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Institution

Williams College

EducationWilliamstown, Massachusetts, United States
About: Williams College is a education organization based out in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 2257 authors who have published 5015 publications receiving 213160 citations. The organization is also known as: Williams.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper explored the relative impact of fear and anger in reaction to the 2015 Paris terror attacks on the propensity to vote for the French far right party, the Front National, in the 2015 Regional Elections.
Abstract: The conjecture that negative emotions underpin support for far right politics in Europe is common among pundits and scholars. However, the conventional account holds that authoritarian populists catalyze public anxiety about the changing social order and/or deteriorating national economic conditions, and this anxiety subsequently drives up support for the far right. We propose that while emotions do indeed play an independent causal role in support for far right parties and policies, that support is more likely built upon the public’s anger rather than fear. This article explores the relative impact of fear and anger in reaction to the 2015 Paris terror attacks on the propensity to vote for the French far right party, the Front National, in the 2015 Regional Elections. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, we find anger is associated with voting for the FN, while fear is associated with voting against the FN. Moreover, anger boosts the FN vote most powerfully among far right and authoritarian voters. On the other hand, fear reduces support for the far right among those same groups.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A 54-year-old woman with damage to cerebellar circuitry resulting from a cerebrovascular accident underwent classical conditioning of the eye-blink response to a tone conditioned stimulus and an air-puff unconditioned stimulus, indicating that the cerebellum is the essential site of plasticity for classically conditioned somatic responses.
Abstract: A 54-year-old woman with damage to cerebellar circuitry resulting from a cerebrovascular accident underwent classical conditioning of the eye-blink response to a tone conditioned stimulus and an air-puff unconditioned stimulus. In contrast to 5 age-matched controls who readily acquired the conditioned response (CR), emitting a mean of 56.7 CRs over 70 trials, the patient emitted only 6 CRs in 100 trials and never emitted 2 consecutive CRs. There were no differences in spontaneous blink rate, sensitivity to the air puff, or sensitivity to the tone between the experimental subject and the control subjects. That conditioning of the eye-blink response is disrupted in a human with damage to cerebellar circuitry is consistent with an accumulating body of literature indicating that the cerebellum is the essential site of plasticity for classically conditioned somatic responses.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Jul 2003-Nature
TL;DR: Observations at a variety of visible and infrared wavelengths of an occultation of a star by Pluto in August 2002 reveal evidence for extinction in Pluto's atmosphere and show that it has indeed changed, having expanded rather than collapsed, since 1988.
Abstract: Stellar occultations—the passing of a relatively nearby body in front of a background star—can be used to probe the atmosphere of the closer body with a spatial resolution of a few kilometres (ref. 1). Such observations can yield the scale height, temperature profile, and other information about the structure of the occulting atmosphere. Occultation data acquired for Pluto's atmosphere in 1988 revealed a nearly isothermal atmosphere2 above a radius of ∼1,215 km. Below this level, the data could be interpreted as indicating either an extinction layer or the onset of a large thermal gradient, calling into question the fundamental structure of this atmosphere. Another question is to what extent Pluto's atmosphere might be collapsing as it recedes from the Sun (passing perihelion in 1989 in its 248-year orbital period), owing to the extreme sensitivity of the equilibrium surface pressure to the surface temperature. Here we report observations at a variety of visible and infrared wavelengths of an occultation of a star by Pluto in August 2002. These data reveal evidence for extinction in Pluto's atmosphere and show that it has indeed changed, having expanded rather than collapsed, since 1988.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of temporary mood on the self-perception of health status were investigated, showing that negative mood can affect subjective appraisals of health by increasing the accessibility of illness-related memories.
Abstract: Two experiments investigated the effects of temporary mood on the self-perception of health status. In Experiment 1, participants viewed one of two videotapes designed to induce either positive or negative mood. Under the guise of a second experiment, they were asked to imagine an illness-related scenario and to provide judgments concerning their health status. As predicted, positive-induction participants judged their health more favorably than negative-induction participants. Experiment 2 examined the mediating role of illness-relevant thinking in this mood effect. After seeing one of the two mood-induction tapes, some participants were asked to imagine either an illness-related or illness-unrelated scenario. A third group was given no instructions concerning imagination. As predicted, the relative effect of negative mood on health appraisal was attenuated only among those who imagined a scenario unrelated to health. Furthermore, the pattern of symptom recall data mirrored the self-appraisal findings. The data are consistent with the notion that negative mood can affect subjective appraisals of health by increasing the accessibility of illness-related memories. Implications for diagnostic practice are explored.

114 citations

BookDOI
TL;DR: This paper found that countries with relatively weak governments and bureaucratic systems impose harsher regulatory restrictions on bank activities, and the likelihood of a banking crisis is greater in countries where banks' securities activities are restricted, other things being equal.
Abstract: Costly bank failures in the past two decades have focused attention on the need to find ways to improve the performance of different countries' financial systems. Belief is overwhelming that financial systems can be improved but there is little empirical evidence to support any specific advice about regulatory and supervisory reform. With scant cross-country comparisons of financial regulatory and supervisory systems, economists cannot decide how to correct incentives and moral hazard problems in developing economies--whether, for example, to require higher (and more narrowly defined) capital-to-asset ratios, to mandate stricter definition and disclosure of non-performing loans, to require that subordinated debt be issued, or to install world-class supervision. Proposed reforms usually involve changes in financial regulations and supervisory standards, but many pressing questions about reform remain unanswered. Making use of a new database, the authors come up with brief answers to three key questions: Do countries with relatively weak governments and bureaucratic systems impose harsher regulatory restrictions on bank activities? Yes. Do countries with more restrictive regulatory regimes have poorly functioning banking systems. No--or at least the evidence is mixed. Do countries with more restrictive regulatory systems have less probability of suffering a banking crisis? No. In fact, the reverse is true. In countries where banks' securities activities are restricted, the likelihood of a banking crisis is greater, other things being equal.

114 citations


Authors

Showing all 2291 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alfred Kröner10137431665
Gabriel B. Brammer9133430335
William M. Tierney8442324235
Larry L. Jacoby7716625631
David P. DiVincenzo7128240038
James T. Carlton7019721690
Robert K. Merton6719074002
Allen Taylor6322216589
John A. Smolin6315024657
Qing Wang6254817215
Neal I. Lindeman6221731462
Michael I. Norton6027317597
Charles H. Bennett6011767435
Brian D. Fields5725063673
Hans C. Oettgen5712410056
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202271
2021209
2020237
2019216
2018190