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The present study examines partisan reactions to presidential election outcomes. Our model investigates the interactive role of political party affiliation on the relationship between identification with the winning party and affect balance. We subsequently examine how tax compliance intentions are influenced by this moderation relationship through affect balance and trust in government. We conducted a quasi-experiment one week prior to the first mass 2016 presidential primary, where 12 of the 50 US states voted to decide which candidates would represent the Republican and Democratic parties in the 2016 US presidential election. Our sample consisted of 205 Republicans and Democrats. We manipulated press releases showing various presidential candidates winning the presidency to examine how matches / mismatches between partisans’ political party affiliation and the party winning the election influence citizens’ overall feelings, beliefs, and intentions. We find election outcomes generate significant overall positive or negative feelings (i.e., affect balance) among partisans, which influences beliefs about trust in government, and subsequently their tax compliance intentions. Political party moderates the relationship between election outcomes and affect balance in such a way that Democrats experience greater overall positive affect balance when their party wins the election compared to Republicans.  相似文献   
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The Life Orientation Test (LOT-R) is the most intensively used instrument for the assessment of optimism, but empirical evidence of its psychometric quality in Latin America is lacking. The aim of this study was to test psychometric properties of this questionnaire based on a representative sample of the general population of Colombia (N = 1,500). Confirmatory factor analyses confirmed the bi-dimensionality of the questionnaire with two factors, namely Optimism and Pessimism. The sum scores of the optimism and pessimism subscale correlated with r = ?.12. Convergent validity aspects were studied by correlating LOT-R values with anxiety, depression, quality of life, fatigue, mental health, hopelessness, and self-efficacy. Optimism was more strongly correlated with these variables than pessimism. Normative data and mean values for both genders and different age groups are given. Generally, there were only small age and gender effects. Compared to the German norm data, the Colombian participants scored on average one scale point higher in the dimension of optimism. In summary, the LOT-R in its Spanish version is an appropriate and practical tool for screening purposes in individual diagnostics and epidemiological research in Latin American samples.  相似文献   
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Twenty male Ss between the ages of three and nine years were shown individually, 12 video scenes of interpersonal situations depicting either peer-peer, peer-adult, or adult-adult in one of two contexts: either cooperative or uncooperative. After each video presentation the S was questioned about the actions and emotions expressed in the scene.

The older Ss were more literal and gave greater detail in their recounting of the scenes. Since the experiment was not methodically complex enough to provide substantial information about the roles of egocentricity and decentering in the child's comprehension of social interaction, alternative paradigms were suggested.  相似文献   
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Training behavioral technicians mainly focuses on teaching accurate implementation of structured behavioral intervention programs. Often behavioral technicians are unable to adequately promote their clients' learning in less structured environments, which can limit opportunities for generalization of the clients' skills to the natural environment. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of using behavioral skills training to coach behavioral technicians on the implementation of naturalistic behavioral interventions. Naturalistic behavioral interventions take advantage of naturally occurring situations to teach new skills and practice mastered skills in natural settings, thus promoting generalization across environments and in the presence of natural contingencies. Five behavioral technicians were trained to implement a novel protocol based on play therapy. Specifically, they were coached to engage in well‐defined positive behaviors during their interactions with clients (e.g., labeled praise). All participants reached mastery criteria, maintained skills at follow‐up, and demonstrated generalization of skills with novel clients.  相似文献   
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Observational studies of multilevel data to estimate treatment effects must consider both the nonrandom treatment assignment mechanism and the clustered structure of the data. We present an approach for implementation of four propensity score (PS) methods with multilevel data involving creation of weights and three types of weight scaling (normalized, cluster-normalized and effective), followed by estimation of multilevel models with the multilevel pseudo-maximum likelihood estimation method. Using a Monte Carlo simulation study, we found that the multilevel model provided unbiased estimates of the Average Treatment Effect on the Treated (ATT) and its standard error across manipulated conditions and combinations of PS model, PS method, and type of weight scaling. Estimates of between-cluster variances of the ATT were biased, but improved as cluster sizes increased. We provide a step-by-step demonstration of how to combine PS methods and multilevel modeling to estimate treatment effects using multilevel data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study–Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K).  相似文献   
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The use of eBay by 102 American undergraduate students was not associated with competitiveness, locus of control scores, or money attitude scores.  相似文献   
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As we reflect on the founding vision of the field of community psychology in the United States, we assess our progress toward achieving, building upon, and refining this vision. We review early literature regarding the US vision of the field, provide a historical overview of education and training within the field, and provide recommendations to guide and strengthen our approach to education. Our recommendations include the following: 1) serve as a resource to communities, 2) promote a sense of community within our field, 3) diversify students, faculty, and leadership, 4) evaluate our efforts, 5) be current and relevant, 6) enhance the visibility and growth of our field, and 7) create globally minded and innovative CPists. We provide strategies for programs, faculty, linkages between researchers and practitioners, and the Society for Community Research and Action. We conclude that community psychology education and training continues to reflect the early vision; however, we believe we must make more intentional efforts to align with the mission and values of the field, and to engage in a critical analysis of our pedagogy. Enhancing and growing undergraduate and graduate education can facilitate the achievement of our goals to promote social justice, prevent and address social problems, and build community connections to become more effective, impactful, and global social change agents.  相似文献   
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It is widely believed that a descending serial circuit consisting of neural projections from the basolateral complex (BLA) to the central nucleus (CEA) of the amygdala mediates fear expression. Here we directly test this hypothesis and show that disconnecting the BLA and CEA with asymmetric neurotoxic lesions after Pavlovian fear conditioning in rats completely abolishes the expression of conditional freezing. These results demonstrate that neural projections from the BLA to CEA are essential for the expression of learned fear responses.Long-standing anatomical models of the brain circuitry underlying learned fear posit serial flow of information through the amygdala to engage the expression of fear responses (LeDoux 2000; Maren 2001). Specifically, conditioning-induced plasticity in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA) is thought to drive learned fear through excitatory axonal projections to the basal nuclei of the amygdala (BA; basolateral and basomedial nuclei), which in turn send unidirectional and excitatory synaptic projections to the medial division of the central nucleus of the amygdala (CEm). Neurons in the CEm project to brain structures involved in the production of a variety of fear responses (Pitkänen et al. 1997; Swanson and Petrovich 1998). Alternatively, neurons in LA might excite neurons in CEm by limiting inhibitory input from the intercalated cell masses (ITC) interposed between the basolateral complex (BLA; lateral and basal nuclei) and the central nucleus of the amygdala (CEA) (Paré et al. 2004). In either case, the BLA is well positioned to drive learned fear responses via anatomical connections with the CEA.Although an extensive literature demonstrates the importance of both the BLA and CEA in the acquisition and expression of fear (LeDoux et al. 1990; Lee et al. 1996; Amorapanth et al. 2000; Goosens and Maren 2001), it is not known whether a functional connection between the two structures is essential for the expression of learned fear. Indeed, the BLA and CEA make independent contributions to aversively motivated learning under some conditions (Killcross et al. 1997; Amorapanth et al. 2000). Moreover, recent work in appetitive conditioning paradigms challenges the necessity of serial circuits in the amygdala for associative learning processes (Holland and Gallagher 1999; Everitt et al. 2003; Balleine and Killcross 2006). It is therefore essential to determine whether serial connections between the BLA and CEA are involved in the expression of fear memories as widely assumed in the literature.To address this issue, we made asymmetric neurotoxic lesions of the BLA and CEA after Pavlovian fear conditioning in rats. That is, we placed BLA lesions in one hemisphere and CEA lesions in the contralateral hemisphere, thereby producing a functional disconnection of the two brain regions. Control animals received neurotoxic BLA and CEA lesions in the same hemisphere, thereby leaving both structures and their connections intact in one hemisphere. This disconnection strategy (e.g., Olton et al. 1982) capitalizes on the fact that projections from the BLA to CEA are both ipsilateral and unidirectional (Pitkänen et al. 1997). It has been used by several groups to assess the contribution of connections between brain areas to learning and memory processes, including conditioned stimulus processing (Han et al. 1999) and appetitive spatial learning (Ito et al. 2008), for example.Fear conditioning was conducted in standard observation chambers (see Supplemental Methods) and consisted of five pairings of an auditory conditional stimulus (CS) (2 kHz, 10 sec, 80 dB) with a footshock unconditioned stimulus (US) (2 sec, 1 mA); the intertrial interval (ITI) was 1 min. Freezing behavior served as the measure of conditional fear. Twenty-four hours after fear conditioning, the rats were deeply anesthetized, and amygdala lesions were made by infusing N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA; 20 mg/mL in 100 mM phosphate buffered saline with a pH 7.4; Sigma) into the CEA and BLA through a 28-g injection cannula attached to a Hamilton syringe via polyethylene tubing. Control rats received unilateral lesions of the BLA and CEA in the same hemisphere (IPSI, n = 13) or sham surgery (SHAM, n = 16), whereas experimental rats received the unilateral BLA and CEA lesions in opposite hemispheres (CONTRA, n = 11). Hence, functional connectivity between the BLA and CEA was left intact in one hemisphere among rats in the IPSI group, whereas the asymmetric lesions in rats in the CONTRA group eliminated this connection. Retention tests assessing fear to the conditioning context and tone CS were conducted in separate sessions one week after recovery from surgery. Histological examination of coronal brain sections obtained from the subjects after the experiment revealed selective CEA and BLA lesions in each group; representative lesions are illustrated in Figure 1, A and B. The lesions spared fibers of passage (Fig. 1C).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Disconnection of the BLA and CEA impairs the expression of conditional fear. (A) Schematic representation of a typical BLA (shaded) and CEA (black) lesions among rats with unilateral lesions placed in the same hemisphere (IPSI) or in opposite hemispheres (CONTRA). (B) Photomicrograph of a thionin-stained coronal section from a representative rat in the CONTRA group. The image has been cropped to include only the left and right amygdale. Broken lines encircle CEA and BLA lesions in the left and right hemispheres, respectively. (C, left) Photomicrograph of a thionin-stained coronal section from a representative rat in the IPSI group. The image has been cropped to focus on the lesion in the right amygdala. Broken lines encircle the CEA and BLA lesions. (C, right) Photomicrograph of an AuCl-stained coronal section adjacent to that shown at left indicates that NMDA infusions into the amygdala did not damage myelinated axons in the vicinity of the lesion. (D) Mean percentage of freezing (± SEM) during the conditioning session (collapsed across CSs and ITIs) and retention tests in rats in each of the three groups. The expression of fear to the conditioning context and tone CS was severely impaired by disconnection of the BLA and CEA in the CONTRA group. *P < 0.05.As shown in Figure 1D (left panel), all rats acquired similar levels of conditional freezing (collapsed across the CS and ITI for each trial) by the end of the presurgical fear conditioning session (main effect of trial, F(5,185) = 42.1, P < 0.0001); there was neither a main effect of group (F < 1) nor a group × trial interaction (F < 1.3). One week after recovery from surgery, conditional freezing to the conditioning context and the auditory CS was assessed in separate retention tests. Importantly, functional disconnection of the BLA and the CEA after fear conditioning severely impaired the expression of conditioned freezing to both the conditioning context and the auditory CS (Fig. 1D, right). Indeed, the expression of fear to the auditory CS was essentially abolished. Freezing among rats in the CONTRA group was significantly lower than that in both the SHAM and IPSI groups during both retention tests (main effect of group, F(2,37) = 9.98, P < 0.001), and this difference did not interact with the nature of the retention test (F < 1). Hence, functional disconnection of the BLA and CEA produced an impairment in the expression of conditional fear that was much greater than that produced by comparable lesions that spared this connection.The logic of the disconnection procedure requires that focal CEA and BLA lesions in each hemisphere do not damage the adjacent BLA or CEA, respectively. For instance, if CEA lesions produce retrograde degeneration in the neighboring BLA, rats in the CONTRA group would effectively have bilateral lesions in the BLA. Such an outcome would be expected to yield the massive deficits in conditional freezing that we have observed. Inspection of thionin-stained coronal sections suggested that, as in previous studies (Goosens and Maren 2001), our lesions were indeed selective for the targeted areas (Fig. 1B). However, to increase our confidence that the BLA adjacent to a CEA lesion was in fact functional, we performed c-fos immunohistochemistry on brain sections obtained from a separate group of rats trained and tested as previously described (SHAM, CONTRA, and IPSI groups; n = 8 per group). In addition to these rats, we included a group of rats that were not conditioned (NO-SHOCK, n = 8) to quantify fear-induced increases in c-fos expression. All rats were sacrificed 90 min after the retention test to the auditory CS. Amygdaloid c-fos expression in the SHAM rats and the intact hemisphere of the IPSI rats did not differ, and these groups were therefore collapsed into a single SHAM group.As shown in Figure 2, SHAM rats exhibited a greater density of c-fos positive nuclei in both the CEA and BLA relative to nonshocked controls. Quantification of these data confirmed this observation and revealed significant differences in c-fos expression among the groups in both the CEA (Fig. 2, left; F(2,40) = 5.59, P < 0.01) and the BLA (Fig. 2, right; F(2,40) = 5.07, P < 0.01). Importantly, BLA c-fos expression adjacent to CEA lesions in the CONTRA group was similar to that in intact SHAM rats, and significantly greater than that in nonshocked controls (Fig. 2B, right). This suggests that the failure of CONTRA rats to express conditional fear responses was not due to a failure to engage the intact BLA but rather to the functional disconnection of BLA activity from CEA output. Indeed, the CEA adjacent to a BLA lesion exhibited a marked reduction in c-fos expression relative to SHAM controls (Fig. 2, left), indicating that BLA lesions failed to drive ipsilateral CEA neurons important for the expression of learned fear. It is possible that the absence of c-fos expression in the CEA, in this case, is due to encroachment of the adjacent BLA lesion. However, thionin-stained sections revealed that BLA lesions were selective. Moreover, we observed intact BLA c-fos expression in rats with adjacent CEA lesions suggesting that nearby lesions per se do not disrupt c-fos expression.Open in a separate windowFigure 2.Functional disconnection of the BLA and CEA revealed by c-fos expression. Mean density (± SEM) of c-fos positive nuclei in the CEA (left) and BLA (right) in rats from each of the three groups. Disconnection of the BLA and CEA eliminated fear-related increases in c-fos expression in the CEA (left), but not the BLA (right). *P < 0.05.These results reveal that a functional connection between the BLA and CEA is required for the expression of learned fear. Considering that BLA projections to the CEA are largely unidirectional, our data reveal that a serial circuit from the BLA to the CEA mediates the expression of conditional fear responses. Consistent with this view, there are numerous reports that permanent lesions or reversible inactivation of either the BLA or CEA prevent the expression of conditioned fear (Lee et al. 1996; Maren 1999; Zimmerman et al. 2007). It is now apparent that the necessity for both the BLA and CEA in fear expression arises from the functional connectivity between them. Anatomically, this connection might involve a direct excitatory projection from BA to CEm (Paré et al. 1999) or indirect projections from LA to ITC and the lateral division of the central nucleus (CEl), both of which project to CEm (Smith and Paré 1994; Paré et al. 2004). Recent data reveal, however, that selective immunotoxic lesions of the ITC do not impair the expression of conditioned freezing (Likhtik et al. 2008). Moreover, CEl projections to CEm are inhibitory, making it unlikely that that an LA-CEl projection drives learned fear responses via CEm (Paré et al. 2004). Hence, it appears that the most likely route by which fear CSs drive learned fear involves projections from BA to CEm. Consistent with this, selective BA lesions disrupt the expression of conditioned freezing when made either before (Goosens and Maren 2001) or after (Anglada-Figueroa and Quirk 2005) fear conditioning.The dependence of conditional fear on a serial circuit between the BLA and CEA stands in contrast to the independent roles these areas have been proposed to play in appetitive conditioning paradigms (Holland and Gallagher 1999; Everitt et al. 2003; Balleine and Killcross 2006). For example, CEA, but not BLA, lesions have been reported to produce deficits in the acquisition and expression of autoshaped conditioned responses (CRs), indicating that the CEA has an independent contribution to CR expression for food-motivated responses (Parkinson et al. 2000). Moreover, the BLA has a role in the attribution of incentive salience to rewarding stimuli independent of the generation of CRs to those stimuli (Hatfield et al. 1996). However, in aversive conditioning, it appears that the BLA may not encode the motivational properties of the shock US (Rabinak and Maren 2008), but rather CS–US associations that are essential for organizing conditional fear responses by the CEA. Indeed, there is an emerging body of data suggesting that these associations may be established not only in sensory afferents in the BLA but also in the CEA (Wilensky et al. 2006; Zimmerman et al. 2007). Synaptic plasticity in projections from BA to CEm may be the essential substrate underlying the functional connectivity between these structures that is essential for the expression of fear memory.  相似文献   
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