Apragmatism: The renewal of a label for communication disorders associated with right hemisphere brain damage. [PDF]
Minga J +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Feeling Virtue: An Enactive Theory of Approval
ABSTRACT A neo‐sentimentalist theory of virtue holds that a trait is virtue if, and only if, it merits approval. Neo‐sentimentalists tend to be sceptical about the prospect of such a theory because it seems unlikely that feelings of approval can be characterised without reference to the notion of virtue. I argue that that scepticism is uncalled for. My
Rafael Graebin Vogelmann
wiley +1 more source
The Effects of Humor in Clinical Settings on Medical Trainees and the Implications for Medical Educators: A Scoping Review. [PDF]
Garcia JT +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
The [ADJ + as] intensifier construction in Māori English/Aotearoa English
Abstract We introduce the Waikato Māori English Conversation (MEC) corpus, which consists of 43 dyadic conversations between 49 young adults who self‐recorded informal conversations with close friends, in their own homes, with no topic of conversation specified (83 hours of dialogue; nearly 800,000 words).
Andreea S. Calude, Hēmi Whaanga
wiley +1 more source
Birth of a scapegoat: An actor‐affect‐affordance model of symbolic attribution in the digital age
Abstract How do scapegoating narratives emerge, diffuse, and solidify within digital media ecosystems? This paper introduces an actor‐affect‐affordance (3A) model to explain how complex social problems become symbolically attributed to marginalized groups.
Jack Gabriel Risien Wippell
wiley +1 more source
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Taboo: Interaction and Creativity in Humour. [PDF]
Maraev V +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
A Case Study on Keicho, Japanese Active Empathetic Listening
ABSTRACT Active empathetic listening (AEL) is a foundational skillset used by counselors. However, little is known about how AEL is used and perceived outside of Western cultures. Keicho (傾聴), the Japanese concept of AEL, is described as tilting one's head to listen to others.
Yuima Mizutani +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Consuming luxury products and services has received little systematic attention as a potential pathway to consumer well‐being, despite sporadic evidence suggesting that luxury experiences may catalyse self‐transformational processes and happiness‐related outcomes.
Solon Magrizos +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Tendency to laugh is a stable trait: findings from a round-robin conversation study. [PDF]
Wood A +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Shaping expectations, losing flexibility: A study of CEO promises as strategic communication tools
Abstract Research Summary CEO promises are powerful but understudied communication tools. We develop a dual‐mechanism framework theorizing that while CEO promises elevate stakeholder expectations, they simultaneously constrain strategic flexibility. We argue that CEO promise‐making is shaped by two competing pressures: making more promises when the ...
Majid Majzoubi +2 more
wiley +1 more source

