809 resultados para thinking styles
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Seventy-five principals and vice-.wincipals from public elementary and secondary schools in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada participated in this study. Participants provided ,information concerning their thinking styles, motivations, and the physical effects of stress. This information was examined to find out how satisfaction-oriented, and how security-oriented the thinking styles of the participants were. Second, the data were analysed to see how the thinking style orientations related to life style habits and the effects of stress. The satisfaction-oriented thinking styles scored higher than all of the security-oriented thinking styles by a wide margin with a small preference for the satisfaction-people-oriented styles labelled humanistic-helpful, and affiliative as opposed to the satisfaction-task-oriented styles labeled achievement, and self-actualizing. Although all eight of the security-oriented thinking styles scored well below all of the satisfaction-oriented thinking styles on the Life Styles Inventory, the perfectionistic style scored higher than all of the security-oriented styles by an impressive margin. The next highest scores were recorded by a cluster of three passive-defensive people-oriented thinking styles labeled approval, conventional, and dependent. The competitive style scored lower, and the styles labeled avoidance, oppositional, and power scored the lowest of all the defensive-security-oriented styles. These findings suggest that principals and vice-principals see themselves as relaxed, flexible, and satisfied with their ability to adapt to the stress levels they experience in their lives; however, there was some support for medical research findings that suggest that specific security-oriented thinking styles are associated with emotional stresses that contribute to the development of specific lifestyle habits, physical symptoms, and illnesses. Although the number of females in this study provides very limited generalizability, the findings of this study suggest that high achieving females tend to develop satisfaction-growth styles to a higher level than males, and they tend to use security-oriented styles to a lesser degree than males.
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This paper makes a case for a direct relationship between digital literacy and nonlinear thinking styles, articulates a demand for nonlinear thinking styles in education and the workplace, and states implications for a connection between nonlinear thinking styles visual literacy, and intuitive artistic practice.
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The Rational-Experiential Inventory REI (Pacini and Epstein, 1999) is a self-administered test comprising two scales measuring the attitude of respondents towards two thinking styles respectively referred to as the rational and the experiential thinking styles. Two validation studies were conducted using a new French-language version of the REI. The first study confirms the validity of the French translation. The second study, which is concerned with the REI's construct validity, assesses the questionnaire's capacity to discriminate between a group of smokers and a group of non-smokers. Both studies give generally satisfactory results. In particular, the advantages of using the two-dimensional REI rather than the better known Need For Cognition scale (Cacioppo & Petty, 1982) are made quite clear.
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Työn tavoitteena oli selventää innovaatioketjun alkupään liittyviä keskeisiä käsitteitä, menetelmiä ja toimintamalleja sekä laatia innovaation alkupään ja kyvykkyyden arviointi- ja johtamismallit. Innovaatio on määritelmänsä mukaisesti uusi keksintö, joka on sovellettu käytäntöön ja se luo yritykselle lisäarvoa. Innovaatio on uusi malli, käytäntö tai konsepti, joka muuttaa vallitsevia käytäntöjä siten, että teknologinen ja taloudellinen suorituskyky paranee. Keskeinen kysymys on kirkastaa sumea etupää (Fuzzy Front End) uusiksi liiketoiminta-mahdollisuuksiksi. Innovaation tietolähteet: hiljaiset signaalit, trendit, kilpailija- ja asiakastieto, nousevat uudet teknologiat, tuotepalaute sekä tutkimus-, patentti- ja lisensiointi-informaatio, tarjoavat yrityksille mahdollisuuksia mm. tuote-, prosessi-, palvelu- ja liiketoimintainnovaatioksi. Tulevaisuuden näkeminen alkaa tietämisestä miten hallitsemme signaaleita, jotka ovat olemassa tänään, mutta niitä ei ole tunnistettu. Taitavissa innovaatioyrityksissä tulevaisuuden etsiminen on avainprioriteetti. Mullistavia uusia teknologioita otetaan käyttöön kaikilla teollisuuden aloilla. Näitä mahdollisuuksia on jatkuvasti ja systemaattisesti monitoroitava ja hyödynnettävä. Innovaatiot ja luovuus liittyvät läheisesti toisiinsa. Yrityksen innovatiivisuuden kehittämiseen liittyy sekä organisaatio- että yksilötason jatkuvaa kehittämistä. Yksilöt ovat organisaatiossa ideoiden lähde, mutta sen kehittäminen innovaatioksi on koko organisaation vastuulla. Innovatiivinen organisaatio on aina myös luova, koska luovuus on innovaation lähde. Luovuuden avulla tuotetaan uusia ja hyödyllisiä ideoita ja toimeenpanokyky sisältää ideoiden kehittämisen ja hyödyntämisen liiketoiminnassa. Innovaatiot edellyttävät myös uutta ajattelua. Rationaalinen ajattelu on jopa innovatiivisuuden este. Ajattelukyvykkyyden kehittäminen johtaa tutkimuksien mukaan tehokkaampaan kommunikointiin ja tuloksekkaampaan tiimityöhön. Innovaatiot syntyvät usein vuorovaikutuksessa poikkiorganisatorisissa tiimeissä Innovaatiot eivät synny sattumalta vaan johtamisen tuloksena. Luovuuden ja kyvykkyyksien johtaminen on innovatiivisen organisaation peruselementtejä. Innovaatiokyvykkyyden osatekijöitä ovat innovaation tietolähteiden hyödyntäminen, toimialan osaaminen, innovaatioita tukevat johtamis- ja tietojärjestelmät, innovaatiokulttuuri, prosessilähtöisyys ja dynaaminen kyvykkyys. Innovaatioiden johtaminenon strategialähtöistä, innovaatioprosessien implementointia, työkalujen ja menetelmien hallintaa sekä innovatiivisuuden kehittämistä.
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A brand-harm crisis not only affects the scandalized brand, but may also influence competing brands. Thus, marketers of competing brands need to develop response strategies for reducing negative spillover effects. This research takes a competitor’s perspective and introduces two types of response strategies used to convey a sense of denial: sensegiving and sensehiding. It also investigates how the effects of response strategies are contingent upon brand relatedness and individual thinking styles. The results from three experimental studies show that using a sensegiving strategy reduces negative spillover effects more than using a sensehiding strategy. Additionally, the studies suggest that the observed difference in the effects of response strategy tends to be greater when the level of brand relatedness is high than when it is low. However, individual thinking styles (holistic vs. analytic) seem to have little impact on consumers’ responses to the two denial strategies. This research contributes to the brand-harm crisis literature and provides novel insights into a competitor’s response to potential negative spillover effects.
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L’élaboration de programme d’interventions propres aux fraudeurs soulève la question de la particularité de leur personnalité. Des écrits suggèrent que la personnalité des fraudeurs présenterait des similitudes avec les traits psychopathiques. L’objectif de l’étude est donc de décrire et d’explorer ces traits chez des fraudeurs spécialisés incarcérés, et ce, à l’aide des questionnaires Psychopathic Personality Inventory (PPI) et Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles (PICTS). Trois groupes de détenus (35 hommes, 17 femmes) ont rempli les questionnaires: fraudeurs spécialisés (n=23), autres délinquants sans crimes violents (ASV, n=19) et autres délinquants avec crimes violents (AAV, n=10). Un groupe d’étudiants (n=430) a aussi complété le PPI, permettant ainsi d’ajouter un groupe de comparaison. Les analyses ont permis de constater que le groupe de fraudeurs diffère peu des autres groupes quant à leurs traits psychopathiques. Cependant, ils sont moins enclins que le groupe d’AAV à adopter des pensées criminelles, fréquentes chez les psychopathes.
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El objetivo principal es verificar emp??ricamente la teor??a tri??rquica de la inteligencia y la teor??a del autogobierno mental de Sternberg y su relaci??n con el aprendizaje y logro acad??mico en los alumnos de ESO, ofreciendo al mismo tiempo un modelo explicativo de la relaci??n entre estas variables y otras de tipo motivacional y afectivo como las metas de aprendizaje y las expectativas de logro para realizar con ??xito los aprendizajes escolares derivadas del autoconcepto acad??mico. Otros objetivos ser??an: 1. buscar evidencia emp??rica del constructo estilos de pensamiento, en alumnos y en profesores, mediante el an??lisis de las respuestas a los instrumentos Thinking Styles Questionnaire para alumnos (TSQS) y para profesores (TSQT) elaborados por Sternberg. 2. Analizar la relaci??n entre los 3 tipos de inteligencia descritos en la teor??a tri??rquica de Stenberg y las distintas clases de estilos de autogobierno mental, as?? como el grado en que habilidades y estilos determinan diferencialmente el logro acad??mico del estudiante. 3. Explorar mediante el procedimiento de An??lisis Cluster la hip??tesis de los estilos compuestos y, en caso de su existencia, indagar sobre su relevancia en la explicaci??n del rendimiento acad??mico. 4. Contrastar la hip??tesis que predice la relevancia de que los estilos de profesor y alumnos coincidan en el sentido de que ello redundar?? en beneficio para el alumno. 5. Analizar la relaci??n que existe entre estilos de pensamiento de los alumnos y tipos de evaluaci??n descritos en p??ginas precedentes. 6. Estudiar la caracter??sticas de los estilos de autogobierno de los estudiantes, teniendo en cuenta la interacci??n con otras variables. 7. Explorar qu?? caracter??sticas motivacionales son caracter??sticas de cada uno de los estilos de pensamiento del alumno. 2698 estudiantes de ESO de distintas zonas de Asturias y 135 profesores de estos estudiantes, durante el curso acad??mico 1999-2000. Entre los meses de noviembre de 1998 y febrero de 1999 se lleva a cabo un estudio piloto con el fin de recopilar informaci??n importante sobre cuestiones relativas a los instrumentos de evaluaci??n necesaria para la planificaci??n del estudio final. En ??ste, realizado a lo largo del curso acad??mico 1999-2000 se le aplican a los estudiantes cuatro pruebas: inteligencia (Stenberg Triarchic Abilities Test), estilos intelectuales (Thinking Styles Questionnaire for Students), competencia percibida para la realizaci??n de los aprendizajes escolares (Escala de Evaluaci??n del Autoconcepto en adolescentes) y metas acad??micas (Cuestionario de Metas Acad??micas en la ESO), mientras que los profesores cumplimentan un cuestionario de evaluaci??n de los estilos intelectuales para profesores. Finalizado el curso acad??mico se han realizado entrevistas con la direcci??n de los centros educativos y con los profesores implicados para obtener las notas del rendimiento de los alumnos, as?? como informaci??n sobre los procedimientos de evaluaci??n utilizados por el profesorado. Stenberg Triarchic Abilities Test (STAT), para medir las habilidades intelectuales seg??n la teor??a tri??rquica de Sternberg. Thinking Styles Questionnaire for Students (TSQS) para evaluar los estilos de autogobierno de los alumnos. Thinking Styles Questionnaire for Teachers (TSQT), eval??a los estilos de pensamiento del profesor. Learning and Study Strategies Inventory (LASSI), para la evaluaci??n de estrategias. Inventario de Procesos Metacognitivos (IPM), escala de evaluaci??n de los procesos metacognitivos. Cuestionario de Metas Acad??micas (CMA), eval??a las diferencias individuales en cuanto a los motivos por los cuales los alumnos se esfuerzan en sus estudios. Self Description Questionnaire (SDQ-II), permite la evaluaci??n de las diversas dimensiones del autoconcepto de los alumnos en la etapa de la adolescencia. Pruebas de rendimiento, muestra c??mo los profesores eval??an los conocimientos de sus alumnos. Se realizan los siguientes an??lisis estad??sticos: An??lisis de fiabilidad de todos los instrumentos de evaluaci??n. An??lisis factoriales de tipo exploratorio y confirmatorio con el fin de estudiar la validez del constructo. An??lisis de las correlaciones entre las distintas variables para investigar sobre la relaci??n entre ??mbitos de las habilidades. An??lisis de Cluster de tipo jer??rquico para obtener informaci??n sobre posibles estilos intelectuales compuestos. An??lisis de covarianza (ANCOVA) para obtener informaci??n sobre el efecto de ciertas variables independientes (estilos de pensamiento y capacidades cognitivas) sobre una variable dependiente (el rendimiento en un tipo de prueba de evaluaci??n). An??lisis de regresi??n m??ltiple para complementar la informaci??n obtenida de los an??lisis de las correlaciones. An??lisis de modelos de ecuaciones estructurales, para el estudio de la causalidad. Se apoyan los supuestos b??sicos del modelo de Robert Sternberg tanto respecto a la teor??a tri??rquica de la inteligencia como a la teor??a del autogobierno del pensamiento, tanto en alumnos como en profesores. Tambi??n aporta informaci??n relevante para la formulaci??n de hip??tesis que implican nuevas dimensiones de este modelo. Se demuestra la vinculaci??n significativa del constructo 'estilos intelectuales' con la 'determinaci??n de una meta personal' en el estudio y con la 'capacidad percibida' para este tipo de trabajo en la explicaci??n del rendimiento acad??mico de los alumnos.
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The well-studied link between psychotic traits and creativity is a subject of much debate. The present study investigated the extent to which schizotypic personality traits - as measured by O-LIFE (Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences) - equip healthy individuals to engage as groups in everyday tasks. From a sample of 69 students, eight groups of four participants - comprised of high, medium, or low-schizotypy individuals - were assembled to work as a team to complete a creative problem-solving task. Predictably, high scorers on the O-LIFE formulated a greater number of strategies to solve the task, indicative of creative divergent thinking. However, for task success (as measured by time taken to complete the problem) an inverted U shaped pattern emerged, whereby high and low-schizotypy groups were consistently faster than medium schizotypy groups. Intriguing data emerged concerning leadership within the groups, and other tangential findings relating to anxiety, competition and motivation were explored. These findings challenge the traditional cliche that psychotic personality traits are linearly related to creative performance, and suggest that the nature of the problem determines which thinking styles are optimally equipped to solve it. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Theory and treatment for childhood anxiety disorders typically implicates children’s negative cognitions, yet little is known about the characteristics of thinking styles of clinically anxious children. In particular, it is unclear whether differences in thinking styles between children with anxiety disorders and non-anxious children vary as a function of child age, whether particular cognitive distortions are associated with childhood anxiety disorders at different child ages, and whether cognitive content is disorder-specific. The current study addressed these questions among 120 7 - 12 year old children (53% female) who met diagnostic criteria for social anxiety disorder, other anxiety disorder, or who were not currently anxious. Contrary to expectations, threat interpretation was not inflated amongst anxious compared to non-anxious children at any age, although older (10 - 12 year old) anxious children did differ from non-anxious children on measures of perceived coping. The notion of cognitive-content specificity was not supported across the age-range. The findings challenge current treatment models of childhood anxiety, and suggest that a focus on changing anxious children’s cognitions is not warranted in mid-childhood, and in late childhood cognitive approaches may be better focussed on promoting children’s perceptions of control rather than challenging threat interpretations.
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This study arises in the context of physics teacher training and aims, from the speech of the teacher trainer, identify possible pedagogical models and characterize thinking styles present in the course of licentiate in physics of IFRN using the epistemology of Ludwik Fleck. We classify our research as qualitative with an empirical nature, and for the analysis we chose the discursive textual analysis - DTA (MORAES, 2003). The locus of our research will be the licentiate in physics at the Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of Rio Grande do Norte - IFRN, Natal-Central Campus and the research subjects, a group of teacher trainers of this course. We interviewed ten teachers, being six from the group dedicated to physics and four from the group dedicated to didactics and pedagogy. From this design, we performed data acquisition consisted of: 1) semi-structured interview, 2) document analysis. On the data analysis, with the support of pedagogical trends that were observed in our study based on the perception of the similarities and differences between the ideas presented by teachers about: education and teaching; ideal teaching practice, teacher's role, learning conceptions, and according to the student and on the ideological thinking of these former teachers on the professional profile of graduates, we noted subsidies to identify evidences of the presence of three distinct thinking styles that interrelate with each other in a considerably intense way. The relevance of the study is presented in the understanding of thinking styles that participate in the dynamics of the course of teacher training in physics, and by consequence, elucidation of a problem pointed out a priori as motivating the research: the difficulty of communicative interaction on educational practices among teacher trainers. We bring Fleck's epistemology as a motivating possibility of dialogue and negotiation, setting thus an instrument of real change, towards the significance of teacher training in physics.
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Recent evidence has highlighted the important role that number ordering skills play in arithmetic abilities (e.g., Lyons & Beilock, 2011). In fact, Lyons et al. (2014) demonstrated that although at the start of formal mathematics education number comparison skills are the best predictors of arithmetic performance, from around the age of 10, number ordering skills become the strongest numerical predictors of arithmetic abilities. In the current study we demonstrated that number comparison and ordering skills were both significantly related to arithmetic performance in adults, and the effect size was greater in the case of ordering skills. Additionally, we found that the effect of number comparison skills on arithmetic performance was partially mediated by number ordering skills. Moreover, performance on comparison and ordering tasks involving the months of the year was also strongly correlated with arithmetic skills, and participants displayed similar (canonical or reverse) distance effects on the comparison and ordering tasks involving months as when the tasks included numbers. This suggests that the processes responsible for the link between comparison and ordering skills and arithmetic performance are not specific to the domain of numbers. Finally, a factor analysis indicated that performance on comparison and ordering tasks loaded on a factor which included performance on a number line task and self-reported spatial thinking styles. These results substantially extend previous research on the role of order processing abilities in mental arithmetic.
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The factor structure of a back translated Spanish version (Lega, Caballo and Ellis, 2002) of the Attitudes and Beliefs Inventory (ABI) (Burgess, 1990) is analyzed in a sample of 250 university students.The Spanish version of the ABI is a 48-items self-report inventory using a 5-point Likert scale that assesses rational and irrational attitudes and beliefs. 24-items cover two dimensions of irrationality: a) areas of content (3 subscales), and b) styles of thinking (4 subscales).An Exploratory Factor Analysis (Parallel Analysis with Unweighted Least Squares method and Promin rotation) was performed with the FACTOR 9.20 software (Lorenzo-Seva and Ferrando, 2013).The results reproduced the main four styles of irrational thinking in relation with the three specific contents of irrational beliefs. However, two factors showed a complex configuration with important cross-loadings of different items in content and style. More analyses are needed to review the specific content and style of such items.
Resumo:
The factor structure of a back translated Spanish version (Lega, Caballo and Ellis, 2002) of the Attitudes and Beliefs Inventory (ABI) (Burgess, 1990) is analyzed in a sample of 250 university students.The Spanish version of the ABI is a 48-items self-report inventory using a 5-point Likert scale that assesses rational and irrational attitudes and beliefs. 24-items cover two dimensions of irrationality: a) areas of content (3 subscales), and b) styles of thinking (4 subscales).An Exploratory Factor Analysis (Parallel Analysis with Unweighted Least Squares method and Promin rotation) was performed with the FACTOR 9.20 software (Lorenzo-Seva and Ferrando, 2013).The results reproduced the main four styles of irrational thinking in relation with the three specific contents of irrational beliefs. However, two factors showed a complex configuration with important cross-loadings of different items in content and style. More analyses are needed to review the specific content and style of such items.
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The momentary, global functional state of the brain is reflected by its electric field configuration. Cluster analytical approaches consistently extracted four head-surface brain electric field configurations that optimally explain the variance of their changes across time in spontaneous EEG recordings. These four configurations are referred to as EEG microstate classes A, B, C, and D and have been associated with verbal/phonological, visual, attention reorientation, and subjective interoceptive-autonomic processing, respectively. The present study tested these associations via an intra-individual and inter-individual analysis approach. The intra-individual approach tested the effect of task-induced increased modality-specific processing on EEG microstate parameters. The inter-individual approach tested the effect of personal modality-specific parameters on EEG microstate parameters. We obtained multichannel EEG from 61 healthy, right-handed, male students during four eyes-closed conditions: object-visualization, spatial-visualization, verbalization (6 runs each), and resting (7 runs). After each run, we assessed participants' degrees of object-visual, spatial-visual, and verbal thinking using subjective reports. Before and after the recording, we assessed modality-specific cognitive abilities and styles using nine cognitive tests and two questionnaires. The EEG of all participants, conditions, and runs was clustered into four classes of EEG microstates (A, B, C, and D). RMANOVAs, ANOVAs and post-hoc paired t-tests compared microstate parameters between conditions. TANOVAs compared microstate class topographies between conditions. Differences were localized using eLORETA. Pearson correlations assessed interrelationships between personal modality-specific parameters and EEG microstate parameters during no-task resting. As hypothesized, verbal as opposed to visual conditions consistently affected the duration, occurrence, and coverage of microstate classes A and B. Contrary to associations suggested by previous reports, parameters were increased for class A during visualization, and class B during verbalization. In line with previous reports, microstate D parameters were increased during no-task resting compared to the three internal, goal-directed tasks. Topographic differences between conditions concerned particular sub-regions of components of the metabolic default mode network. Modality-specific personal parameters did not consistently correlate with microstate parameters except verbal cognitive style which correlated negatively with microstate class A duration and positively with class C occurrence. This is the first study that aimed to induce EEG microstate class parameter changes based on their hypothesized functional significance. Beyond, the associations of microstate classes A and B with visual and verbal processing, respectively and microstate class D with interoceptive-autonomic processing, our results suggest that a finely-tuned interplay between all four EEG microstate classes is necessary for the continuous formation of visual and verbal thoughts, as well as interoceptive-autonomic processing. Our results point to the possibility that the EEG microstate classes may represent the head-surface measured activity of intra-cortical sources primarily exhibiting inhibitory functions. However, additional studies are needed to verify and elaborate on this hypothesis.
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Adolescent substance use is a serious public health concern with long-lasting consequences. Although specific coping behaviors have been associated with adolescent substance use, less is known about the role of multidimensional coping styles that account for both positive and negative coping behaviors. This study examined the association of coping styles and substance use (alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drugs) of 1,019 ethnically diverse high school students. Coping styles were categorized by high or low negative coping behaviors (e.g. distraction, social withdrawal, self-criticism, blame others, wishful thinking, resignation, and negative emotional regulation) and high or low positive coping behaviors (e.g. cognitive restructuring, problem-solving, social support, and positive emotional regulation). My hypothesis that high positive coping, regardless of the use of negative coping behaviors, would be protective against substance use was rejected. Logistic regression analyses controlling for age, gender, race, and parent education indicated that adolescents who relied primarily on adaptive coping were 45-67% less likely to report lifetime or past year substance use than any other coping style. However, mixed copers (i.e. high in both positive and negative coping behaviors) were 2 to 3 times as likely to report substance use than their adaptive coping counterparts.^