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Articles 1 - 21 of 21
Full-Text Articles in Psychology
Three Coins In The Fountain: The Mueller Report And Russian Active Measures, Ibpp Editor
Three Coins In The Fountain: The Mueller Report And Russian Active Measures, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article identifies non-political elements of Russian Federation political warfare as inferred from the Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election.
Fatal Attractions, Elective Affinities, And Deadly Epistemologies, Ibpp Editor
Fatal Attractions, Elective Affinities, And Deadly Epistemologies, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article cites film, the novel, and news report to underline the deadly seriousness of the quest for knowledge.
Espionage: Why Did Hanssen Do It?, Ibpp Editor
Espionage: Why Did Hanssen Do It?, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes speculative elements of a post-dictive profile on Robert P. Hanssen’s convictions for espionage and conspiracy.
The Political Psychology Of Crossroads, Ibpp Editor
The Political Psychology Of Crossroads, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article elaborates on how the construct of crossroads has situated within political psychological discourse.
A Political Psychology Of Obituary, Ibpp Editor
A Political Psychology Of Obituary, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article ascribes political psychological relevance to the recent death of Russian critic and documentarian Maya Turovskaya.
New Terrorism In New Zealand? The Psychology Of Censorship, Ibpp Editor
New Terrorism In New Zealand? The Psychology Of Censorship, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes the essentialness of information transmission for terrorism and some psychological findings on related censorship.
Popular Culture And The Psychology Of The Insider Threat, Ibpp Editor
Popular Culture And The Psychology Of The Insider Threat, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article illustrates an identification between pop culture and an important intelligence, law enforcement, and security issue.
Answers To Questions - Martin Wieser’S “Psychology In National Socialism [Psychologie Im Nationalsozialismus] At Sigmund Freud Private University Berlin, July 27–28, 2018”, Martin Wieser, Richard W. Bloom
Answers To Questions - Martin Wieser’S “Psychology In National Socialism [Psychologie Im Nationalsozialismus] At Sigmund Freud Private University Berlin, July 27–28, 2018”, Martin Wieser, Richard W. Bloom
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This Scholarly Commons record provides the transcript of the interview IBPP editor Dr. Richard Bloom conducted with Dr. Martin Wieser of Sigmund Freud Private University Berlin on March 2, 2019.
With the publication of Dr. Wieser’s “Psychology in National Socialism [Psychologie im Nationalsozialismus] at Sigmund Freud Private University Berlin, July 27–28, 2018” in History of Psychology, 22(1), 107-109., the IBPP Editor requested that the author provide responses to questions…and Dr. Wieser graciously accepted.
The Political Psychology Of Death: Until It Do Us Part, Ibpp Editor
The Political Psychology Of Death: Until It Do Us Part, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes interwoven complexities and psychologies of life and death in the lives of political actors.
“I’Ll Be Your Mirror”, The Soul, And Intelligence And Counterintelligence Applications, Ibpp Editor
“I’Ll Be Your Mirror”, The Soul, And Intelligence And Counterintelligence Applications, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes how the psychological trope of mirroring can explicate mass leadership and betrayals of trust.
When Is Terrorism All In The Family?, Ibpp Editor
When Is Terrorism All In The Family?, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes putative linkages between family relationships and kinds of terrorism.
Psychologies Of Going Nuclear, Ibpp Editor
Psychologies Of Going Nuclear, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article identifies multiple psychologies affecting joining and withdrawing from nuclear weapons agreements.
The Us Government Shutdown: When Is Personality Shut Out?, Ibpp Editor
The Us Government Shutdown: When Is Personality Shut Out?, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article identifies factors influencing how significant a leader’s personality affects political decision making and behavior.
Psychology Of Cargo Cults And Contemporary Cargo Security, Ibpp Editor
Psychology Of Cargo Cults And Contemporary Cargo Security, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes a convergence between the psychology of cargo cults and contemporary cargo security
Do Government Shut Downs Shut Down Aviation Security?, Ibpp Editor
Do Government Shut Downs Shut Down Aviation Security?, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
There have been reports of a growing number of Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents calling in sick and refusing to work for no pay (1). The immediate question becomes, what’s the impact on aviation security? The answer is a negative one, but not as negative as one might think, and one only adding to festering, pre-shutdown problems.
Difference In Attitudes Toward Crew Resource Management Based On Nationality, Christoph Zurman, Herbert O. Hoffmann, Hans-Joachim K. Ruff-Stahl
Difference In Attitudes Toward Crew Resource Management Based On Nationality, Christoph Zurman, Herbert O. Hoffmann, Hans-Joachim K. Ruff-Stahl
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
The E-3A Airborne Early Warning and Control System aircraft operates with multinational crewmembers from 15 different nations on 12 different aircrew positions. Given this non-standard cultural environment, the authors explored the differences in the attitude toward Crew Resource Management (CRM), based on nationality, and how these differences could be used as a predictor for other nationalities attitudes. The potential benefit of this study may be, that CRM methods could be developed further to either work universally, independent to national or cultural backgrounds, or be adjusted for different cultural contexts in order to be even more effective. Primary data was gathered …
Collegiate Aviation Pilots: Analyses Of Fatigue Related Decision-Making Scenarios, Julius Keller, Flavio Coimbra Mendonca Mr, Jason E. Cutter
Collegiate Aviation Pilots: Analyses Of Fatigue Related Decision-Making Scenarios, Julius Keller, Flavio Coimbra Mendonca Mr, Jason E. Cutter
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
According to Dawson and McCulloch (2005), indicating factors for pilot fatigue may be difficult to ascertain. However, fatigue is a probable cause in 15%-20% of all aircraft accidents (Akerstedt, 2000). It may be assumed fatigue has been important latent condition for many of the general aviation incidents and or accidents but not necessarily identified as a probable cause. Events that barely missed a detrimental situation due to fatigue, often go unnoticed and or unreported. Furthermore, fatigue can influence the quality of flight instruction and flight operations overall. The purpose of the current paper was to examine fatigue related decision-making responses …
Speech Interfaces And Pilot Performance: A Meta-Analysis, Kenneth A. Ward
Speech Interfaces And Pilot Performance: A Meta-Analysis, Kenneth A. Ward
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
As the aviation industry modernizes, new technology and interfaces must support growing aircraft complexity without increasing pilot workload. Natural language processing presents just such a simple and intuitive interface, yet the performance implications for use by pilots remain unknown. A meta-analysis was conducted to understand performance effects of using speech and voice interfaces in a series of pilot task analogs. The inclusion criteria selected studies that involved participants performing a demanding primary task, such as driving, while interacting with a vehicle system to enter numbers, dial radios, or enter a navigation destination. Compared to manual system interfaces, voice interfaces reduced …
Mindspace And Development Of Organizational Culture In Aviation Safety Management, Wilson Gilliam Jr
Mindspace And Development Of Organizational Culture In Aviation Safety Management, Wilson Gilliam Jr
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
Abstract
The organization’s role in establishing a culture fertile for safety development, risk management and mitigation is paramount. Barriers to the effectiveness of aviation safety systems may emerge when human biases interfere with the basic processes of safety management systems. Biases come in many forms and can serve as unconscious discriminatory behaviors against a person’s race, gender, sexual orientation, profession, skill level or other characteristic. Biases can also result from instinctive reactions and habitual patterns serving to protect one’s status, sense of belonging, desire to be viewed as normal and other characteristics. Minimizing biases within an organization is a key …
There Is A Bias In Aviation Against Research That Is Perceived To Be “Easy”, Stephen Rice, Scott R. Winter, Nicola M. O'Toole
There Is A Bias In Aviation Against Research That Is Perceived To Be “Easy”, Stephen Rice, Scott R. Winter, Nicola M. O'Toole
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
The purpose of conducting research is to make contributions to the body of knowledge. In managing research studies, researchers are often forced to make decisions on a series of tradeoffs due to scarce resources. They may have to select participants from certain accessible populations, limit the time required to conduct the study, or use a minimal number of researchers due to funding constraints. The purpose of this current study was to examine for a possible bias on the perceived value of scientific research based on the location in which the data was collected, the amount of time required to complete …
A Trust In Air Traffic Controllers (T-Atc) Scale, Bradley S. Baugh, Scott R. Winter
A Trust In Air Traffic Controllers (T-Atc) Scale, Bradley S. Baugh, Scott R. Winter
International Journal of Aviation, Aeronautics, and Aerospace
Trust is a concept that cannot be easily measured. Further, trust is domain-specific. Trust is a foundational aspect of safe flight operations in the National Airspace System, and while there has been much attention to trust in teams and trust in automation, there appears to be a gap in knowledge of a pilot’s trust in air traffic controllers. The purpose of this study was to develop and validate the Trust in Air Traffic Controllers (T-ATC) scale, a summative scale to measure a pilot’s trust in air traffic controllers. This study followed a three-step methodology. In steps one and two, words …