scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Hampshire College

EducationAmherst Center, Massachusetts, United States
About: Hampshire College is a education organization based out in Amherst Center, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Genetic programming & Population. The organization has 461 authors who have published 998 publications receiving 40827 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By moving beyond studies of racialized genetics, this work can clarify the processes by which varied and interwoven forms of racialization and racism affect individuals "under the skin."
Abstract: There is a paradoxical relationship between "race" and genetics. Whereas genetic data were first used to prove the validity of race, since the early 1970s they have been used to illustrate the invalidity of biological races. Indeed, race does not account for human genetic variation, which is continuous, complexly structured, constantly changing, and predominantly within "races." Despite the disproof of race-as-biology, genetic variation continues to be used to explain racial differences. Such explanations require the acceptance of 2 disproved assumptions: that genetic variation explains variation in disease and that genetic variation explains racial variation in disease. While the former is a form of geneticization, the notion that genes are the primary determinants of biology and behavior, the latter represents a form of racialization, an exaggeration of the salience of race. Using race as a proxy for genetic differences limits understandings of the complex interactions among political-economic processes, lived experiences, and human biologies. By moving beyond studies of racialized genetics, we can clarify the processes by which varied and interwoven forms of racialization "under the skin."

310 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The error data obtained are consistent with a hierarchical planning as well as execution model, but the interresponse-time data provide strong support for a hierarchical execution model.
Abstract: Are movement sequences executed in a hierarchically controlled fashion? We first state explicitly what such control would entail, and we observe that if a movement sequence is planned hierarchically, that does not imply that its execution is hierarchical. To find evidence for hierarchically controlled execution, we require subjects to perform memorized sequences of finger responses like those used in playing the piano. The error data we obtain are consistent with a hierarchical planning as well as execution model, but the interresponse-time data provide strong support for a hierarchical execution model. We consider three alternatives to the hierarchical execution model and reject them. We also consider the implications of our results for the role of timing in motor programs, the characteristics of motor buffers, and the relations between memory for symbolic and motor information. Language: en

309 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Stress, a concept addressing the consequences of disruptive events on individuals and populations, can be a useful integrative idea as discussed by the authors, where adaptation focuses on "adaptive" or positive consequences, stress redresses an imbalance by focusing on the costs and limits of adaptation.
Abstract: Stress, a concept addressing the consequences of disruptive events on individuals and populations, can be a useful integrative idea. The stress process has much in common with its sister concept of adaptation. However, where adaptation focuses on “adaptive” or positive consequences, stress redresses an imbalance by focusing on the costs and limits of adaptation. In this paper we first review the interdisciplinary roots of the stress concept. While most stress research derives from research in environmental physiology, Selyean concepts of stress (involving increased catecholamine and corticosteroid output) have forced an expansion toward greater concern for perceptual and psychosocial stressors. What is largely missing from all traditions, however, is concern for sociopolitical processes which are not easily adapted to and consequently are persistent and pervasive causes of stress. Studies of stress in prehistoric, historical, and contemporary populations by biological anthropologists vary, in a complementary way, as to ability to delineate aspects of the stress process. Whereas the paleopathological methods of the prehistorian provide a suite of skeletal indicators of stress response, and the demographic measures of the historian provide a detailed analysis of consequence, a wide variety of techniques for examining all levels of the stress process are potentially available to those studying contemporary populations. In order to better utilize information from different levels of analysis one needs to focus on measures of stress, such as infant mortality, which are accessible at all levels. Biological anthropologists are in a unique position to elucidate the human condition if, via concepts such as stress, attention is paid to both human adaptive and political economic processes.

296 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These findings are consistent with an attenuation of the automatic emotional identification with others that is part of the innate moral sense that may result from neurodegenerative disease affecting the ventromedial frontal cortex.
Abstract: Objective:To investigate the basis of disturbed moral judgment in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD).Background:FTD is characterized by difficulty in modulating social behavior. Patients lack social propriety and may perform sociopathic acts. In addition, FTD patients often lack empathy for

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Gallic and citric acids were able to induce removal of Cd, Zn, Cu, and Ni from soil without increasing the leaching risk, and supplying appropriate mineral nutrients increased biomass and metal removal.

269 citations


Authors

Showing all 467 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Anton Zeilinger12563171013
Peter K. Hepler9020721245
William H. Warren7634922765
James Paul Gee7021040526
Eric J. Steig6922317999
Raymond W. Gibbs6218817136
David A. Rosenbaum5119810834
Lee Jussim441159101
Miriam E. Nelson4412216581
Stacia A. Sower431786555
Howard Barnum411096510
Lee Spector391654692
Eric C. Anderson381065627
Alan H. Goodman341045795
Babetta L. Marrone33953584
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
City University of New York
56.5K papers, 1.7M citations

83% related

University at Albany, SUNY
21.3K papers, 886K citations

82% related

California State University, Long Beach
13.9K papers, 377.3K citations

82% related

University of Massachusetts Amherst
83.9K papers, 3.8M citations

81% related

Kent State University
24.6K papers, 720.3K citations

81% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202221
202117
202034
201949
201833