parental status reduced the power of the woman and increased the power of the man only in the city, whereas the reverse was true in the kibbutz. These results counter the "parental emergency" explanation for the shift in power with age. Furthermore, older women used traditionally feminine power strategies, but their behavior was evaluated as more powerful than the same behavior in younger women. Thus, it is not the behaviors but rather people's evaluation of the behaviors that changes across the life span of the individual. 相似文献
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Ariella Werden-Greenfield 《Religion》2015,45(3):493-497
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Sex Roles - In an exploratory study of the perceived interpersonal power of women in three subcultures in Kenya, urban lower class, urban middle class, and rural traditional, a story telling... 相似文献
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