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Michael Lee Wood

Researcher at University of Notre Dame

Publications -  8
Citations -  200

Michael Lee Wood is an academic researcher from University of Notre Dame. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Agency (philosophy). The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications receiving 138 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Lee Wood include Brigham Young University.

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What Are Dual Process Models? Implications for Cultural Analysis in Sociology

TL;DR: The dual process framework (DPF) as mentioned in this paper is an interdisciplinary approach to the study of learning, memory, thinking, and action in cognitive and social psychology, which can be applied to a variety of analytically distinct issues of interest to sociologists beyond specific issues related to morality.
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Schemas and Frames

TL;DR: The authors suggest that the distinction between personal culture and public cult can be seen as a way to explain how frames structure perception and persuade audiences, and suggest that personal culture can be viewed as a kind of public cult.

Examining the Social Affordances of Communication Technology on Human Relations: A Critique of Networked Individualism from the Perspective of the Ethical Phenomenology of Emmanuel Levinas

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine and compare two opposed perspectives of human relations and social life and argue that networked individualism is an inadequate framework inasmuch as its ontological assertions prevent it from seeing some of the significant affordances of technology on human relations.
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Predicting Homophily and Social Network Connectivity From Dyadic Behavioral Similarity Trajectory Clusters

TL;DR: The similarity between pairs of people is often measured on relatively static traits and at a given point in time, but a burgeoning line of research is investigating temporal similarity.
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Visualizing Bring-backs:

TL;DR: The number of articles that have attempted to bring "back" something "back in" in the social sciences by publication year and number of citations was analysed by Abbott as discussed by the authors, taking a (pessimistic)...