Crime is central to the public debate about the state of American society. Citizens consistently express great concern about the issue and are increasingly calling for punitive policies, such as “three strikes” and the death penalty. In response, politicians and policymakers have allocated larger and larger shares of their budgets to crime control. This is ironic given that the population-adjusted crime rate has declined in recent years. This article addresses the paradox by focusing on the role of television news. A content analysis of local television news in a major media market demonstrates that coverage of crime features two important cues: Crime is violent, and criminals are nonwhite. We translate these media biases into an experimental design that manipulates the level of violence and the race of the perpetrator to test the relevance of these cues to public thinking about crime. The results indicate that race works independently and in conjunction with racial stereotypes to influence people's concern about crime and their willingness to attribute criminal behavior to breakdowns in the African-American community. We conclude by discussing the implications of our findings for race relations, the practice of journalism, and public policy.
The experiments reported here investigate asymmetries in performance of speeded target detection and visual search tasks using colourful stimuli. Experiment 1 found evidence of asymmetries in the performance of within-category trials in both tasks. Two further experiments consider possible explanations. The results of Experiment 2 suggest these asymmetries are not linked to changes in the frequency with which individual stimuli appear in trials. A third experiment shows that asymmetries in performance of the two tasks are accompanied by changes in stimulus categorization, thus providing evidence that asymmetries in performance of search tasks may represent a language driven category effect. In the Discussion section, theories describing how category information might give rise to the asymmetries found are considered.Category effects are demonstrated when stimulus categorization influences task performance. 1 Such effects have been reported in a range of domains, including; phoneme discrimination (e.g.,
Objective: This study aimed to develop interpretive insights concerning Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) in care homes for older people.Design: This study had a meta-ethnography design.Data Sources: Six bibliographic databases were searched from inception to May 2020 to identify the relevant literature.Review Methods: A meta-ethnography was performed.Results: Searches yielded 652 records; 15 were included. Findings were categorized into groups: The difficulties of enacting IPC measures in the care home environment; workload as an impediment to IPC practice; the tension between IPC and quality of life for care home residents; and problems dealing with medical services located outside the facility including diagnostics, general practice and pharmacy. Infection was revealed as something seen to lie 'outside' the control of the care home, whether according to origins or control measures. This could help explain the reported variability in IPC practice. Facilitators to IPC uptake involved repetitive training and professional development, although such opportunities can be constrained by the ways in which services are organized and delivered.Conclusions: Significant challenges were revealed in implementing IPC in care homes including staffing skills, education, workloads and work routines. These challenges cannot be properly addressed without resolving the tension between the objectives of maintaining resident quality of life while enacting IPC practice. Repetitive staff training and professional development with parallel organisational improvements have prospects to enhance IPC uptake in residential and nursing homes.
This study investigated cross-modal associations between color and touch using a matching task. Participants matched colors drawn from the surface of the Munsell color solid to antonym pairs of haptic/tactile adjectives. For most of the term pairs assessed (soft/hard, smooth/rough, flat/uneven, slippery/not slippery, light/heavy, thin/thick and round/sharp) matching appears predominantly influenced by lightness, with the first term from each pair matched to light colors and the other to dark colors, a result in close agreement with previous research. For two terms, warm and wet, there were clear influences of hue on task performance. There were also similarities between patterns of color matching to several of the haptic/tactile terms assessed and color matching to another term, dislike. This suggests valence may play a mediating role in cross-modal associations involving touch and color.
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