Results 171 to 180 of about 34,064 (303)
Performing Integrity: Managing Misalignment while Researching Transgressive Social Worlds
The qualitative literature criticizing REBs suggests that researchers should develop an approach to research ethics that does justice to their daily practice of fieldwork. In this article, I contribute to this exploration by presenting three cases of negotiating research ethics while researching transgressive social worlds.
Thaddeus Müller
wiley +1 more source
Neuropsychiatric symptoms and their impact on quality of life among patients with multiple sclerosis. [PDF]
Shivaprakash P +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
The totalitarian laughter versus the State Laughter
Evgeny Dobrenko and Natalia Jonsson-Skradol’s foundational study delves deeply into a pivotal subject within cultural history: the role and significance of laughter during the era of “high” Stalinism.
Ioffe, Dennis
core
Looking for Trouble: Pre‐Intervention Monitoring in Human and AI Driver Training
We compare two types of situations involving monitoring of car driving: a driving instructor overseeing a trainee driver and a safety driver overseeing the performance of autonomous vehicle (AV) software. Our focus is on instances of monitoring that precede (1) interventions that are aborted before impacting the driving and (2) actual interventions on ...
Mathias Broth +2 more
wiley +1 more source
In sync through laughter? An fNIRS hyperscanning study on neural synchrony and social connection. [PDF]
Schäfer VT, Hoehl S, Pletti C.
europepmc +1 more source
An Outline of a Theory of Play
Play is often dismissed as trivial, yet it is a fundamental and adaptive aspect of human and mammalian life. This paper develops a sociological theory of play, treating it as a total social fact that spans biological, psychological, and social dimensions.
Seth Abrutyn
wiley +1 more source
A survey about laughter upon viewing functional seizures. [PDF]
Koubeissi MZ +12 more
europepmc +1 more source
Drawing on 40 in‐depth interviews with transgender and nonbinary people, we found that respondents' gender identities or displays shifted day‐by‐day and audience‐by‐audience. The first describes respondents shifting their identities and displays based on feeling their way through gender while the latter describes feeling out an audience.
Stef M. Shuster, Andrew Kirks‐Cler
wiley +1 more source
Healing with laughter: the therapeutic power of laughter yoga in pediatric health - a systematic review. [PDF]
Dur Ş, Erkin Ö, Çetin RC.
europepmc +1 more source

