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Behavioral and social science : fifty years of discovery : in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the "Ogburn report," Recent social trends in the United States / Neil J. Smelser and Dean R. Gerstein, editors ; Committee on Basic Research in the Behavioral and Social Sciences, Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, National Research Council.

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Smelser, Neil J.
Gerstein, Dean R.
National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Basic Research in the Behavioral and Social Sciences.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Social sciences--Research--United States--Congresses.
Social sciences.
Social change--Congresses.
Social change.
Social policy--Congresses.
Social policy.
United States--Social policy--Congresses.
United States.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (310 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C. : National Academy Press, 1986.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
In 1933, President Herbert Hoover commissioned the "Ogburn Report," a comprehensive study of social trends in the United States. Fifty years later, a symposium of noted social and behavioral scientists marked the report's anniversary with a book of their own from the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education. The 10 chapters presented here relate the developments detailed in the "Ogburn Report" to modern social trends. This book discusses recent major strides in the social and behavioral sciences, including sociology, psychology, anthropology, economics, and linguistics.
Contents:
Behavioral and Social Science Fifty Years of Discovery
Copyright
PREFACE
Contents
INTRODUCTION
UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL CHANGE
NUMBERS AND DECISIONMAKING
DISCOVERING THE MIND AT WORK
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
The Ogburn Vision Fifty Years Later
READING THE OGBURN COMMITTEE REPORT TODAY
THE OGBURN VISION OF SOCIAL PROCESS
SOCIAL CHANGE
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
DOCUMENTATION BY OBJECTIVE FACTS
SOCIAL INVENTION
APPLICATION BY POLICY CHANGE
SOCIAL AMELIORATION
A CONCLUDING NOTE
References
Measuring Social Change
SOCIAL INVENTIONS
Major Social Inventions and Their Consequences
Human Testing
Sample Surveys
Reduction of Cultural Lags
Statistics and Quality Control
Cohort Analysis
CONSEQUENCES OF SOCIAL CHANGE FOR MEASURES AND MEASUREMENT
Concepts and Measures as Products of Social Life
Social Change and the Organization of Ways of Knowing
The Paradox of Method
Consequences of Institutionalizing Measures of Changes
Some Consequences of the Organization of Statistical Indicators
THE CONCEPTUALIZATION AND MEASUREMENT OF SOCIAL CHANGE
Individualistic Biases in Studying Social Change
Lags in Measuring Social Change
Need for an National Statistical System
A SUMMING UP
Uncertainty, Diversity, and Organizational Change
CENTRALITY OF ORGANIZATIONAL PROCESSES IN LARGE-SCALE SOCIAL CHANGE
Rational and Natural System Perspectives
Perspectives On Organizational Change
An Ecological-Evolutionary Approach
Organizational Diversity
NICHE THEORY
INSTITUTIONAL ISOMORPHISM
DISCUSSION
Macroeconomic Modeling and Forecasting
ORIGINS OF THE SUBJECT
A PERIOD OF EXPANSION
CONTRIBUTION TO THOUGHT
SOME NEW LINES OF DEVELOPMENT
NUMBERS AND DECISIONMAKING.
Public Statistics and Democratic Politics
DEMOCRATIC ACCOUNTABILITY
REPRESENTATION OF DIVERSE INTERESTS
CONCLUSIONS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Deterrence in Criminology and Social Policy
TWO FUNDAMENTAL PERSPECTIVES ON CRIMINAL CONDUCT
STREET CRIMES
Certainty of Punishment
Severity of Punishment
The Death Penalty
Other Punishments
Summary
DRUNK DRIVING
Scandinavian-Type Laws
Enforcement Crackdowns
Statutory Changes
Judicial Crackdowns
RESEARCH AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
The Continued Reliance On Deterrence
The Prospect For Increased Certainty
Alternatives To Deterrence
Choices, Values, and Frames
RISKY CHOICE
Framing of Outcomes
The Psychophysics of Chances
Formulation Effects
TRANSACTIONS AND TRADES
Losses and Costs
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Changing Views of Cognitive Competence in the Young
THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
STUDYING INFANT KNOWLEDGE
Early Knowledge of Objects
Abstract Concepts
PRESCHOOL THOUGHT
Principles About Numbers, Causes, and Objects
Number
Causality
Objects
Making Plans and Strategies
Strategies for Remembering
Theory-building
THE TRANSITION TO FORMAL SCHOOLING
Incomplete Knowledge
The Expansion of Strategic Powers
Formal and Informal Teaching
Learned Academic Helplessness
Reawakening the Active Learner
Some Developments in Research On Language Behavior
The Structure of Language
Three Areas of Applied Research in Language
THE GENERATIVE REVOLUTION IN LINGUISTICS
Acoustic Phonetics
AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE
BRAIN SPECIALIZATION FOR LANGUAGE.
Evidence from Studies of Aphasia
Evidence from Split-Brain Studies
Evidence From Studies of Asl "Aphasia
LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
Visual Perception of Real and Represented Objects and Events
THE PRE-1850S: ARTISTS, PHILOSOPHERS, AND PHYSICISTS
PSYCHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY FROM 1850-1950
THE 1950S AND AFTER: "DIRECT" SENSITIVITY TO OBJECT ATTRIBUTES
The Evidence For Perceptual Rules Rather Than Lookup Tables
The Doctrine That Event Perception Is Both Fundamental and Veridical
COMPUTERS AND PERCEPTUAL PSYCHOLOGY
Obtaining Data
Modeling Theories and Explanations
Embodying Perceptual Functions
The Computer As An Analogy To Perception
Computer Science in Perceptual Psychology Research
Why Models of Human Perception Are Needed
MENTAL STRUCTURE IN OBJECT PERCEPTION AND REPRESENTATION
References.
Notes:
Symposium held Nov. 29-30, 1983.
Includes bibliographies.
ISBN:
9786610221967
9781280221965
1280221968
9780309542418
0309542413
9780585155708
0585155704
OCLC:
427404649

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