Browsing Psychology, Department of by Title
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
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Coding Manual for a Study With the Girl Scouts of Western Washington on the Importance of (Not Just Visual) Interaction With Nature
(2022-04-09)This technical report provides our coding manual – our systematic method to code the qualitative narrative data – from a study of Girl Scouts’ meaningful nature experiences. Other authors on this study (but not on this ... -
Coding Manual for the Study: “Do People Hold a Humanoid Robot Morally Accountable for the Harm It Causes?”
(University of Washington Department of Psychology, 2013-05)Robots will increasingly take on roles in our social lives where they can cause humans harm. When this happens, will people hold robots morally accountable for the harms they cause? Toward addressing this question, 40 ... -
Coding Manual for “The Nature Voices of People Who Visit Discovery Park: An Interaction Pattern Approach”
(2019-06-15)Interaction with nature is vital for human physical health and mental well-being, yet urban development continues to put pressures on natural areas that allow for essential forms of human-nature interaction. Discovery Park, ... -
Coding Manual for: Modeling Child-Nature Interaction in a Forest Preschool
(University of Washington The Human Interaction with Nature and Technological Systems Laboratory Department of Psychology & University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, 2022-05-08)There is increasing evidence that interaction with nature provides substantial benefits to the mental and physical development of children. While children’s time spent outdoors has declined substantially in recent decades, ... -
DBT Skills Training as a Treatment Strategy for Female Survivors of Human Trafficking
(2017-04)This paper will include suggestions for the first six group sessions using Dialectical Behavior Therapy for adults who were victims of sex trafficking in their youth. Group therapy involving DBT primarily focuses on skills ... -
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are highly conserved in rhesus (Macaca mulatta) and cynomolgus (Macaca fascicularis) macaques
(2007)Background: Macaca fascicularis (cynomolgus or longtail macaques) is the most commonly used nonhuman primate in biomedical research. Little is known about the genomic variation in cynomolgus macaques or how the sequence ...