16 results match your criteria: "University of Toulouse 1 Capitole[Affiliation]"
Behav Brain Sci
May 2024
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham,
We argue that the phases identified in the novelty-seeking model can be clarified by considering an updated version of the optimal-level of arousal model, which incorporates the "arousal" and "mood changing" potentials of stimuli and contexts. Such a model provides valuable insights into what determines one's state of mind, inter-individual differences, and the rewarding effects of curiosity and creativity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvol Hum Sci
March 2024
Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Although still prevalent in many human societies, the practice of cousin marriage has precipitously declined in populations undergoing rapid demographic and socioeconomic change. However, it is still unclear whether changes in the structure of the marriage pool or changes in the fitness-relevant consequences of cousin marriage more strongly influence the frequency of cousin marriage. Here, we use genealogical data collected by the Tsimane Health and Life History Project to show that there is a small but measurable decline in the frequency of first cross-cousin marriage since the mid-twentieth century.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Psychol
June 2023
Yale Child Study Center, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Humans can find music happy, sad, fearful, or spiritual. They can be soothed by it or urged to dance. Whether these psychological responses reflect cognitive adaptations that evolved expressly for responding to music is an ongoing topic of study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Public Health
January 2023
Department of Practice, Sciences, and Health Outcomes Research (P-SHOR), University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore, MD, USA.
When the COVID-19 pandemic struck and China reported the first case to the World Health Organization in December 2019, there was no evidence-based treatment to combat it. With the catastrophic situation that followed, materialised by a considerable number of deaths, researchers, doctors, traditional healers, and governments of all nations committed themselves to find therapeutic solutions, including preventive and curative. There are effective treatments offered both by modern medicine and traditional medicine for COVID-19 today.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolution
June 2023
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Models of sexual conflict over mating, including conflict over indirect benefits of mate choice, have generally presumed that female resistance to male coercion must involve direct confrontation, which can lead to sexually antagonistic coevolutionary arms-races. We built a quantitative model examining the largely ignored possibility that females may evolve new, additional mate preferences for new male traits that undermine male capacity to coerce. Thus, females may "remodel" the coercive capacity of the male phenotype in order to enhance their own sexual autonomy-a novel alternative mechanism by which females may avoid arms-races.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
May 2023
Hill/Levene Schools of Business, University of Regina, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada.
Why is disbelief in anthropogenic climate change common despite broad scientific consensus to the contrary? A widely held explanation involves politically motivated (system 2) reasoning: Rather than helping uncover the truth, people use their reasoning abilities to protect their partisan identities and reject beliefs that threaten those identities. Despite the popularity of this account, the evidence supporting it (i) does not account for the fact that partisanship is confounded with prior beliefs about the world and (ii) is entirely correlational with respect to the effect of reasoning. Here, we address these shortcomings by (i) measuring prior beliefs and (ii) experimentally manipulating participants' extent of reasoning using cognitive load and time pressure while they evaluate arguments for or against anthropogenic global warming.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2023
Toulouse School of Economics (TSE) and Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse (IAST), University of Toulouse 1 Capitole, Toulouse, France.
Psychological traits display substantial variation worldwide. These psychological variations could be explained by the intensity of kinship ties which, we hypothesize, depends on the reception of innovations that gradually complexified family organizations. These innovations originated from several centers across the world that also spread other crucial novelties such as agriculture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychopharmacol
January 2023
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: Psychedelic use is anecdotally associated with belief changes, although few studies have tested these claims.
Aim: Characterize a broad range of psychedelic occasioned belief changes.
Survey: A survey was conducted in 2374 respondents who endorsed having had a belief changing psychedelic experience.
Cogn Emot
September 2022
Sloan School, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Misinformation is a serious concern for societies across the globe. To design effective interventions to combat the belief in and spread of misinformation, we must understand which psychological processes influence susceptibility to misinformation. This paper tests the widely assumed - but largely untested - claim that emotionally provocative headlines are associated with worse ability to identify true versus false headlines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
January 2022
CNRS, Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse, University of Toulouse 1 Capitole, France.
Cumulative cultural evolution (CCE)-defined as the process by which beneficial modifications are culturally transmitted and progressively accumulated over time-has long been argued to underlie the unparalleled diversity and complexity of human culture. In this paper, I argue that not just any kind of cultural accumulation will give rise to human-like culture. Rather, I suggest that human CCE depends on the gradual exploitation of natural phenomena, which are features of our environment that, through the laws of physics, chemistry or biology, generate reliable effects which can be exploited for a purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
December 2020
Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
Economic preferences may be shaped by exposure to sex hormones around birth. Prior studies of economic preferences and numerous other phenotypic characteristics use digit ratios (2D : 4D), a purported proxy for prenatal testosterone exposure, whose validity has recently been questioned. We use measures of neonatal sex hormones (testosterone and oestrogen), measured from umbilical cord blood ( = 200) to investigate their association with later-life economic preferences (risk preferences, competitiveness, time preferences and social preferences) in an Australian cohort (Raine Study Gen2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Psychol
June 2017
Center for Research in Management (CRM), University of Toulouse 1 Capitole.
How do individuals form fairness perceptions? This question has been central to the fairness literature since its inception, sparking a plethora of theories and a burgeoning volume of research. To date, the answer to this question has been predicated on the assumption that fairness perceptions are subjective (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Econ
May 2016
Toulouse School of Economics, University of Toulouse 1 Capitole (CNRS), France. Electronic address:
We determine the optimal health policy mix when the average utility of patients increases with the supply of drugs available in a therapeutic class. Health risk coverage relies on two instruments, copayment and reference pricing, both of which affect the risk associated with health expenses and diversity of treatment. For a fixed supply of drugs, the reference pricing policy aims at minimizing expenses, in which case the equilibrium price of drugs is independent of the copayment rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Health Policy Manag
September 2013
Toulouse School of Economics, University of Toulouse 1 Capitole, Toulouse, France.
Whereas public information campaigns have failed to reverse the rising trend in obesity, economists support food taxes as they suggest they can force individuals to change their eating behavior and make the agro-food industry think more about healthy food products. Excise taxes based on the unhealthy nutrient content would be more effective since they impact more on unhealthy food products than VAT (value-added-tax) taxes. Taxes based only on junk food products would avoid perverse effects on healthy nutrient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNowadays, medical robots become more and more important to better provide care, to remote patients and help to perform surgery. Legal et ethical issues relating to health care robots are not new, but are more complicated, in particular about the assignation of liabilitiy. This article will give an overview of some of the legal issues relating the use of robotics in health care and medical and surgical procedures: first in relation to the safety of these specific devices, and then in relation to the threats to privacy and individual liberties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Int Bioethique
December 2013
University of Toulouse 1 Capitole, Institut Maurice Hauriou.
The existence of the subject of law is not an automatic allocation when the will and the autonomy are awarded, but a tool conferred by the legal system in order to protect the humanity (based on the presupposition of a consciousness that the human being remains to be the only one to have and to suppose at the others). He cannot involve thus of reducing the question of the status of the android to the simple recognition of an intelligence, besides artificial, but of denying the reasoning by analogy any real impact for the existence of a legal status. If specific status there would be, it will be only because the human being will have decided on it for his own legally protected interest.
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