Guest guest Posted March 22, 2012 Report Share Posted March 22, 2012 Bill, Sage publications does not make its articles available for free once the actual hardcopy of its journals has been mailed to paying subscribers. For some but not all journals they do make their articles available to anyone"pre-publication," but the window is usually very short. Please send me your .pdf of this article. I used to have universal access through Cambridge and Harvard Universities [only available to tenured faculty, and not graduate students] but I've let my relationships with advanced tenured faculty lapse since retiring. One of the nice things about that class of access is that the translation facility at Cambridge also makes possible article translation at a very high level into English from over 80 languages...and is of far higher quality than what the US NSA does with its clunky translation computer. The translation computer at Cambridge is not ordinarily accessible to graduate students because both universities want their grad students to actually learn the language if an article they need is in a foreign tongue. Once you get tenure as advanced senior faculty, you gets lotsa perks, and that is one of them. Doesn't sound fair, but who says academia is about fairness? <g> N. Meyer Article - heavyweight > > >NOT A LIGHTWEIGHT article at all. The first half and more is a >(necessary) recap of older experiments. It's quite long and requires >heavy-duty thinking and some understanding of psychological terms and >practices. Putting it (last half or so) to use might require unusual >comprehension and very good personal insights. > >IT IS NOT A "COOKBOOK". Nonetheless, the *concepts* described could be >life-savers. > They bear on how *behaviors might be changed* (or not), and the >importance of *context* -- especially past, *life-long* context -- when >trying to change an individual's behavior. ...Even one's own. > >Obviously, this can be relevant to AS/NS/NT *relationships* - to help >start good ones or to try healing the failing ones. > >-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >Reversal Without Remapping : What We Can (and Cannot) Conclude About >Learned Associations From Training-Induced Behavior Changes >Marc N. Coutanche and Sharon L. -Schill >Perspectives on Psychological Science 2012 7: 118 >DOI: 10.1177/1745691611434211 > >The online version of this article can be found at: > > http://pps.sagepub.com/content/7/2/118 >If you want a personal copy (offered on-site), but can't get it for some >reason, I have a PDF [313,819 bytes]. > >- Bill ...AS, retired geneticist > >-- >WD "Bill" Loughman - Berkeley, California USA >http://home.earthlink.net/~wdloughman/wdl.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2012 Report Share Posted March 22, 2012 rogernmeyer@... wrote: > > > Bill, > > Sage publications does not make its articles available for free once the > actual hardcopy of its journals has been mailed to paying subscribers. > For some but not all journals they do make their articles available to > anyone " pre-publication, " but the window is usually very short. Yes, I know. Sage has funny, sometimes flaky arrangements with professional societies. I never know with Sage exactly what access I'll get on any given attempt. > > Please send me your .pdf of this article. I used to have universal Sent privately, ...off-List. > access through Cambridge and Harvard Universities [only available to > tenured faculty, and not graduate students] but I've let my > relationships with advanced tenured faculty lapse since retiring. One of > the nice things about that class of access is that the translation > facility at Cambridge also makes possible article translation at a very > high level into English from over 80 languages...and is of far higher I'm green with envy. I get by with good German, and reading " familiarity " with anything Latin-based. It's Babelfish and a good dictionary for everything else. > quality than what the US NSA does with its clunky translation computer. > The translation computer at Cambridge is not ordinarily accessible to > graduate students because both universities want their grad students to > actually learn the language if an article they need is in a foreign > tongue. Once you get tenure as advanced senior faculty, you gets lotsa > perks, and that is one of them. Doesn't sound fair, but who says > academia is about fairness? <g> Not me! But then I always worked without tenure, rank notwithstanding. While most often *in* academe I preferred never to be *of* it. I avoided all faculty appointments except " Adjunct " ones - with equivalent ranks and titles - paid from " other " budgets. " Security " cuts both ways, and I prefer freedom of action. > Article - heavyweight [ snip ] > >IT IS NOT A " COOKBOOK " . Nonetheless, the *concepts* described could be > >life-savers. > > They bear on how *behaviors might be changed* (or not), and the > >importance of *context* -- especially past, *life-long* context -- when > >trying to change an individual's behavior. ...Even one's own. > > > >Obviously, this can be relevant to AS/NS/NT *relationships* - to help > >start good ones or to try healing the failing ones. > > > >-------------------------------------------------------------------------------\ ---------------- > >Reversal Without Remapping : What We Can (and Cannot) Conclude About > >Learned Associations From Training-Induced Behavior Changes > >Marc N. Coutanche and Sharon L. -Schill > >Perspectives on Psychological Science 2012 7: 118 > >DOI: 10.1177/1745691611434211 > > > >The online version of this article can be found at: > > > > http://pps.sagepub.com/content/7/2/118 Some can get it; some can't. See below. > >If you want a personal copy (offered on-site), but can't get it for some > >reason, I have a PDF [313,819 bytes]. - Bill ...AS, retired geneticist -- WD " Bill " Loughman - Berkeley, California USA http://home.earthlink.net/~wdloughman/wdl.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2012 Report Share Posted March 23, 2012 I am very disappointed with Sage. I researched some stuff a few weeks ago for my clearinghouse, and found Sage links. Needless to say, I couldn't access them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2012 Report Share Posted March 23, 2012 , What you ran into is typical of any of the professional journal sites on-line. There is one way to by-pass this, and it generally works. For any university near you, could you strike up a working relationship with the librarians who staff the reference desk? Most universities and an increasing number of public libraries are subscribing to major journals on line rather than receiving hard copies in print. For enrolled students, there is permission to download and print articles, and that's what I've done when I haven't had time to make arrangements with either Harvard or Cambridge in the most recent past. See whether the folks at your local advanced education institutions would allow you this kind of privilege. Good luck. N. Meyer Re: Article - heavyweight > >I am very disappointed with Sage. I researched some stuff a few weeks ago for my clearinghouse, and found Sage links. Needless to say, I couldn't access them. > > > > > > >------------------------------------ > > "We each have our own way of living in the world, together we are like a symphony. >Some are the melody, some are the rhythm, some are the harmony >It all blends together, we are like a symphony, and each part is crucial. >We all contribute to the song of life." > ...Sondra > > We might not always agree; but TOGETHER we will make a difference. > > ASPIRES is a closed, confidential, moderated list. >Responsibility for posts to ASPIRES lies entirely with the original author. > Do NOT post mail off-list without the author's permission. > When in doubt, please refer to our list rules at: > http://www.aspires-relationships.com/info_rules.htm > ASPIRES ~ Climbing the mountain TOGETHER > http://www.aspires-relationships.com > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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