Sentences with phrase «psychological experiments from»

It is a bit of a shock that the Stanford prison experiment, one of the most famous psychological experiments from the 1970's, has not received a direct adaptation until now.

Not exact matches

This was a type of psychological experiment to see if people as a group could be tricked into ascribing value to something created from nothing, if they were given it as a gift.
The results come from a tweak to a well - known psychological experiment called the trust game.
The key insight came with a test derived from a classic psychological experiment invented in the 1970s by Stanford University psychologist Roger Shepherd.
Michael Almereyda's Experimenter pulls from theatrical conventions to depict Stanley Milgram's landmark psychological experiment.
Like any military experiment they are held in quarantine and all suffer from psychological maladies that surface throughout the book.
Purpura goes on to talk about a psychological experiment done with scale - model rooms, from full size scale to models 1/6 or 1/12 or 1 / 24th that size.
Originally trained as a scientist, Höller is frequently inspired by research and experiments from scientific history and deploys these studies in works that alter the audience's physical and psychological sensations, inspiring doubt and uncertainty about the world around them.
The implementation didn't directly involve individual psychological analysis, but created an experiment of either artistic or therapeutic manifestations of various actors, both from the art world and by other interested participants.
(Think of the psychological effect of the «authority figure in the white coat» from the Milgrim experiments.)
Thus Prof. Lewandowsky created, controlled, conducted, analyzed, and published a psychological experiment without any disclosures to, or consent from, the subjects.
The study of law from non-legal or non-black-letter perspectives can usefully be divided into those that treat data derived from experiments and surveys (such as sociological studies of legal systems, or psychological studies of juries), and those look to the written word for evidence, the latter covering the vast majority of what is conventionally considered «legal scholarship».
This evidence comes mostly from psychological experiments inspired by terror - management theory [6,41,42,60] and life - history theory [45,46,50,52,54,56,63].
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