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Zabriskie B 《The Journal of analytical psychology》2004,49(2):235-242
The theme, 'Science and the Symbolic', may be approached via either concept. From one side, we may track how imagination, fantasy, and even dreams have initiated scientific theory and lines of research. From the other, we may look to the mythopoeic musings of the human mind for themes of proto-science and/or proto-psychology, and attempt to discern if they follow a method which may be called scientific. Neuroscientists such as Edelman and Llinas honour imagination as the carrier of emergent properties, and depth psychoanalysts see it as a vector toward actualization. What mind imagines through what the alchemists termed 'true imagination' may eventually be realized through what brain and body may conceive and execute. 相似文献
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Open-ended questions were used to obtain narrative accounts of what makes a girl (or a boy) popular (or unpopular) at school. The participants were 489 African American students in Grades 1, 4, and 7 recruited from high-risk inner-city neighborhoods. Appearance and self-presentation were mentioned the most in Grades 4 and 7. Prosocial characteristics were especially relevant for popularity in Grade 1, as were studentship in Grade 4 and peer affiliations in Grade 7. Deviant behaviors were nominated for popularity more frequently in Grade 7 than in the younger grades and more for boys' popularity than for girls'. The mean deviance scores were negative in all grade levels, suggesting a normative peer culture. Male groups in Grade 7 showed significant homophily in reports of deviant behaviors. 相似文献
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In many cases, X-linked conditions are transmitted through families “silently” until the first affected individual is diagnosed.
Grandmothers are often then tested to help determine the risk to other family members. To date, psychosocial research on carriers
of X-linked conditions has focused primarily on mothers and sisters of affected males. In the wider social science literature,
studies on grandparents of children with disabilities have centered on their role within the family and relationship with
the grandchild. We therefore know little about the impact of carrier testing for a genetic condition on grandparents. This
qualitative study aims to contribute towards filling that gap. This study included thirteen grandmothers in families with
Fragile X or Duchenne muscular dystrophy; ten had living affected grandsons and three had daughters who chose not to continue
with affected male pregnancies after prenatal diagnosis. All thirteen took part in semi-structured interviews and provided
a rich and varied data source for conducting thematic analysis. Most of the grandmothers expressed recurring feelings of guilt
and a strong sense of responsibility for what had occurred in the family. Other themes included feelings of shock after receiving
their test result, changes in family relationships and searching to make sense of the inheritance within the context of the
family’s experience. This study provides evidence that X-linked carrier testing can have a profound and lasting impact on
grandmothers. Although genetic counseling for X-linked conditions is often focused on the potential reproductive implications
for carriers, these findings suggest that grandmothers should also be offered genetic counseling when tests are carried out,
because of the likely psychosocial impact of a positive test result. 相似文献
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