Results 111 to 120 of about 49,746 (256)

UNWARRANTED CONFIDENCE: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE POVERTY OF ANTI‐REALISM

open access: yesHistory and Theory, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The Poverty of Anti‐Realism: Critical Perspectives on Postmodernist Philosophy of History, edited by Tor Egil Førland and Branko Mitrović, celebrates the new dawn of historical realism, which it claims supersedes the erroneous and harmful anti‐realism.
Jouni‐Matti Kuukkanen
wiley   +1 more source

What Causal Illusions Might Tell us about the Identification of Causes

open access: yes, 2016
According to existing accounts of causation, people rely on asingle criterion to identify the cause of an event. Thephenomenon of causal illusions raises problems for suchviews. Causal illusions arise when a particular factor isperceived to be causal despite knowledge indicatingotherwise.
Thorstad, Robert, Wolff, Phillip
openaire   +1 more source

Conversational AI Agents: The Effect of Process and Outcome Variation on Anthropomorphism and Trust

open access: yesInformation Systems Journal, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Organisations increasingly deploy conversational AI agents (CAs) in agentic roles where behavioural variations are inevitable. Prior work often conflates two distinct forms of variation: outcome variation (where success fluctuates) and process variation (where the path to completion varies).
Kambiz Saffarizadeh, Mark Keil
wiley   +1 more source

Relationships Between Nurses' Self‐Leadership Practices, Professional Autonomy, Job Satisfaction and Intention to Leave: A Structural Equation Modelling Approach

open access: yesJournal of Advanced Nursing, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Aim To explain the relationships between nurses' self‐leadership and professional autonomy, job satisfaction, and intention to leave the profession. Design A descriptive cross‐sectional study design. Methods A total of 230 registered nurses responded to a survey including a Finnish version of the Dempster Practice Behaviour Scale and the ...
Katja Pursio   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Pan‐Europe Revisited: Inter‐War Debates and the EU's Pursuit of Geopolitical Power

open access: yesJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The European Union's (EU) transformation from a peace project to an assertive geopolitical actor reflects enduring tensions in integration theory dating back to the inter‐war period. This paper develops a comparative framework distinguishing territorial integration logic, which emphasises bounded political communities and collective defence ...
Kamil Zwolski
wiley   +1 more source

Psycho‐social factors associated with disagreement between prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment

open access: yesJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView.
Background Prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment often identify different individuals and are differentially associated with psychopathology. This study examines psycho‐social factors that may explain discrepancies between these measures.
Oonagh Coleman   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

What Are Asset Price Bubbles? A Survey on Definitions of Financial Bubbles

open access: yesJournal of Economic Surveys, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Financial bubbles and crashes have repeatedly caused economic turmoil notably but not just during the 2008 financial crisis. However, both in the popular press as well as scientific publications, the meaning of bubble is sometimes unspecified.
Michael Heinrich Baumann   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Political Economy of Attention: Media Salience, Voter Cognition, and Electoral Accountability

open access: yesJournal of Economic Surveys, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT We review conceptual and empirical contributions to the political economy of attention, with a focus on how attention allocation shapes political behavior and electoral accountability. The review distinguishes between endogenous (goal‐directed) and exogenous (stimulus‐driven) attention and examines how these concepts are incorporated into ...
Patrick Balles   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Representing, Re‐presenting, or Producing the Past? Memory Work amongst Museum Employees

open access: yesJournal of Management Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract Though it is widely understood that the past can be an important resource for organizations, less is known about the micro‐level skills and choices that help to materialize different representations of the past. We understand these micro‐level skills and choices as a practice: ‘memory work’ – a banner term gathering various activities that ...
Jeremy Aroles   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

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