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Topic: Psychological bond


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Bond - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In finance, a bond is a debt security, in which the issuer owes the holders a debt and is obliged to repay the principal and interest (the coupon).
Bonds are generally issued for a fixed term (the maturity) longer than one year.
Bonds and stocks are both securities, but the difference is that stock holders own a part of the issuing company (have an equity stake), whereas bond holders are in essence lenders to the issuer.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bond   (2834 words)

  
 Book-Derived Hero System Character Adaptions - James Bond   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Bond is a Scotsman, as was his father, though his mother was a Swiss national -- neither parent was living by the time he joined the Secret Service -- and he was primarily raised in England (and is currently being played in the movies by Pierce Brosnan, an Irishman).
Bond was given the designation 007 by M.I.6, meaning he is one of the few British agents (there are probably less than ten; SMERSH believes there are three at one point) who is licensed to kill in the line of service to Her Majesty's Government.
Bond is not an overpowering presence; he is, however, an extremely dangerous customer due to his acumen and resourcefulness.
surbrook.devermore.net /adaptionsbook/bond.html   (1110 words)

  
 NMSU ‘psychological sleuth' works to detect deception
Bond applied Pennebaker’s LIWC algorithm in his prison field experiments to look for categories of words that are indicators of truthfulness or deception.
Bond was drawn to research as an undergraduate at NMSU participating in the Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program, which prepares first-generation college students for graduate studies.
Bond graduated with high honors and distinction in university honors from NMSU in the fall of 2001, received his master’s degree in psychology from NMSU in December 2003 and is now working on his doctorate in psychology.
www.nmsu.edu /~ucomm/Releases/2004/July/deception_detection.html   (671 words)

  
 Doctor Talks of Quantifying Psyche - Daily Nexus Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Bond proposed the use of a method that would add objectivity to the field and perhaps standardize psychological testing.
Bond said this is because there are millions of dollars invested in other methods that have become conventional.
Bond said he is dissatisfied with current testing methods because a score may be composed of added numbers that cannot be properly added.
www.ucsbdailynexus.com /print_article.php?a=7140   (565 words)

  
 Bond (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bond number, in fluid mechanics, a dimensionless number expressing the ratio of gravitational forces to surface tension forces
Chemical bond, the physical phenomenon of chemical substances being held together by attraction of atoms
Bond (masonry), the manner in which the bricks overlap as they are laid
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bond_(disambiguation)   (215 words)

  
 psychological contract - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about psychological contract   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The psychological contract described the mutually beneficial position where the employee gave his loyalty and hard work to an organization in return for job security.
The downsizing of the late 1980s and early 1990s virtually put paid to the psychological contract by removing the trust on which it was based.
The contract was superseded by concepts such as employability and free agents.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /psychological+contract   (162 words)

  
 An appreciation of James Bond in the cinema.
It is difficult to analyse or define the exact nature of the appeal of the Bond films, but for me the essential factor (certainly in the earlier films) is their knowing approach to the telling of a ridiculous tale which is seriously told.
In a very real sense the audience partnered Bond in his adventures as he made jokes at the expense of his enemies or indeed the very situations in which he found himself.
Clearly it would be damaging to the film NOT to have Bond show human characteristics, but it can be equally damaging, given the entire premise of fun and entertainment, to dig too deeply into the psyche of what was intended to be an instrument of entertainment.
www.geocities.com /stuartfernie/bond.htm   (1642 words)

  
 Argus Institute for Families and Veterinary Medicine - Colorado State University
Human-Animal Bond: The human-animal bond is a mutually beneficial and dynamic relationship between people and other animals that is influenced by behaviors that are essential to the health and well being of both.
The nature and strength of the bond is influenced by both human and animal behaviors, as well as by animals' health status and peoples' life circumstances.
The veterinarian's role in the human-animal bond is to maximize the potentials of the relationship between people and other animals and deal with the emotional consequences that arise when an animal's behavior, health status, or life circumstances jeopardize the continuation of the bond.
www.argusinstitute.colostate.edu /define.htm   (273 words)

  
 Lloyd Bond
One enduring interest centers on the extent to which cognitive and psychological measures are equally valid for linguistic and cultural subgroups in our society.
Bond, L., and Harman, A. (In press) Test-taking strategies: the effects of coaching and practice on measures of intelligence.
Bond, L. The effects of special preparation on measures of scholastic ability.
www.uncg.edu /erm/lloyd.htm   (410 words)

  
 When Psychiatry and the Law Join Forces   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
There is a pathological psychological bond here between the mother and children that is not going to be changed by therapy as long as the children live with the mother.
Whereas the mothers in the severe category have a sick psychological bond with the children (often a paranoid one), the mothers in this category are more likely to have a healthy psychological bond that is being compromised by their rage.
Although the court may appreciate the pathological nature of the bond the mother has with her therapist, it may be reluctant to order a cessation of such treatment.
www.deltabravo.net /custody/pas-aja1.php   (6024 words)

  
 IberPsicologia 2000:5.1.4. Montero, A.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The SIES will be described as an interpersonal bond of protection built between victim and aggressor, within a traumatic and stimuli isolated environment, through the induction of a mental model, of cognitive nature and contextual anchoring, that will be aimed at the victim's physiological and behavioural balance recovering and psychological integrity protection.
Apart from debates about the suitability of establishing a category that would permit a differential diagnosis in the sphere of the pathological psychology, it is however appropriate to consider the incidence of certain processes of specific features, mainly in the cognitive side, in some of the victims leaving a period of privation of freedom.
In spite of the fact that cognitive and psychological recovery may be complex and tedious in some cases, the Stockholm syndrome should be reversible and must wear out due to the reintroduction of the victim's primary referential framework in absence of the stimular configuration that induced the mental model.
fs-morente.filos.ucm.es /Publicaciones/Iberpsicologia/Iberpsi8/Montero/Montero.htm   (5541 words)

  
 Understanding and Collaboratively Treating Parental Alienation Syndrome by Richard A. Gardner
Mothers are generally more bonded to their children than fathers, and they are more likely to engage in a wide variety of manipulations designed to strengthen their positions in custody disputes.
Because most children's psychological bonding with their mothers is stronger than with their fathers, they are more likely to join the mother in the dispute.
But this joint paranoid bond is certainly not healthy, and its presence is a strong argument for recommending the father as the primary custodial parent.
www.fact.on.ca /Info/pas/gardnr94.htm   (3118 words)

  
 Society&Animal Forum - Society & Animals Journal
An analysis of the human/companion animal bond from a self psychological perspective will help to give a framework for a deepened understanding of the bond and of the past and current significance of humans' relationships with their animals.
Rather, it is the individual's inner psychological experience of some aspect of the selfobject that is felt to maintain, bring out, or hold together the sense of self (Wolf, 1988).
Kohut (1984) made clear that the responsiveness from selfobjects is the “oxygen” for the psychological life of the self and is required throughout the lifespan.
www.psyeta.org /sa/sa12.1/brown.shtml   (6514 words)

  
 assessment references
Bond, M. Assessment of the psychosocial outcome of severe head injury.
Bond, M. R., and Brooks, D. Understanding the process of recovery as a basis for the investigation of rehabilitation for the brain injured.
Bond, and J. Miller (Eds.), Rehabilitation of the adult and child with traumatic brain injury (2nd ed., pp.
www.neuro.pmr.vcu.edu /reflists/assment.htm   (1980 words)

  
 Staff Directory: Lloyd Bond   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Prior to coming to Carnegie, Bond held professorships in the department of educational research methodology at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, and in the psychology department at the University of Pittsburgh.
A Fellow of the American Psychological Association, he served on both the 1985 and 1999 national education research committees to revise the standards for educational and psychological testing.
Bond, L.  (1998).  "Culturally relevant pedagogy and the assessment of accomplished teaching."  Journal of Negro Education, 54(3), 242-254.
www.carnegiefoundation.org /aboutus/staff/bond.htm   (350 words)

  
 IPT Journal - "Addendum III: Recommendations for Dealing With Parents Who Induce a Parental Alienation Syndrome in ...
The children's primary motive in contributing to the campaign of denigration is to maintain the stronger, healthy psychological bond that they have developed with their mothers.
The primary motive for the children's scenarios of denigration is to maintain the stronger, healthy psychological bond with the mother.
Whereas in the mild and moderate categories the children's primary motive is to strengthen the stronger, healthy psychological bond with the mother, in the severe category the psychological bond with the mother is pathological (often paranoid) and the symptoms serve to strengthen this pathological bond.
www.ipt-forensics.com /journal/volume8/j8_3_6.htm   (2591 words)

  
 Trent University - Emotional Health Research Laboratory
Several studies also examine the relationship between emotional and social competency and the development of various psychological and behavioural problems (e.g., depression, social anxiety, impulsivity, hyperactivity, and sleep) in community based and clinical samples of children and adolescents.
Paper presented in a symposium on "Recent developments in the measurement of emotional intelligence" at the annual meeting of the Canadian Psychological Association, Hamilton, Ontario.
Parker, J. A., Duffy, J., Wood, L. M., Bond, B. J., and Hogan, M. Academic achievement and emotional intelligence: Predicting the successful transition from high school to university.
www.trentu.ca /psychology/jparker/research_activities.htm   (1423 words)

  
 Library   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Photocopying of any part of a test is not permitted unless the test is sold with a license to copy or the written permission of the author or publisher to do so.
Psychological tests, or their components, can be purchased from the publisher of the test or from suppliers or distributors of psychological tests.
The tests are then paid for by the student, and the tests are usually sent to the student c/- the supervisor at the Bond address.
www.hss.bond.edu.au /psychlibrary/libraryindex.htm   (721 words)

  
 Attachment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Emotional or psychological bond between child and "primary care giver" (mother, father).
This study has been repeated many times; there is record of one batch of geese becoming bonded to a matchbox swinging on a piece of string.
Harlow suggested that on this basis, food cannot be the only bonding reason, other factors must be taken into account; love, comfort, feeling safe, protection.
freespace.virgin.net /kerridwen.red/ASnotes/Attachment.htm   (375 words)

  
 Male Circumcision: Pain, Trauma and Psychosexual Sequelae
Even if the psychological sequelae of circumcision do not coalesce into a formal diagnosis of PTSD, it is possible that there may be long-lasting effects on a man's life, particularly in psychologically sensitive individuals with comorbidity factors (cf.
Emotional numbing, avoidance of the topic of circumcision, and anger are potential long-term psychological consequences of the circumcision trauma (Bigelow, 1995; Bensley and Boyle, 2001; Boyle and Bensley, 2001; Gemmell and Boyle, 2001; Goldman, 1997, 1999).
Others, by invoking psychological defences, may be perceptually blind to the pain associated with circumcision--perhaps as a result of their own circumcised status.
www.cirp.org /library/psych/boyle6   (7769 words)

  
 ACVC 2001 - Family - Pet Bond = Profit
A majority of veterinarians make their living because of the human-animal bond, but most veterinarians do not capitalize upon the potentials available.
The client calls the veterinarian because they have a concern about the well being of their animal and want an expert to assist them during their stressful decision time; they want peace of mind.
Either of these programs can develop new pet owners, clients who are already bonded to the practice since they selected their pet with the expert assistance of the veterinary professionals of that facility.
www.vin.com /VINDBPub/SearchPB/Proceedings/PR05000/PR00452.htm   (1799 words)

  
 SPN Professional Profile: Charles Bond
My social psychological research on deception has drawn interest from the FBI, the CIA, and the National Academy of Sciences.
Bond, C.F., Jr., and Kenny, D.A. The triangle of interpersonal models.
Bond, C.F., Jr., Horn, E.M., & Kenny, D.A. A model for triadic relations.
bond.socialpsychology.org   (147 words)

  
 Beyond Technology: The Human Factors Impeding the EMR
Bond says a common vendor reaction is to attempt to make a paperless environment somehow seem more like the traditional environment—a step he says has not been effective.
Bond is optimistic, however, that this barrier constructed from behavioral patterns and issues will be overcome.
Bond says doctors’ yearly incomes are not increasing in the manner they might have expected or on a level comparable to those of other professionals and medical staff, noting that incomes are rising for only a select few doctors—5% to 10%.
www.fortherecordmag.com /archives/ftr_050905p20.shtml   (2071 words)

  
 WritingSchool.com - Faculty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Bond is a Fellow and faculty member of the Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research.
Bond was one of the first non-medical analysts to be made a member of the International Psychoanalytic Association.
She is also a member of The American Psychological Association, The American Society of Journalists and Authors, The Florida Freelance Writers Association, The Dramatists Guild, and The Authors Guild.
www.writingschool.com /faculty.htm   (1756 words)

  
 Bond University - Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences - Dick Hicks   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Australian Psychological Society (PNG Branch) & the Society for PNG Research and Publications, Port Moresby.
Psychological Services Branch, Public Service Board, Port Moresby.
"Psychological tests in the British Solomons: a trial run December 1968".
www.bond.edu.au /hss/staff/dhickspubs1960.htm   (729 words)

  
 Jean Piaget Society - IOMW 1997
This symposium is an undisguised attempt to enhance communication between Rasch theorists on the one hand, and investigators who use explicitly theory-driven research to address substantive issues in the psychology of human development, on the other.
Research into formal operational thought using the Rasch model (Bond 1995a,b; Bond and Bunting, 1995) substantiates important aspects of the original theorising of Piaget (Inhelder and Piaget, 1953/58) which was based wholly on qualitative structural analyses of children's responses.
Smith and Knight (1992) describe the construction of three 16-item variants of the BLOTCH test (Bond's Logical Operations Test in the Context of History) where itemswith a common sense science content taken from the original BLOT (Bond, 1976) were transposed into the context of medieval English history.
www.piaget.org /Rasch/IOMW.1997.html   (2812 words)

  
 Goldsmiths College - Psychology Department   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The impact of psychological flexibility and job control on learning, job performance, and mental health.
Donaldson, E. Bond, F.W. Psychological acceptance and emotional intelligence in relation to workplace well-being.
Bond, F.W. & Bunce, D. The role of acceptance and job control in mental health, job satisfaction, and work performance.
www.goldsmiths.ac.uk /departments/psychology/staff/bond.html   (646 words)

  
 GUIDELINES FOR ASSESSING PARENTAL PREFERENCE IN CHILD-CUSTODY DISPUTES   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Actually, what we are really trying to assess in a child-custody dispute is which parent has the stronger and healthier psychological bond with the child.
Each parent should be assessed psychologically to ascertain the presence of significant psychological disorders.
It is not necessary that formal psychological tests be administered to each parent in the context of a child-custody evaluation.
www.rgardner.com /refs/ar4.html   (2292 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
This study of couples undergoing infertility treatment found that a change in the psychological state (as evaluated by self-rating and psychologist assessment) correlated with the ability of couples either to become pregnant or to accept childlessness.
This study of 116 couples presenting with primary infertility found that those who fared worse emotionally were the dispositionally neurotic or anxious and men whose marriages were less well adjusted and who were the source of the infertility.
This study of egg donors finds that of women who initially show interest in donating eggs, women who are recruited by docotors at sterilisation clinics are more likely to go ahead with donation than women who express an interests as a result of hearing about it in the media or from talking to friends.
www.csu.edu.au /learning/eubios/asrep1991-93.html   (15422 words)

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