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Dive into the research topics where Nathalia L. Gjersoe is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathalia L. Gjersoe.


Psychological Science | 2010

The Effect of Creative Labor on Property-Ownership Transfer by Preschool Children and Adults

Patricia Kanngiesser; Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Bruce M. Hood

Recognizing property ownership is of critical importance in social interactions, but little is known about how and when this attribute emerges. We investigated whether preschool children and adults believe that ownership of one person’s property is transferred to a second person following the second person’s investment of creative labor in that property. In our study, an experimenter and a participant borrowed modeling-clay objects from each other to mold into new objects. Participants were more likely to transfer ownership to the second individual after he or she invested creative labor in the object than after any other manipulations (holding the object, making small changes to it). This effect was significantly stronger in preschool children than in adults. Duration of manipulation had no effect on property-ownership transfer. Changes in the object’s identity acted only as a secondary cue for children. We conclude that ownership is transferred after an investment of creative labor and that determining property ownership may be an intuitive process that emerges in early childhood.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Individualism and the extended-self:cross-cultural differences in the valuation of authentic objects

Nathalia L. Gjersoe; George E. Newman; Vladimir Chituc; Bruce M. Hood

The current studies examine how valuation of authentic items varies as a function of culture. We find that U.S. respondents value authentic items associated with individual persons (a sweater or an artwork) more than Indian respondents, but that both cultures value authentic objects not associated with persons (a dinosaur bone or a moon rock) equally. These differences cannot be attributed to more general cultural differences in the value assigned to authenticity. Rather, the results support the hypothesis that individualistic cultures place a greater value on objects associated with unique persons and in so doing, offer the first evidence for how valuation of certain authentic items may vary cross-culturally.


Journal of Cognition and Culture | 2011

Moral Contagion Attitudes towards Potential Organ Transplants in British and Japanese Adults

Bruce M. Hood; Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Katy E Donnelly; Alison Byers; Shoji Itakura

In two studies we investigated whether people evidence an effect of moral contamination with respect to hypothetical organ transplants. This was achieved by asking participants to make judgements after presenting either positive or negative background information about the donor. In the first study, positive/negative background information had a corresponding effect on three judgements with attitudes to a heart transplant most pronounced by negative background information relative to good information and controls. This effect was replicated in the second study with both heart and liver transplantation. Negative effects were stronger than positive effects in all conditions consistent with a negativity bias, but again stronger with regards to organs than controls. These results confirm findings from surveys that reveal real patients are concerned about moral contamination following organ transplantation and show that this bias in evident even in hypothetical, non-life-threatening scenarios. In a third study we found a significantly stronger moral contagion effect in Japanese relative to English participants, suggesting that concerns about moral contagion may be moderated by culture.


Cognition | 2013

When pictures lie: Children’s misunderstanding of photographs

Katherine E. Donnelly; Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Bruce M. Hood

In three experiments we examined duality of representation for photographs in young children. Three- to four-year-olds were shown a target item which was then hidden. A sticker was placed on a photograph of this target and children, asked to retrieve the referent, were faced with a choice between a stickered and un-stickered version. Children brought back a stickered distracter object, as if the action to the photograph had modified the object. Control conditions demonstrated that these errors could not be attributed to memory failure or bias towards stickered objects. Experiment 2 indicated that childrens errors depended on the sticker being placed directly on the image on the photograph and were not due to signalling which object to choose. A final experiment demonstrated that this effect could be observed under circumstances involving more substantial changes to objects: Here, children acted as if wetting a photograph of an object would cause the object itself to become wet. We interpret these results as evidence that an immature comprehension of photographs fails to take into account the episodic and symbolic referential nature of photographs.


Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 2006

The supernatural guilt trip does not take us far enough

Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Bruce M. Hood

Belief in souls is only one component of supernatural thinking in which individuals infer the presence of invisible mechanisms that explain events as paranormal rather than natural. We believe it is important to place greater emphasis on the prevalence of supernatural beliefs across other domains, if only to counter simplistic divisions between rationality and irrationality recently aligned with the contentious science/religion debate.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Changing children's understanding of the brain: a longitudinal study of the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures as a measure of public engagement

Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Bruce M. Hood

Demonstrating the impact of public engagement is an increasingly important activity for today’s academics and researchers. The difficulty is that many areas of interest do not lend themselves well to evaluation because the impact of each single intervention can be hard to trace and take time to become manifest. With this in mind, we evaluated a lecture based around the 2011 Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, ”Meet Your Brain,” delivered to school children from low performing schools. We compared knowledge about four neuroscience facts one week before, one week after and six weeks after the lecture. Analysis revealed significant knowledge transfer one week after the lecture that was retained five weeks later. We conclude that public engagement through tailored lectures can have significant impact in the moderate term with the potential to leave a lasting impression over a longer period.


Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 2009

On the adaptive advantage of always being right (even when one is not)

Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Bruce M. Hood

We propose another positive illusion – overconfidence in the generalisability of one’s theory – that fits with McKay & Dennett’s (M&D’s) criteria for adaptive misbeliefs. This illusion is pervasive in adult reasoning but we focus on its prevalence in children’s developing theories. It is a strongly held conviction arising from normal functioning of the doxastic system that confers adaptive advantage on the individual.


Environment and Planning B-planning & Design | 2004

Human movement behaviour in urban spaces: implications for the design and modelling of effective pedestrian environments

Alexandra Willis; Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Catriona Havard; Jon M. Kerridge; Robert Kukla


Transport Policy | 2006

Newspaper response to the Edinburgh congestion charging proposals

Tim Ryley; Nathalia L. Gjersoe


Developmental Science | 2011

Inhibitory Control Interacts with Core Knowledge in Toddlers' Manual Search for an Occluded Object.

Sara T. Baker; Nathalia L. Gjersoe; Kasia Sibielska-Woch; Alan M. Leslie; Bruce M. Hood

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Jon M. Kerridge

Edinburgh Napier University

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Robert Kukla

Edinburgh Napier University

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