14 resultados para kognitio
Resumo:
Väitöksenalkajaisesitelmä Turun yliopistossa 20. lokakuuta 2001
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Wechsler Adult Intelligent Scale (WAIS) III.
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Lectio praecursoria
Metsänomistuksen kulttuuriset tekijät - metsänomistajien käsityksiä metsästä ja ympäristönsuojelusta
Resumo:
Tässä Pro gradu –tutkielmassa tavoiteltiin kokonaiskuvaa teemapuistoalan asiakastyytyväisyyden muodostumisesta kognitiivisesta, affektiivisesta ja kognitiivis-affektiivisesta näkökulmasta. Lisäksi tarkasteltiin kunkin näkökulman teoriapohjaa; miten asiakas muodostaa arvionsa tyytyväisyydestään sekä tyytyväisyyteen vaikuttavia tekijöitä kussakin näkökulmassa. Tutkimus toteutettiin kvalitatiivisena tutkimuksena, ryhmähaastatteluna. Tutkimustulosten perusteella todettiin asiakastyytyväisyyden muodostuvan kognitioiden ja affektien yhteisvaikutuksesta, tulosten tukien kognitiivis-affektiivista näkökulmaa. Lisäksi tuloksissa saatiin viitteitä sosiaalisesta näkökulmasta asiakastyytyväisyyden muodostumisessa, affektiivisesta diskonfirmaatiosta sekä asiakastyytyväisyyden dynaamisesta luonteesta. Myös asiakastyytyväisyyden ja –tyytymättömyyden prosessien havaittiin eroavan ainakin jossain määrin. Uudet, viitekehyksen ulkopuoliset havainnot tukivat uusimman kirjallisuuden käsitystä asiakastyytyväisyydestä monitasoisena ja –ulotteisena käsitteenä.
Resumo:
This thesis was written in order participate in the emergent discussion on the role of emotions in consumer decision-making. The goal of the thesis was to find out which emotions affect consumer decision-making, how these emotions relate to traditional process models of consumer decision-making, and how emotions and other factors affect consumer decision-making. The thesis is placed into a context of high involvement product adoption. The empirical research was conducted according to a qualitative methodology, which combined video diaries and face-to-face or Skype interviews as data collection methods. The case product category was dancing poles, and four women participated in the study. The central results indicate that emotion and cognition walk hand in hand in consumer decision-making, that consumers experience a variety of emotions during a decision-making process, and that emotions have an important effect on consumer decision-making and consumer behavior.
Resumo:
In this thesis, two negatively valenced emotions are approached as reflecting children’s self-consciousness, namely guilt and shame. Despite the notable role of emotions in the psychological research, empirical research findings on the links between guilt, shame, and children’s social behavior – and particularly aggression – have been modest, inconsistent, and sometimes contradictory. This thesis contains four studies on the associations of guilt, shame, emotion regulation, and social cognitions with children’s social behavior. The longitudinal material of the thesis was collected as a survey among a relatively large amount of Finnish preadolescents. In Study I, the distinctiveness of guilt and shame in children’s social behavior were investigated. The more specific links of emotions and aggressive behavior were explored in Study II, in which emotion regulation and negative emotionality were treated as the moderators between guilt, shame, and children’s aggressive behavior. The role of emotion management was further evaluated in Study III, in which effortful control and anger were treated as the moderators between domain-specific aggressive cognitions and children’s aggressive behavior. In the light of the results from the Studies II and III, it seems that for children with poor emotion management the effects of emotions and social cognitions on aggressive behavior are straight-forward, whereas effective emotion management allows for reframing the situation. Finally, in Study IV, context effects on children’s anticipated emotions were evaluated, such that children were presented a series of hypothetical vignettes, in which the child was acting as the aggressor. Furthermore, the identity of the witnesses and victim’s reactions were systematically manipulated. Children anticipated the most shame in situations, in which all of the class was witnessing the aggressive act, whereas both guilt and shame were anticipated the most in the situations, in which the victim was reacting with sadness. Girls and low-aggressive children were more sensitive to contextual cues than boys and high-aggressive children. Overall, the results of this thesis suggest that the influences of guilt, shame, and social cognition on preadolescents’ aggressive behavior depend significantly on the nature of individual emotion regulation, as well as situational contexts. Both theoretical and practical implications of this study highlight a need to acknowledge effective emotion management as enabling the justification of one’s own immoral behavior.