Now showing items 361-380 of 466

    • Risk factors for the development of depression in patients with Hepatitis C taking Interferon-alpha. 

      O'MARA, SHANE; O'FARRELLY, CLIONA (2010)
      Interferon-?, currently used for the treatment of hepatitis C, is associated with a substantially elevated risk of depression. However, not everyone who takes this drug becomes depressed, so it is important to understand ...
    • A functional MRI study of the influence of practice on component processes of working memory. 

      GARAVAN, HUGH PATRICK (Elsevier, 2004)
      Previous neuroimaging studies have shown that neural activity changes with task practice. The types of changes reported have been inconsistent, however, and the neural mechanisms involved remain unclear. In this study, we ...
    • Early Visual Processing Deficits in Dysbindin-Associated Schizophrenia, 

      GARAVAN, HUGH PATRICK; ROBERTSON, IAN (Elsevier, 2008)
      Background: Variation at the dysbindin gene (DTNBP1) has been associated with increased risk for schizophrenia in numerous independent samples and recently with deficits in general and domain-specific cognitive processing. ...
    • Evidence of increased activation underlying cognitive control in ecstasy and cannabis users 

      ROBERTS, GLORIA; GARAVAN, HUGH (2010)
      Evidence suggests that users of ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) have behavioural and cognitive deficits and show increased impulsivity. Impulse control impairments have been shown to be common to a number of ...
    • Counterfactual thinking about controllable events 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (2000)
      When people think about what might have been, they mentally undo controllable rather than uncontrollable events. We report the results of two experiments in which we examined this controllability effect in counterfactual ...
    • The temporality effect in counterfactual thinking about what might have been 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Psychonomic Society, 2000)
      When people think about what might have been, they undo an outcome by changing events in regular ways. Suppose two contestants could win 1,000 Pounds if they picked the same color card; the first picks black, the second ...
    • Deductive reasoning with factual, possible and counterfactual conditionals 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Psychonomic Society, 1999)
      We compared reasoners' inferences from conditionals based on possibilities in the present or the past (e.g., "If Linda had been in Dublin then Cathy would have been in Galway") with their inferences based on facts in the ...
    • Growing up in Ireland: The lives of 9 year olds 

      DOYLE, ERIKA; O'DOWD, THOMAS; GREENE, SHEILA; SWORDS, LORRAINE; NIXON, ELIZABETH; SMYTH, EMER; MCCRORY, CATHAL; QUAIL, AMANDA; THORNTON, MAEVE; MURRAY, AISLING; O'MOORE, ASTRID; WILLIAMS, JAMES; MCCOY, SELINA (The Stationery Office, 2009)
      This report presents the first descriptive analysis of the findings from the first wave of data collection with the 8,570 nine-year-old children, their families and teachers who have participated in Growing Up in Ireland ? ...
    • A Study of Intercountry Adoption Outcomes in Ireland 

      GREENE, SHEILA MARY; WHYTE, JEAN; NIXON, ELIZABETH (The Adoption Board, 2007)
      The study consisted of three stages. In stage one, research on intercountry adoption outcomes, policies and practices was reviewed. A computerised database on all intercountry adoptions in Ireland was compiled. In stage ...
    • Children s perception of coping and support following parental separation 

      GREENE, SHEILA MARY; HOGAN, DIANE (Taylor and Francis, 2008)
      Families represent the primary setting in which most children's lives are shaped and determined. Increasingly, children experience ongoing change in family formation and structure, and such fluctuation may threaten or ...
    • A computational model of counterfactual thinking: The temporal order effect 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2001)
      People generate counterfactual alternatives to realitywhen they think about how things might have happeneddifferently, 'if only?'. There are considerableregularities in the sorts of past events that peoplementally undo, ...
    • Contradictions and counterfactuals: Generating belief revisions in conditional inference 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002)
      Reasoners revise their beliefs in the premises when an inference they have made is contradicted. We describe the results of an experiment that shows that the belief they revise depends on the inference they have made. They ...
    • Chess Masters' Hypothesis Testing 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 2004)
      Falsification may demarcate science from non-science as the rational way to test the truth of hypotheses. But experimental evidence from studies of reasoning shows that people often find falsification difficult. We ...
    • The Temporal Order Effect in Children s Counterfactual Thinking 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2005)
      When adults think about how an outcome could have turned out differently, they tend to undo the events leading up to the outcome in regular ways. Consider a game in which two players could win a prize if they picked the ...
    • When falsification is the only path to truth 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2005)
      Can people consistently attempt to falsify, that is, search for refuting evidence, when testing the truth of hypotheses? Experimental evidence indicates that people tend to search for confirming evidence. We report two ...
    • Precis of The Rational Imagination: How People Create Alternatives to Reality 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (2007)
      The human imagination remains one of the last uncharted terrains of the mind. People often imagine how events might have turned out ?if only? something had been different. The ?fault lines? of reality, those aspects more ...
    • 'If only counterfactuals and the exceptionality effect' 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Erlbaum, 2009)
      People create counterfactual `if only? alternatives that change exceptional actions to be normal (e.g., `if only he had placed his usual small bet he would have lost less money?). Two experiments show that this effect ...
    • People think about what is true for conditionals, not what is false: only true possibilities prime the comprehension of "if" 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (2009)
      We report the results of two priming experiments that examine the comprehension of conditionals--for example, "if there are apples then there are oranges"--and biconditionals--for example, "if and only if there are apples ...
    • Mental models and pragmatics: Author's response 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (Cambridge University Press, 2000)
      Van der Henst argues that the theory of mental models lacks a pragmatic component. He fills the gap with the notion that reasoners draw the most relevant conclusions. We agree, but argue that theories need an element of ...
    • The rational imagination and other possibilities: Author's response 

      BYRNE, RUTH MARY JOSEPHINE (2007)
      In this response I discuss some of the key issues raised by the commentators on The Rational Imagination. I consider whether the imaginative creation of alternatives to reality is rational or irrational, and what happens ...