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1.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull ; 43(12): 1686-1695, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28914152

ABSTRACT

Four studies document an asymmetry in givers' and receivers' evaluations of gifts: Givers underestimate the extent to which receivers perceive partial (but more desirable) gifts to be thoughtful, valuable, and worthy of appreciation. Study 1 documents this asymmetry and suggests that givers underestimate the extent to which partial gifts signal thoughtfulness to receivers. Study 2 replicates this asymmetry in the context of a real gift exchange among friends. Study 3 shows that this asymmetry arises because givers believe that purchasing partial gifts is a greater violation of gift-giving norms than do receivers, leading givers to expect that partial gifts will damage receivers' perceptions of a gift's value. Study 4 offers an intervention that induces givers to select the (partial) gifts that receivers prefer more than givers expect: framing a gift's separate components as complete units.


Subject(s)
Gift Giving , Interpersonal Relations , Social Perception , Decision Making , Humans
2.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 104(1): 10-9, 2008 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17947503

ABSTRACT

Heterogeneity is a fundamental property of airway constriction; however, whether it is a distinguishing feature of mild asthma is not clear. We used computerized tomography and the forced oscillation technique to compare lung heterogeneity between 18 mildly asthmatic and 19 healthy control subjects at similar levels of bronchoconstriction while subjects were supine. We also assessed the effects of deep inhalation and albuterol on supine lung mechanics. Measures of heterogeneity included lung attenuation, from which we derived a novel index of air-space size, and the frequency dependence of respiratory system resistance between 1 and 20 Hz. We found that asthmatic subjects had airways hyperresponsiveness to methacholine in the sitting position compared with controls, but both groups had similar falls in forced expiratory volume in 1 s after inhaling methacholine while supine. There were no baseline differences between the groups in the frequency dependence of resistance, or lung attenuation, before methacholine, and both groups responded similarly with an increase in air-space size (+9.2% vs. +3.4%), air-space size heterogeneity (+9.8% vs. +4.2%), and frequency dependence of resistance (+76% vs. +86%) after methacholine. Deep inhalation did not affect resistance in either group, but albuterol significantly reduced resistance in both groups. We conclude that both computerized tomography and the forced oscillation technique demonstrate increased heterogeneity of airway narrowing during induced bronchoconstriction while supine and that this heterogeneity is equivalent between subjects with mild asthma and healthy controls when bronchoconstricted to the same degree. Thus heterogeneity appears to be a fundamental feature of bronchoconstriction and is not unique to mild asthma.


Subject(s)
Airway Resistance , Asthma/diagnosis , Bronchial Hyperreactivity/diagnosis , Bronchoconstriction , Respiratory Function Tests , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Adolescent , Adult , Airway Resistance/drug effects , Albuterol/pharmacology , Asthma/diagnostic imaging , Asthma/physiopathology , Bronchial Hyperreactivity/diagnostic imaging , Bronchial Hyperreactivity/physiopathology , Bronchial Provocation Tests , Bronchoconstriction/drug effects , Bronchoconstrictor Agents , Bronchodilator Agents/pharmacology , Case-Control Studies , Female , Forced Expiratory Volume , Humans , Inhalation , Male , Methacholine Chloride , Severity of Illness Index , Spirometry , Supine Position
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