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Kinds of Edwards Selected AbstractsA passion for publishing: Griffith Edwards and the creation of an institutionADDICTION, Issue 1 2005THOMAS F. BABOR On behalf of the editorial team No abstract is available for this article. [source] Causal uncertainty as a chronically accessible constructEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 5 2009John A. Edwards Causal uncertainty refers to feelings that one may not understand the causes of events. A number of studies have shown that causal uncertainty has significant effects on people's processing of information and on important life outcomes. Weary and Edwards have postulated that causal uncertainty is, in part, a cognitive construct that can vary in its accessibility. This assumption has allowed for a variety of predictions to be made about the causes and consequences of causal uncertainty. However, this accessibility assumption has never been directly tested. To do this, in Study 1 an emotional Stroop procedure was used. Higher causal uncertainty was associated with longer latencies to name the color in which causal uncertainty-related words were written compared to uncertainty-irrelevant words. In Study 2, both manipulated and chronic causal uncertainty led to faster times to respond to causal uncertainty-related stimuli in an attitude accessibility task. Both studies are consistent with the theoretically predicted chronic accessibility of causal uncertainty beliefs. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] WILLIAM H. REHNQUIST AWARD ADDRESSFAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 4 2005Hon. Leonard Edwards The William H. Rehnquist Award is one of the most celebrated judicial honors in the country.1 It is given each year to a state court judge who demonstrates the "highest level of judicial excellence, integrity, fairness, and professional ethics."2 The 2004 recipient, Judge Leonard Edwards, is the Supervising Judge of the Santa Clara County, California juvenile dependency court.3 He is the first juvenile court judge to receive this prestigious award. During the 24 years he has held his position, Judge Edwards has worked extremely hard to improve how the juvenile court system serves troubled families. He has founded two organizations to achieve this end, the Juvenile Court Judges of California and the Santa Clara County Domestic Violence Council.4 Judge Edwards serves as a lead judge in San Jose's Model Court, which is one of twenty-five jurisdictions in the country which utilizes new ideas and techniques to improve adoption rates for children in foster care.5 Moreover, he has worked as president of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges.6 Below is the speech he gave after accepting the award from U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy. The speech notes the importance of the award to everyone working in America's juvenile courts. [source] DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SPECIES OF THE GENUS CULICOIDES (DIPTERA: CERATOPOGONIDAE) FROM XINGJUNG UYGUR AUT.INSECT SCIENCE, Issue 3 2001Abstract A new species of Culicoides, C. tahemanensis sp. nov. is described from Xingjiang Uygur Aut. Reg. in China. The new species is closely allied to Culicoides grisescens Edwards, but both of them are distinctly different in pale spots of cell R5 and cell A of wing of female, and shape of distal portion of aedeagus of male. The ninth tergum of new species is somewhat allied to C. nipponensis Tokunaga, but distinctly different in pale spots of cell R5, cell M2 and cell A of wing, and shape of aedeagus of male. The type speciemens are deposited in the Institute of Military Medical Sciences, Shenyang Military District, Shengyang 110034, China. [source] Changing the atmosphere: expert knowledge and environmental governance, edited by Clark Miller and Paul Edwards, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2001.INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 11 2002No. of pages xii + 385. No abstract is available for this article. [source] National Enterprises, National States and Labour Relations after the End of GlobalizationINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 2 2001Bob Jessop Books reviewed in this essay: Edwards, Paul and Tony Elger (eds.) The global economy, national states, and the regulation of labour Waddington, Jeremy (ed.) Globalization and patterns of labour resistance Rugman, Alan The end of globalization [source] Common Risk Factors Versus a Mispricing Factor of Tokyo Stock Exchange Firms: Inquiries into the Fundamental Value Derived from Analyst Earnings Forecasts,INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCE, Issue 3 2009KEIICHI KUBOTA ABSTRACT We search for common factors and/or a mispricing factor for Tokyo Stock Exchange firms. We utilize the Edwards,Bell,Ohlson model to compute the firms' fundamental value and divide this value by the firms' market price to construct a new variable called a ,value-to-price ratio' (VPR). We find that this VPR variable can generate abnormal returns even after adjusting for the risk factors related to portfolio style differences. To find out whether it is indeed a risk factor or simply a characteristic, we construct return difference portfolios of the high VPR stocks minus the low value-to-price stocks and call this portfolio the upward-forecast minus downward-forecast (UMD) factor. Fama and MacBeth test indicate that the risk premium for this UMD factor is positive. The best model in terms of the adjusted R2 value is the four-factor model in which the UMD factor is added to the Fama and French three factors. GMM Euler condition tests reveal that the UMD factor helps to price assets and that the four-factor model is not rejected. We conclude the VPR variable contains new information content that is not contained in the conventional Fama and French's three factors. [source] Structural Solutions to Social Dilemmas: A Field Study on Commuters' Willingness to Fund Improvements in Public Transit,JOURNAL OF APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 3 2001Jeffrey A. Joireman The present field study examined commuters'(N= 152) willingness to fund improvements in public transit. Consistent with Samuelson's (1993; Samuelson & Messick, 1995) multiattribute evaluation model of structural change in social dilemmas, support for the transit plan was higher when it was perceived to be (a) effective at reducing congestion and pollution, (b) personally beneficial, and (c) fair in terms of taxes and benefits. Also consistent with predictions, these relationships were moderated by individual differences in social value orientation (MClintock, 1968) and the consideration of future consequences (CFC; Strathman, Gleicher, Boninger, & Edwards, 1994). Prosocials responded more to the perceived fairness of the plan, while proselfs responded more to the plan's effectiveness in reducing congestion. Low CFCs responded more to the plan's personal benefits and effectiveness in reducing congestion, while high CFCs responded more to the plan's effectiveness in reducing pollution. [source] Geographical history of the central-western Pacific black fly subgenus Inseliellum (Diptera: Simuliidae: Simulium) based on a reconstructed phylogeny of the species, hot-spot archipelagoes and hydrological considerationsJOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 9 2001Douglas A. Craig Aim With six new species of subgenus Inseliellum Rubtsov recently described, a revised reconstructed phylogeny based on morphology is required. Geological history of islands where Inseliellum occurs, plus a cladistic analysis and hydrological considerations, provide the basis for a reconstructed geographical history of the species. Location Inseliellum is widely distributed and occurs in Micronesia, Cook Islands and Polynesia. A single specimen is known from Tonga Islands. Methods Maximum parsimony criteria using PAUP*, plus cytological information, were used to arrive at a preferred phylogenic reconstruction. Island ages of the hot spot archipelagoes involved are well known. The phylogeny was then compared with the palaeogeology. Information on evolution of running water habitats as islands age was incorporated into the biogeography. Results Cladistic analysis of forty of the forty-eight known Inseliellum species with Simulium (Nevermannia) neornatipes Dumbleton from New Caledonia and S. (Hebridosimulium) laciniatum Edwards from Fiji as outgroups, shows basal species and clades to be on widely separated older islands. In the Society Islands basal species are widely spread. Derived species, with morphological adaptations to deal with specialized habitats, are on younger islands (e.g. Tahiti), where a major species radiation has taken place. The reconstructed phylogeny indicates dispersal back to older islands, with minor subsequent species radiation. Main conclusions Palaeogeological evidence provides a basis for postulating that Inseliellum entered the western Pacific area some 20 Ma, with the possibility that it rafted eastwards on proto-Tonga Islands to the edge of southern-central Pacific. Older Cook Islands were present at that time. Movement into the Marquesas Islands was not earlier than 6 Ma and into the Society Islands perhaps 8,10 Ma. Basal species with generalized habitat requirements would have found suitable habitats (inferred from hydrological postulates) on leaves in the original, small shaded streams. With erosion and valley development, in particular on Tahiti, species radiated into specialized habitats such as cascades. Rich seston and high velocity probably drove reduction of filtering fans in some clades. With collapse of the caldera and formation of large rivers at c. 0.9 Ma, S. exasperans Craig and S. tahitiense Edwards adapted to deep, swiftly flowing water, all indicative that specialized habitat availability drove species radiation in Inseliellum. In the Society Islands, dispersal of derived species back to the oldest western islands was not possible because erosion has removed suitable habitats. [source] Maximum acyclic and fragmented sets in regular graphsJOURNAL OF GRAPH THEORY, Issue 2 2008Penny Haxell Abstract We show that a typical d -regular graph G of order n does not contain an induced forest with around vertices, when n,,,d,,,1, this bound being best possible because of a result of Frieze and ,uczak [6]. We then deduce an affirmative answer to an open question of Edwards and Farr (see [4]) about fragmentability, which concerns large subgraphs with components of bounded size. An alternative, direct answer to the question is also given. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 57: 149,156, 2008 [source] Editor's comments on letters from Hickson and EdwardsJOURNAL OF HUMAN NUTRITION & DIETETICS, Issue 4 2007Dr Joan Gandy [source] Regional and Urban Economics and Economic Development: Theory and Methods by Mary E. EdwardsJOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2008Scott Loveridge No abstract is available for this article. [source] Focus Introduction: Taking the Measure of Jonathan Edwards for Contemporary Religious EthicsJOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS ETHICS, Issue 2 2003Stephen A. Wilson and The Journal of Religious Ethics marks the tercentenary of Edwards's birth with the following collection of essays. In keeping with the overall mission of the journal, this tribute takes the form of historical and constructive reflection, in which diverse perspectives on Edwards's work and diverse forms of engagement with it supplement and correct one another. Our hope is that these essays will serve both to generate interest in Edwards's work among those who are unfamiliar with him, and to advance the discussion of central issues in theological and religious ethics. In this introductory essay, we will offer some reflections on Edwards's general significance for contemporary ethics, followed by a closer examination of his main texts and a brief summary of the essays collected here. [source] Jonathan Edwards and the Language of Nature: The Re-Enchantment of the World in the Age of Scientific ReasoningJOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, Issue 1 2002Avihu Zakai For a long time Jonathan Edwards (1703-58) was thought of more as a preacher of hellfire and revival than as a theologian, and rather as a Calvinist theologian than a philosopher of importance, and he was dismissed accordingly. Yet Edwards was more than a hellfire preacher, more than a theologian. This New England divine was one of the rare individuals anywhere to recognize and answer the challenges posed to traditional Christian belief by the emergence of new modes of thought in early modern history - the new ideas of the scientific thought and the Enlightenment. His force of mind is evident in his exposition of the poverty of mechanical philosophy, which radically transformed the traditional Christian dialectic of God's utter transcendence and divine immanence by gradually dimin-ishing divine sovereignty with respect to creation, providence, and redemption, thus leading to the disenchantment of the world. Edwards constructed a teleological and theological alternative to the prevailing mechanistic interpretation of the essential nature of reality, whose ultimate goal was the re-enchantment of the world by reconstituting the glory of God's majestic sovereignty, power, and will within the order of creation. [source] John Bryant, Mary K. Bercaw Edwards, And Timothy Marr, "Ungraspable Phantom": Essays on Moby-DickLEVIATHAN, Issue 1 2008Jonathan A. Cook [source] Ectoparasites of Chevrier's field mouse, Apodemus chevrieri, in a focus of plague in southwest ChinaMEDICAL AND VETERINARY ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 3 2007M XING-YUAN Abstract Chevrier's field mouse, Apodemus chevrieri Milne,Edwards (Rodentia: Muridae), has been identified as the main wild reservoir of plague in the sylvatic plague focus of Yunnan Province, southwest China. Here, the ectoparasite communities of A. chevrieri and the potential medical and veterinary importance of these ectoparasites are described. A high proportion (66%) of 321 mice were found to be infested with ectoparasites. A total of 81 species of ectoparasite, including 48 species of chigger mite, 25 species of mesostigmatid (gamasid) mite, six species of flea and two species of sucking louse were collected. Most species of ectoparasite were relatively uncommon, but a few were abundant. Within this ectoparasite complex, 16 species have previously been reported to be vectors of human disease agents. Apodemus chevrieri would appear therefore to be a natural reservoir for plague bacilli and epidemic haemorrhagic fever (Korean haemorrhagic fever) viruses. [source] On Robert Jenson's Trinitarian ThoughtMODERN THEOLOGY, Issue 1 2002Brian K. Sholl This paper addresses Robert Jenson's critique of impassibility along with his Trinitarian formulations. Jenson's decision to eschew a doctrine of divine impassibility leads him to adopt a Kantian conception of subjectivity in order to explicate the traditional concept of hypostasis. In turn, Jenson advocates a Hegelian notion of determinate negation to relate to a concept of being dependent upon a German Idealist figuration of temporality. The final section of the paper contrasts Jenson's modernist immanentism with the positive perichoretic movement of Jonathan Edwards' trinitarian thought. For Edwards, the Trinity cannot be known as a repeatable object of knowledge reflected within human consciousness, but as a non-identical repletion of eternal love to which univocal categories do not apply. [source] "Where Theologians Fear to Tread"MODERN THEOLOGY, Issue 1 2000Amy Plantinga Pauw This essay appeals to the practice of Baroque musical ornamentation as an analogy to the place of reflection on angels and demons in Christian theology. In ways left to the discretion of the performer, this reflection functions to enhance the main theological melody of God, Christ, human salvation, and, in particular, eschatology. Jonathan Edwards and Karl Barth are the text cases for this thesis. While Edwards' treatment of angels and Satan mutes his eschatology of glory by drawing attention to the humility and suffering of Christ, Barth's treatment underscores the sovereignty of God and Christ's victory over sin. [source] Kabul Transit edited by David Edwards, Gregory Whitmore, and Maliha ZulfacarAMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Issue 1 2010Bill Nichols No abstract is available for this article. [source] POETS AND GOD: CHAUCER, SHAKESPEARE, HERBERT, MILTON, WORDSWORTH, COLERIDGE, BLAKE by David L. Edwards, Darton, Longman and Todd, London, 2005, pp. xv + 256, £12.95 pbk.NEW BLACKFRIARS, Issue 1009 2006ISBN: 0-232-52577-3. No abstract is available for this article. [source] Evaluating Human Resources Programs: A 6-Phase Approach for Optimizing Performance by Jack Edwards, John Scott, and Nambury RajuPERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2008Article first published online: 12 MAY 200 First page of article [source] Oviposition habitat selection by mosquitoes in response to predator (Notonecta maculata) densityPHYSIOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2004Avi Eitam Abstract., Some species of mosquitoes can detect the presence of predatory notonectid bugs and avoid oviposition in predator pools. The oviposition response of two mosquito species, Culiseta longiareolata Macquart and Culex laticinctus Edwards (Diptera: Culicidae), to a range of densities of the predator, Notonecta maculata Fabricius (Heteroptera: Notonectidae), was tested here. Densities of 0, 1, 2 or 4 Notonecta were established in 30-L artificial pools. Both mosquito species oviposited less in predator pools, but the response was unrelated to predator density, whereas vulnerability of Culiseta immatures to predation was density-dependent. Thus, although mosquitoes can detect Notonecta at any density within the range tested, they may be unable to discriminate among predator densities. The avoidance of predator pools by Culiseta, as well as its vulnerability to predation, occurred to a lesser degree than in earlier studies. This may have been due to the mitigating effects of components of the biotic community. [source] Withdrawing antidepressants: guide to patient managementPRESCRIBER, Issue 1 2006Guy Edwards FRCPsych Our series on stopping drugs provides practical advice on why, when and how to withdraw and change drug therapy. In this article, Dr Edwards discusses the withdrawal of antidepressant drugs and addresses some of the issues this raises with respect to patient management. Copyright © 2006 Wiley Interface Ltd [source] Ecology at the Heart of Faith: The Change of Heart that Leads to a New Way of Living on the Earth , By Denis EdwardsRELIGIOUS STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 3 2007Forrest Clingerman No abstract is available for this article. [source] The Trinitarian Metaphysics of Jonathan Edwards and Nicolas MalebrancheTHE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 2 2002Jasper Reid This paper explores both the striking similarities and also the differences between Jonathan Edwards and Nicolas Malebranche's philosophical views on the Holy Trinity and, in particular, the ways in which they both gave important roles to specific Persons of the Trinity in the various different branches of their respective metaphysical systems,ontological, epistemological and ethical. It is shown that Edwards and Malebranche were in very close agreement on ontological questions pertaining to the Trinity, both with respect to the internal, triune nature of the divine substance (characterising the Three Persons as the divine power, as the consubstantial idea of God which was generated as He eternally reflected on Himself, and as the mutual love which proceeded between the Father and this idea), and also with respect to the various roles these Three Persons played in the creation of the world. In epistemology, Malebranche postulated an illuminating union between the mind of man and the divine Word, insisting on an absolutely direct involvement of the Second Person in all human cognition, both intellectual and sensible. On this point Edwards did differ, endorsing instead an empiricist epistemology which left no room for such a direct union with the Word. However, when it came to ethics, Edwards and Malebranche both gave the Third Person an utterly central role, postulating much the same kind of union as Malebranche alone had postulated in the epistemological case, only now between the will of man and the Holy Spirit. [source] Jonathan Edwards: America's Evangelical , By Philip F. GuraTHE HISTORIAN, Issue 2 2007Timothy D. Hall No abstract is available for this article. [source] Johnny Cash and the Paradox of American Identity by Leigh H. EdwardsTHE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN CULTURE, Issue 2 2010Bob Batchelor No abstract is available for this article. [source] Sensible objects: colonialism, museums and material culture , Edited by Elizabeth Edwards, Chris Gosden & Ruth B. PhillipsTHE JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE, Issue 2 2008Graeme Were [source] Linguistic Markers of Psychological State through Media Interviews: John Kerry and John Edwards in 2004, Al Gore in 2000ANALYSES OF SOCIAL ISSUES & PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 1 2005James W. Pennebaker What can we learn about presidential candidates by examining their speech in natural conversation? In the present study, the television interviews from the 2004 Democratic presidential primary campaign of John Kerry (N= 29) and John Edwards (N= 34) were examined using linguistic analyses. Results indicate that Kerry and Edwards were similar in their use of positive emotion words, but that Kerry used significantly higher rates of negative emotion words than did Edwards. Comparisons with televised interviews of Al Gore from the 2000 presidential campaign (N= 17) revealed striking similarities in the linguistic styles of Gore and Kerry. Gore's linguistic style overlapped considerably with that of Kerry on pronoun usage and many cognitive domains. This study points to how linguistic analyses can give us a clearer picture of how political candidates think, act, and feel. [source] How is Well-Being Related to Membership in New Religious Movements?APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2010An Application of Person, Environment Fit Theory Ongoing public discussion about the consequences of membership in new religious movements (NRMs) and the lack of studies concerning the relationship between the fit of the person with his or her NRM and well-being together call for a theoretically based investigation of the phenomenon. Hence, this German study on new members of three NRMs applied person,environment fit theory to investigate whether the fit between persons' needs for autonomy and relatedness, on the one hand, and the commensurate supplies of the groups, on the other, are related to well-being and mental health. The regression model following Edwards (1994) predicted satisfaction with religious affiliation, mental health, and depression, but not life satisfaction and anxiety. Results indicate that, for autonomy and relatedness, well-being measures tend to decrease as supplies exceed needs. Little support was found for a moderator effect of centrality of religiosity. Overall, findings encourage the application of person,environment fit theory to the study of membership in (new) religious groups and call for further research. L'actuel débat public sur les conséquences de l'adhésion à un nouveau mouvement religieux et l'absence d'études sur la relation entre l'adaptation de la personne à son groupe et son bien-être nécessitent une investigation fondée théoriquement. D'où cette recherche allemande sur les nouveaux membres de trois de ces mouvements: on est parti de la théorie de l'adéquation personne-environnement pour savoir si l'ajustement entre les besoins personnels d'autonomie et autres besoins analogues d'une part, et les réponses du groupe dans ce domaine d'autre part, étaient reliés au bien-être et à la santé mentale. Le modèle de régression d'Edwards (1994) porte sur la satisfaction concernant l'engagement religieux, la santé mentale et la dépression, mais pas sur l'anxiété et la satisfaction liée à l'existence. Les résultats indiquent que, pour ce qui est de l'autonomie et ce qui en dépend, les mesures relatives au bien-être ont tendance à décroître à mesure que l'offre excède les attentes. L'effet modérateur de la centralité de la religiosité n'a pas vraiment été confirmé. Globalement, ce que l'on a obtenu est en faveur de l'application de la théorie de l'ajustement personne-environnement à l'étude de l'adhésion à de (nouveaux) groupes religieux et incite à développer d'autres recherches. [source] |