Re: [tips] Alice's restaurant

2011-11-28 Thread Mike Palij
On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 18:19:38 -0800,  Paul K Brandon
>As I recall from the day (and I won't cheat by looking it up on the record 
>cover) the song by that name was based on a real event at a real restaurant, 
>but not by that name.

Just goes to show how faulty memory can be.  Quoting from Wikipedia:

|Though the song's official title, as printed on the album, is "Alice's 
|Restaurant Massacree" (pronounced mass-a-cree, not massacre), 
|Guthrie states in the opening line of the song that "This song's called 
|'Alice's Restaurant'" and that "'Alice's Restaurant'... is just the name 
|of the song;" as such, the shortened title is the one most commonly
|used for the song today. In an interview for All Things Considered, 
|Guthrie said the song points out that any American citizen who was 
|convicted of a crime, no matter how minor (in his case, it was littering), 
|could avoid being conscripted to fight in the Vietnam War.[1] The 
|Alice in the song was restaurant-owner Alice M. Brock, who in 1964 
|used $2,000 supplied by her mother to purchase a deconsecrated 
|church in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, where Alice and her husband 
|Ray would live. It was here rather than at the restaurant—which 
|came later—where the song's Thanksgiving dinners were actually held.

And it was the garbage from a Thanksgiving dinner that Arlo & Co
illegally dumped in the town dump (blind justice and all that) that resulted
in him having a criminal record and which caused the Army recruiters
to reject him along with father rapers, etc.  

See the Wikipedia entry for information about the restaurant:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice%27s_Restaurant#The_restaurant

-Mike Palij
New York University
m...@nyu.edu


On Nov 28, 2011, at 3:55 PM, Michael Palij wrote:
> On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 12:28:45 -0800, Michael Sylvester wrote:
>> 
>> TRUE OR FALSE
>> 
>> Alice's restaurant is not a restaurant but the name of a song.
> 
> Well, it depends upon what your meaning of "is" is.
> 
> On the other hand, check out the Wikipedia entry (yadda-yadda):
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice%27s_Restaurant 
> 
> So, the answer is it's both.
> 
> Or neither.
> 
> Or, in a Zen sense, it is both and neither, depending upon your
> definition of "is".

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Re: [tips] Alice's restaurant

2011-11-28 Thread Brandon, Paul K
As I recall from the day (and I won't cheat by looking it up on the record 
cover) the song by that name was based on a real event at a real restaurant, 
but not by that name.

On Nov 28, 2011, at 3:55 PM, Michael Palij wrote:

> On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 12:28:45 -0800, Michael Sylvester wrote:
>> 
>> TRUE OR FALSE
>> 
>> Alice's restaurant is not a restaurant but the name of a song.
> 
> Well, it depends upon what your meaning of "is" is.
> 
> On the other hand, check out the Wikipedia entry (yadda-yadda):
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice%27s_Restaurant
> 
> So, the answer is it's both.
> 
> Or neither.
> 
> Or, in a Zen sense, it is both and neither, depending upon your
> definition of "is".



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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Carol DeVolder
OK, now that I have all of these other parts going through my head (Her
name was McGill...) I can't think of it. Give me time...it's...it's...I
give up.

On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 5:43 PM, Shearon, Tim
wrote:

>
>
>
>
>
>
> ** **
>
> Carol and David, et al
>
> Trivia!! Without looking it up. . . What was Rocky Raccoon’s original name
> in the song? J (I think being a music major may have “messed with my
> brain” in some good ways). 
>
> Tim
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* David Hogberg [mailto:dhogb...@albion.edu]
> *Sent:* Monday, November 28, 2011 4:38 PM
> *To:* Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> *Subject:* Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping
>
> ** **
>
>  
>
>  
>
>  
>
> Carol et al.: I've greatly enjoyed your thread concerning very special
> memories of how songs are supposed to sound as they shift to the next LP
> band during play. In that I'm a wee tad older than many/most of you, I have
> many more LP band-shift memories than do the rest of you.  Perhaps the
> Beatles (because I played the albums so frequently) provide the best
> examples of anticipatory conditioning or so I guess that's what it is.  To
> this day, one of my favorite quotable lyrics from the Beatles is also a
> part of Rocky Racoon, i.e.," Her name was McGill, but she called herself
> Lil, but everyone knew her as Nancy."
>
> Doggone, they were good! D
>
> 
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:36 PM, Carol DeVolder 
> wrote:
>
>  
>
>  
>
>  
>
> I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back
> in his room only to fi...ble.
> I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over,
> and now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I
> expect to hear certain songs after others.
>
> Carol
>
> 
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael 
> wrote:
>
> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>
> Other people experienced this?
>
> Michael
>
>
> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> Host of The Psych Files podcast
> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
>
>
> ---
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: devoldercar...@gmail.com.
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> or send a blank email to
> leave-14447-177920.a45340211ac7929163a021623...@fsulist.frostburg.edu*
> ***
>
>
>
>
> --
> Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
> Professor of Psychology
> St. Ambrose University
> 518 West Locust Street
> Davenport, Iowa  52803
> 563-333-6482
>
> This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.
>
>
> 
>
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>
>  
>
>  
>
>
>
>
> --
> David K. Hogberg, PhD
> Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
> Department of Psychological Science
> Albion College
> Albion MI 49224
>
> Tel: 517/629-4834 (Home and mobile)
>
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-- 
Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
St. Ambrose University
518 West Locust Street
Davenport, Iowa  52803
563-333-6482

This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.

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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread David Hogberg
It's in the first line of the piece, isn't it?

On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 6:43 PM, Shearon, Tim
wrote:

>
>
>
>
>
>
> ** **
>
> Carol and David, et al
>
> Trivia!! Without looking it up. . . What was Rocky Raccoon’s original name
> in the song? J (I think being a music major may have “messed with my
> brain” in some good ways). 
>
> Tim
>
> ** **
>
> *From:* David Hogberg [mailto:dhogb...@albion.edu]
> *Sent:* Monday, November 28, 2011 4:38 PM
> *To:* Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> *Subject:* Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping
>
> ** **
>
>  
>
>  
>
>  
>
> Carol et al.: I've greatly enjoyed your thread concerning very special
> memories of how songs are supposed to sound as they shift to the next LP
> band during play. In that I'm a wee tad older than many/most of you, I have
> many more LP band-shift memories than do the rest of you.  Perhaps the
> Beatles (because I played the albums so frequently) provide the best
> examples of anticipatory conditioning or so I guess that's what it is.  To
> this day, one of my favorite quotable lyrics from the Beatles is also a
> part of Rocky Racoon, i.e.," Her name was McGill, but she called herself
> Lil, but everyone knew her as Nancy."
>
> Doggone, they were good! D
>
> 
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:36 PM, Carol DeVolder 
> wrote:
>
>  
>
>  
>
>  
>
> I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back
> in his room only to fi...ble.
> I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over,
> and now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I
> expect to hear certain songs after others.
>
> Carol
>
> 
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael 
> wrote:
>
> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>
> Other people experienced this?
>
> Michael
>
>
> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> Host of The Psych Files podcast
> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
>
>
> ---
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: devoldercar...@gmail.com.
> To unsubscribe click here:
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> or send a blank email to
> leave-14447-177920.a45340211ac7929163a021623...@fsulist.frostburg.edu*
> ***
>
>
>
>
> --
> Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
> Professor of Psychology
> St. Ambrose University
> 518 West Locust Street
> Davenport, Iowa  52803
> 563-333-6482
>
> This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.
>
>
> 
>
> ---
>
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: dhogb...@albion.edu.
>
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>
> (It may be necessary to cut and paste the above URL if the line is broken)
> 
>
> or send a blank email to
> leave-14448-13152.d92d7ec47187a662aacda2d4b4c76...@fsulist.frostburg.edu**
> **
>
>  
>
>  
>
>
>
>
> --
> David K. Hogberg, PhD
> Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
> Department of Psychological Science
> Albion College
> Albion MI 49224
>
> Tel: 517/629-4834 (Home and mobile)
>
> ---
>
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: tshea...@collegeofidaho.edu.
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-- 
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Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
Department of Psychological Science
Albion College
Albion MI 49224

Tel: 517/629-4834 (Home and mobile)

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RE: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Shearon, Tim

Carol and David, et al
Trivia!! Without looking it up. . . What was Rocky Raccoon's original name in 
the song? :) (I think being a music major may have "messed with my brain" in 
some good ways).
Tim

From: David Hogberg [mailto:dhogb...@albion.edu]
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 4:38 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping







Carol et al.: I've greatly enjoyed your thread concerning very special memories 
of how songs are supposed to sound as they shift to the next LP band during 
play. In that I'm a wee tad older than many/most of you, I have many more LP 
band-shift memories than do the rest of you.  Perhaps the Beatles (because I 
played the albums so frequently) provide the best examples of anticipatory 
conditioning or so I guess that's what it is.  To this day, one of my favorite 
quotable lyrics from the Beatles is also a part of Rocky Racoon, i.e.," Her 
name was McGill, but she called herself Lil, but everyone knew her as Nancy."

Doggone, they were good! D

On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:36 PM, Carol DeVolder 
mailto:devoldercar...@gmail.com>> wrote:






I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back in his 
room only to fi...ble.
I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over, and 
now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I expect to 
hear certain songs after others.

Carol

On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael 
mailto:mich...@thepsychfiles.com>> wrote:
When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.

Other people experienced this?

Michael


Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
Host of The Psych Files podcast
http://www.thepsychfiles.com
mich...@thepsychfiles.com


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--
Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
St. Ambrose University
518 West Locust Street
Davenport, Iowa  52803
563-333-6482

This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.



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Department of Psychological Science
Albion College
Albion MI 49224

Tel: 517/629-4834 (Home and mobile)

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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread David Hogberg
Carol et al.: I've greatly enjoyed your thread concerning very special
memories of how songs are supposed to sound as they shift to the next LP
band during play. In that I'm a wee tad older than many/most of you, I have
many more LP band-shift memories than do the rest of you.  Perhaps the
Beatles (because I played the albums so frequently) provide the best
examples of anticipatory conditioning or so I guess that's what it is.  To
this day, one of my favorite quotable lyrics from the Beatles is also a
part of Rocky Racoon, i.e.," Her name was McGill, but she called herself
Lil, but everyone knew her as Nancy."

Doggone, they were good! D


On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:36 PM, Carol DeVolder
wrote:

>
>
>
>
>
> I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back
> in his room only to fi...ble.
> I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over,
> and now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I
> expect to hear certain songs after others.
>
> Carol
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael wrote:
>
>> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
>> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
>> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
>> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
>> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
>> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
>> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>>
>> Other people experienced this?
>>
>> Michael
>>
>>
>> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
>> Host of The Psych Files podcast
>> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
>> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
>>
>>
>> ---
>> You are currently subscribed to tips as: devoldercar...@gmail.com.
>> To unsubscribe click here:
>> http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=177920.a45340211ac7929163a021623341&n=T&l=tips&o=14447
>> or send a blank email to
>> leave-14447-177920.a45340211ac7929163a021623...@fsulist.frostburg.edu
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
> Professor of Psychology
> St. Ambrose University
> 518 West Locust Street
> Davenport, Iowa  52803
> 563-333-6482
>
> This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.
>
>
>
> ---
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>
>
>



-- 
David K. Hogberg, PhD
Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
Department of Psychological Science
Albion College
Albion MI 49224

Tel: 517/629-4834 (Home and mobile)

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[tips] Cyber monday Quick help

2011-11-28 Thread michael sylvester
Where can I purchase Psaych software at 95% discount prices on this cyber 
monday?
Michael
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Re: [tips] Plagiarism in Published Work

2011-11-28 Thread roig-reardon


My sense is that these experiences are not all that uncommon in the 
biomedical sciences and in particular with some low impact 
factor, foreign-based journals. 



Miguel 




- Original Message -
From: "Christopher D. Green"  
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)" 
 
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 1:24:02 PM 
Subject: Re: [tips] Plagiarism in Published Work 



  


  


  
On 11/28/11 9:32 AM, Paul C Bernhardt wrote: 

An interesting article from Chronicle of Higher Education on plagiarism of one 
article. The author has apparently found over 20 instances of the article being 
plagiarized. The response of editors of journals has been silence, for the most 
part. http://plagiarism-main.blogspot.com/ 

I am entirely un-surprised, I must say. When I was a graduate student, I found 
a published article in a reputable peer-review journal that consisted almost 
entirely of cobbled together paragraphs from a number of other articles on the 
same topic (I was writing a paper of my own on the topic at the time, so I knew 
the literature in this area extremely well). What tipped me off first that 
something was amiss were paragraphs containing pronouns that did not refer to 
anything named in the previous paragraph (that is how crude the cutting and 
pasting had been). Then I found certain unusal phrases that I knew I had read 
before and, when I located them in other articles, I found that whole 
paragraphs around them had been copied as well. 

I went to the journal editors about it. They said that they had not been 
editors when the paper was published and, so, could not do anything about (or, 
rather, weren't interested in doing so). I went to a few of the authors who had 
been apparently plagiarized. They too did not have much interest in pursuing 
the matter. (To be entirely fair, the article in question was 8 or 9 years old 
at the time, and some of the plagiarized material was over 15 years old.) 

So it goes... 
Chris 

-- 


Christopher D. Green 
Department of Psychology 
York University 
Toronto, ON M3J 1P3 
Canada 

  

416-736-2100 ex. 66164 
chri...@yorku.ca 
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/ 

== 


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re: [tips] Alice's restaurant

2011-11-28 Thread Michael Palij
On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 12:28:45 -0800, Michael Sylvester wrote:
>
>TRUE OR FALSE
>
>Alice's restaurant is not a restaurant but the name of a song.

Well, it depends upon what your meaning of "is" is.

On the other hand, check out the Wikipedia entry (yadda-yadda):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice%27s_Restaurant

So, the answer is it's both.

Or neither.

Or, in a Zen sense, it is both and neither, depending upon your
definition of "is".

-Mike Palij
New York University
m...@nyu.edu

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RE: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Marc Carter
Paul, if you go into the Info (Get Info, Options) section for the tracks, you 
can set the gaps to zero -- you check the "Is part of a gapless album" box.

Tedious, but perhaps worth it.  I have some Irish music session tunes in 
iTunes, and in a set there might be three tunes, one leading into the other.  
In iTunes it's horrible that the tunes just stop and start up as if in the 
middle of something.

Anyway, FWIW...

m

--
Marc Carter, PhD
Associate Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Behavioral and Health Sciences
College of Arts & Sciences
Baker University
--

> -Original Message-
> From: Paul C Bernhardt [mailto:pcbernha...@frostburg.edu]
> Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 3:33 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping
>
> Dark Side of the Moon, when listening to it as an Album on iTunes, in
> the early years of it at least, there would be gaps between songs when
> most of the songs on the vinyl album flow from one to the next
> directly. It was very jarring to have those gaps show up between songs.
>
> Paul
>
> On Nov 28, 2011, at 1:43 PM, Bourgeois, Dr. Martin wrote:
>
> > Yes, I have many examples of this very phenomenon etched into my
> brain. A related thing for me is that I had many 8-tracks that broke up
> songs between tracks (e.g., the Yes song  called 'Gates of Delirium'
> off the Relayer album took up all of tracks 1 & 2 and part of track 3).
> When I listen to intact version of the songs now (usually on vinyl) I
> still anticipate the gaps.
> >
> > Martin Bourgeois
> > Professor and Chair
> > Social and Behavioral Sciences
> > Florida Gulf Coast University
> > Fort Myers, FL 33931
> >
> >
> >
> > ** Confidentiality Statement 
> >
> > Florida has a very broad public records law.  As a result, any
> written communication created or received by Florida Gulf Coast
> University employees is subject to disclosure to the public and the
> media, upon request, unless otherwise exempt.  Under Florida law, e-
> mail addresses are public records.  If you do not want your email
> address released in response to a public records request, do not send
> electronic mail to this entity.  Instead, contact this office by phone
> or in writing.
> > 
> > From: Michael [mich...@thepsychfiles.com]
> > Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 12:19 PM
> > To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> > Subject: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping
> >
> > When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> > skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use
> them
> > as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find
> when
> > I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT
> it to
> > skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to
> skip at
> > exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other
> than
> > memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
> >
> > Other people experienced this?
> >
> > Michael
> >
> >
> > Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> > Host of The Psych Files podcast
> > http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> > mich...@thepsychfiles.com
> >
> >
> > ---
> > You are currently subscribed to tips as: mbour...@fgcu.edu.
> > To unsubscribe click here:
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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Maxwell Gwynn
 
Heartbreaker from Led Zeppelin II should not be allowed to end without
Living Loving Maid following one beat later.
 
-Max
 
Max Gwynn, Ph.D.
Dept. of Psychology
Wilfrid Laurier University
(519) 884-0710 ext 3854
mgw...@wlu.ca

>>> Claudia Stanny  11/28/2011 12:49 PM >>>

Another phenomenon is the expectation that one song will follow another
on an album (or CD).
Playing something on shuffle will sometimes create surprises when the
expected sequence is violated.
 
Not all memories are encoded intentionally!  :-)
Claudia Stanny
 


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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Paul C Bernhardt
Dark Side of the Moon, when listening to it as an Album on iTunes, in the early 
years of it at least, there would be gaps between songs when most of the songs 
on the vinyl album flow from one to the next directly. It was very jarring to 
have those gaps show up between songs. 

Paul

On Nov 28, 2011, at 1:43 PM, Bourgeois, Dr. Martin wrote:

> Yes, I have many examples of this very phenomenon etched into my brain. A 
> related thing for me is that I had many 8-tracks that broke up songs between 
> tracks (e.g., the Yes song  called 'Gates of Delirium' off the Relayer album 
> took up all of tracks 1 & 2 and part of track 3). When I listen to intact 
> version of the songs now (usually on vinyl) I still anticipate the gaps.
> 
> Martin Bourgeois
> Professor and Chair
> Social and Behavioral Sciences
> Florida Gulf Coast University
> Fort Myers, FL 33931
> 
> 
> 
> ** Confidentiality Statement 
> 
> Florida has a very broad public records law.  As a result, any written 
> communication created or received by Florida Gulf Coast University employees 
> is subject to disclosure to the public and the media, upon request, unless 
> otherwise exempt.  Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records.  
> If you do not want your email address released in response to a public 
> records request, do not send electronic mail to this entity.  Instead, 
> contact this office by phone or in writing.
> 
> From: Michael [mich...@thepsychfiles.com]
> Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 12:19 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping
> 
> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
> 
> Other people experienced this?
> 
> Michael
> 
> 
> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> Host of The Psych Files podcast
> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
> 
> 
> ---
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Re: [tips] Alice's restaurant

2011-11-28 Thread Brandon, Paul K
Sorry -- Alice doesn't take tips.

On Nov 28, 2011, at 2:28 PM, michael sylvester wrote:

 TRUE OR FALSE

Alice's restaurant is not a restaurant but the name of a song.



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[tips] Alice's restaurant

2011-11-28 Thread michael sylvester
TRUE OR FALSE

Alice's restaurant is not a restaurant but the name of a song.

Michael
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[tips] Orlando's version of a Stanford prison study

2011-11-28 Thread michael sylvester
An Orlando,Florida judge who wanted to give some teens that appeared in his 
court a taste of prison life ordered  them
to visit and spend some time in the county jail.The teens were accompanied by 
their parents.However the jail inmates had some of the visiting teens don dirty 
prison clothes,one was forced to do push ups at the toilet and an inmate kissed 
passionately one of the teens.Some were targets of serious verbal abuse. Some 
of the parents were out side of the prison taking a cigarette break,and the 
prison guards who observed the inmates' harassment did nothing to stop it.
 It appears that sending teens to preview prisons will be extinguished.
Iguess inmates will be inmates and guards will be guards.
Michael "omnicentric" Sylvester,PhD
Daytona Beach,Florida
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RE: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Bourgeois, Dr. Martin
Yes, I have many examples of this very phenomenon etched into my brain. A 
related thing for me is that I had many 8-tracks that broke up songs between 
tracks (e.g., the Yes song  called 'Gates of Delirium' off the Relayer album 
took up all of tracks 1 & 2 and part of track 3). When I listen to intact 
version of the songs now (usually on vinyl) I still anticipate the gaps.

Martin Bourgeois
Professor and Chair
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Florida Gulf Coast University
Fort Myers, FL 33931



** Confidentiality Statement 

Florida has a very broad public records law.  As a result, any written 
communication created or received by Florida Gulf Coast University employees is 
subject to disclosure to the public and the media, upon request, unless 
otherwise exempt.  Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records.  If 
you do not want your email address released in response to a public records 
request, do not send electronic mail to this entity.  Instead, contact this 
office by phone or in writing.

From: Michael [mich...@thepsychfiles.com]
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 12:19 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.

Other people experienced this?

Michael


Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
Host of The Psych Files podcast
http://www.thepsychfiles.com
mich...@thepsychfiles.com


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Re: [tips] Plagiarism in Published Work

2011-11-28 Thread Christopher D. Green
On 11/28/11 9:32 AM, Paul C Bernhardt wrote:
> An interesting article from Chronicle of Higher Education on plagiarism of 
> one article. The author has apparently found over 20 instances of the article 
> being plagiarized. The response of editors of journals has been silence, for 
> the most part.
>
> http://plagiarism-main.blogspot.com/
>
I am entirely un-surprised, I must say. When I was a graduate student, I 
found a published article in a reputable peer-review journal that 
consisted almost entirely of cobbled together paragraphs from a number 
of other articles on the same topic (I was writing a paper of my own on 
the topic at the time, so I knew the literature in this area extremely 
well). What tipped me off first that something was amiss were paragraphs 
containing pronouns that did not refer to anything named in the previous 
paragraph (that is how crude the cutting and pasting had been). Then I 
found certain unusal phrases that I knew I had read before and, when I 
located them in other articles, I found that whole paragraphs around 
them had been copied as well.

I went to the journal editors about it. They said that they had not been 
editors when the paper was published and, so, could not do anything 
about (or, rather, weren't interested in doing so). I went to a few of 
the authors who had been apparently plagiarized. They too did not have 
much interest in pursuing the matter. (To be entirely fair, the article 
in question was 8 or 9 years old at the time, and some of the 
plagiarized material was over 15 years old.)

So it goes...
Chris
-- 

Christopher D. Green
Department of Psychology
York University
Toronto, ON M3J 1P3
Canada

416-736-2100 ex. 66164
chri...@yorku.ca
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/

==


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RE: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Marc Carter
I was going to write and make this comment.  I notice it very much, and am an 
ardent opponent of shuffling.  It seems very jarring.

But yes, we learn those associations strongly, even without trying.

m

--
Marc Carter, PhD
Associate Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Behavioral and Health Sciences
College of Arts & Sciences
Baker University
--
From: Claudia Stanny [mailto:csta...@uwf.edu]
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 11:49 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping







Another phenomenon is the expectation that one song will follow another on an 
album (or CD).
Playing something on shuffle will sometimes create surprises when the expected 
sequence is violated.

Not all memories are encoded intentionally!  :-)
Claudia Stanny


The information contained in this e-mail and any attachments thereto ("e-mail") 
is sent by Baker University ("BU") and is intended to be confidential and for 
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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Claudia Stanny
Another phenomenon is the expectation that one song will follow another on
an album (or CD).
Playing something on shuffle will sometimes create surprises when the
expected sequence is violated.

Not all memories are encoded intentionally!  :-)
Claudia Stanny

On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael  wrote:

> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>
> Other people experienced this?
>
> Michael
>
>
> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> Host of The Psych Files podcast
> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
>
>
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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread David Epstein

On Mon, 28 Nov 2011, Carol DeVolder went:


I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back in
his room only to fi...ble.


Yep.  My vinyl copy of the Turtles' "Let Me Be" had two "pops" that
each landed perfectly on an off-beat as one of the verses transitioned
to the chorus.  I still wish I were hearing them--and I still
half-expect to.

Many of the 14,000+ songs on my iPod are tracks that I digitized from
vinyl.  The sound of the vinyl enhances my pleasure.  If I let Apple
"match" my songs to perfect versions in its Cloud, I'd be losing
something.

--David Epstein
  da...@neverdave.com

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Re: [tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Carol DeVolder
I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back in
his room only to fi...ble.
I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over,
and now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I
expect to hear certain songs after others.

Carol


On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael  wrote:

> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>
> Other people experienced this?
>
> Michael
>
>
> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
> Host of The Psych Files podcast
> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
> mich...@thepsychfiles.com
>
>
> ---
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-- 
Carol DeVolder, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
St. Ambrose University
518 West Locust Street
Davenport, Iowa  52803
563-333-6482

This e-mail might be confidential, so please don't share it.

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[tips] Memory for Record Skipping

2011-11-28 Thread Michael
When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.

Other people experienced this?

Michael


Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
Host of The Psych Files podcast
http://www.thepsychfiles.com
mich...@thepsychfiles.com


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Re: [tips] contralateral organization

2011-11-28 Thread drnanjo

thanks everyone for the help with this...

Nancy M.



-Original Message-
From: Pollak, Edward (Retired) (Retired) 
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) 
Sent: Mon, Nov 28, 2011 6:54 am
Subject: [tips] contralateral organization


 


 


 



Nancy asked, "Are ALL human sensory systems organized contralaterally? Or just 
vision and the somatosenory system?"
 
All of the "body senses" also exhibit contralateral dominance. That is 
certainly true for audition & vision as well. 
 
Olfaction, however, is primarily ipsilateral.  Gustation seems to be bilateral 
but with a marked contralateral dominance.
 
Ed 


 

 
Edward I. Pollak, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Psychology


West Chester University of Pennsylvania 

http://home.comcast.net/~epollak/
Husband, father, grandfather, bluegrass fiddler, banjoist & 
biopsychologist... in approximate order of importance
 
 



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[tips] contralateral organization

2011-11-28 Thread Pollak, Edward (Retired)
Nancy asked, "Are ALL human sensory systems organized contralaterally? Or just 
vision and the somatosenory system?"



All of the "body senses" also exhibit contralateral dominance. That is 
certainly true for audition & vision as well.



Olfaction, however, is primarily ipsilateral.  Gustation seems to be bilateral 
but with a marked contralateral dominance.



Ed




Edward I. Pollak, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Psychology
West Chester University of Pennsylvania
http://home.comcast.net/~epollak/
Husband, father, grandfather, bluegrass fiddler, banjoist & 
biopsychologist... in approximate order of importance


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[tips] Plagiarism in Published Work

2011-11-28 Thread Paul C Bernhardt
An interesting article from Chronicle of Higher Education on plagiarism of one 
article. The author has apparently found over 20 instances of the article being 
plagiarized. The response of editors of journals has been silence, for the most 
part.

http://plagiarism-main.blogspot.com/
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