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Following upon the Handbook of Japan-United States
Environment-Behavior Research, published by Plenum in 1997, leading
experts review the interrelationships among theory, problem, and
method in environment-behavior research. The chapters focus on the
philosophical and theoretical assumptions underlying current
research and practice in the area and link those assumptions to
specific substantive questions and methodologies
Derived from a conference sponsored by the Heinz Werner Institute
for Developmental Analysis at Clark University, these papers
consider the role emotions play in ideal human development.
Contributors from the fields of psychology, philosophy, and
sociology discuss the place that "feelings," "affect," "passion,"
and "emotion" should ideally occupy in human existence and how
realization of this goal can be fostered. The conference organizers
focused the discussions by asking the participants to consider six
questions, each of which was intended to touch upon some aspect of
the relationship between emotions and ideal human development.
Chapters contain the papers presented and a summary of the
discussions that followed the presentations.
The papers presented in this volume seek to illuminate
relationships among the cognitive style of field dependence-
independence and biological, psychological, and sociocultural
aspects of human functioning across the life span. The book begins
by addressing fundamental issues concerning the role of cognitive
style in human development. The remainder of the text treats
cognitive style in relation to biological, psychological, and
sociocultural functioning. Also included is a summary of directions
for future research.
The papers presented in this volume seek to illuminate
relationships among the cognitive style of field dependence-
independence and biological, psychological, and sociocultural
aspects of human functioning across the life span. The book begins
by addressing fundamental issues concerning the role of cognitive
style in human development. The remainder of the text treats
cognitive style in relation to biological, psychological, and
sociocultural functioning. Also included is a summary of directions
for future research.
First published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor and
Francis, an informa company.
Derived from a conference sponsored by the Heinz Werner Institute
for Developmental Analysis at Clark University, these papers
consider the role emotions play in ideal human development.
Contributors from the fields of psychology, philosophy, and
sociology discuss the place that "feelings," "affect," "passion,"
and "emotion" should ideally occupy in human existence and how
realization of this goal can be fostered. The conference organizers
focused the discussions by asking the participants to consider six
questions, each of which was intended to touch upon some aspect of
the relationship between emotions and ideal human development.
Chapters contain the papers presented and a summary of the
discussions that followed the presentations.
First published in 1986. The chapters and discussions presented in
this volume derive from the conference, Value presuppositions in
theories of human development, sponsored by the Heinz Werner
Institute, Clark University, on June 10-11, 1983. The conference
included both psychologists and philosophers and mainly concerned
those assumptions about what ought to be that enter into the ways
that investigators in the human sciences construe development
Following upon the Handbook of Japan-United States
Environment-Behavior Research, published by Plenum in 1997, leading
experts review the interrelationships among theory, problem, and
method in environment-behavior research. The chapters focus on the
philosophical and theoretical assumptions underlying current
research and practice in the area and link those assumptions to
specific substantive questions and methodologies
This volume is an outgrowth of research on the relations between
human beings and their environments, which has developed
internationally. This development is evident in
environment-behavior research studies conducted in countries other
than the United States. See Stokols and Altman (1987) for examples
of such work in Australia, Japan, France, Germany, the Netherlands,
Sweden, the United King dom, the former Soviet Union, and Latin and
North America. The international development of this research area
is also evident in the establishment of profes sional organizations
in different countries such as the Environment-Behavior De sign
Research Association (EDRA) in the United States, the
Man-Environment Research Association (MERA) in Japan, the
International Association for People-En vironment Studies (lAPS) in
Great Britain, and the People and Physical Environ ment Research
Association (PAPER) in Australia. This volume focuses on
environment-behavior research within Japan and the United States as
well as cross-cultural studies involving both countries. As we note
in detail in Chapter 1, the conference on which the work presented
herein is based was preceded by three Japan-United States
conferences on environment-behavior research, the first of which
took place in Tokyo in 1980. As currently conceived, the present
volume stands alone as a compendium of a Significant proportion of
cross-cultural research on environment-behavior relations in Japan
and the United States that has been developing over the last 15
years. As such, we envision the volume as a basic interdisciplinary
reference for anthropolgists, archi tects, psychologists,
SOCiologists, urban planners, and environmental geographers.
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