Rachel Best
University of Memphis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rachel Best.
Psychological Science | 2011
Mark Levine; Paul J. Taylor; Rachel Best
Although researchers know much about the causes of aggression, they know surprisingly little about how aggression leads to violence or how violence is controlled. To explore the microregulation of violence, we conducted a systematic behavioral analysis of footage from closed-circuit television surveillance of public spaces. Using 42 incidents involving 312 people, we compared aggressive incidents that ended in violence with those that did not. Behaviors of antagonists and third parties were coded as either escalating or conciliatory acts. Results showed that third parties were more likely to take conciliatory actions than to escalate violence and that this tendency increased as group size increased. This analysis revealed a pattern of third-party behaviors that prevent aggression from becoming violent and showed that conciliatory behaviors are more successful when carried out by multiple third parties than when carried out by one person. We conclude by emphasizing the importance of collective third-party dynamics in understanding conflict resolution.
British Journal of Development Psychology | 2006
Rachel Best; Julie E. Dockrell; Nick Braisby
Assessments of lexical acquisition are often limited to pre-school children on forced choice comprehension measures. This study assessed the understandings 30 school-age children (mean age = 6;7) acquired about the science term, eclipse following a naturalistic exposure to a solar eclipse. The knowledge children acquired about eclipses and a control term, comet was assessed at three points in time (baseline-test, two-week post-test and five-month post-test) using a range of assessment tasks (multiple-choice comprehension, picture-naming, drawing and a model of a solar system task). Childrens knowledge was compared to 15 adult controls during the baseline-test and two-week post-test. Children acquired extensive knowledge about eclipses, but not comets; at the two-week post-test and five-month post-test, the majority of children named and drew eclipses and „made? an eclipse using models of the sun, moon and earth. Also, childrens eclipse knowledge more closely approximated adult-level understandings at the two-week post-test than at the baseline-test. Implications for the study of lexical acquisition in later development are discussed.
Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2012
Robert D. Lowe; Mark Levine; Rachel Best; Derek Heim
This article explores accounts of bystanders to female-on-female public violence. Group interviews with participants in the night-time economy are carried out. Whereas men tend to respond to the discussion topic of female-on-female violence with laughter, this laughter reveals ambivalence and discomfort as much as amusement. Men seem to negotiate the tension between the expectation that they should intervene in emergencies and a catalogue of costs that attend intervention. Female bystanders appear to have a different set of concerns. They talk about feelings of shame at the interpersonal and the group level. Women cite the public spectacle, and the opportunity for men to demean or sexualize women, as reasons for intervention. The article concludes with some recommendations about the importance of exploring female violence in its own terms, beginning with a series of identified moral and social dilemmas incurred within possible third-party intervention.
international conference of learning sciences | 2008
Rachel Best; Randy G. Floyd; Danielle S. McNamara
Journal of Educational Computing Research | 2006
Danielle S. McNamara; Tenaha O'Reilly; Rachel Best; Yasuhiro Ozuru
Topics in Language Disorders | 2005
Rachel Best; Michael Rowe; Yasuhiro Ozuru; Danielle S. McNamara
Cognition and Instruction | 2007
Yasuhiro Ozuru; Rachel Best; Courtney M. Bell; Amy Witherspoon; Danielle S. McNamara
Archive | 2007
Danielle S. McNamara; Yasuhiro Ozuru; Rachel Best; Tenaha O'Reilly
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society | 2004
Tenaha O'Reilly; Rachel Best; Danielle S. McNamara
Discourse Processes | 2010
Yasuhiro Ozuru; Stephen W. Briner; Rachel Best; Danielle S. McNamara