Monday, March 30, 2015



March 15 through July 12th @ The Detroit Institute of Arts
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo in DetroitNow



Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo were an explosive couple. He carried a pistol. She carried a flask. He romanticized Detroit. She rejected it. But what they shared was a belief in communism, a thirst for tequila and a passion for each other. Discover how they left their mark on Detroit.  

Reaction to the exhibit.
The DIA features the most famous work of Rivera—the mural of the River Rouge plant in the Great Hall.  This show shows all the sketches contributing to the development of this mural.  There are some short videos showing Rivera on scaffolds as he paints the mural in the DIA.  The exhibit also traces the relationship between Rivera and Kahlo often stormy and competitive.  The sketches remembering Kahlo’s miscarriage are very sad and the tragedy of her experience is there too.  If you are interested in these artists, don’t miss this exhibit. 

Monday, March 23, 2015

Stupid things that academics say

Reason for rejection
Reviewer summarizes:"The paper is premised on the observation that vegans are stigmatized, then goes on to say that to this point, no study of vegan stigma has been based on experimental manipulation of persuasive messages. This study aims to fill that gap."
Reviewer comments: I can see how that gap might loom large if the authors are vegan, but to the readers of CM it might seem a bit narrow, perhaps even superficial. People are stigmatized for being blond, for being bald, and for being from New York. But, none of these topics seem quite as important as the stigmatization that accompanies HIV, mental illness, or old age."

So------only vegans can write about vegan stigma which according to the reviewer is of no consequence and only people with HIV can write about HIV stigma if the logic holds.  HMMMM!

Looking for a picture of me eating a juicy cheeseburger!  Never mind, Wimpy will do!

Sunday, March 22, 2015

More Ndotto who is thriving!


   Little Ndotto and his best friend Lasayen who is also a baby from the nursery.

Lasayen's story
On the 25th of September a tiny calf was retrieved from a well on the Namunyak conservancy in Samburu by the community rangers. He had obviously fallen down this community dug well meant specifically for livestock but so often frequented by the thirsty elephant herds under the cover of darkness in the dry season months. Little elephant calves at this time become increasingly vulnerable and slip in. Because of the human presence the elephant herds disappear at daybreak to avoid human wildlife conflict and in this case are faced with the simply heartbreaking decision of walking away from their forsaken calf.

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

More on little Ndotto His name means to dream!




"We called the new arrival Ndotto, after the Ndoto Mountains, which in Swahili means to dream.  As a newborn Ndotto’s journey was challenging and fraught from the beginning, and it took three and a half months before he began to teeth confirming that he was certainly born premature by a couple of months.  It is for this reason that we have delayed placing Ndotto onto the fostering program, frightened to jinx the miracle.  He is through his teething with four molars out, remains tinier than any of the new born babies coming into our care despite being five months old now, yet he has a huge personality."

Welcome, Ndotto! Now Ndotto Bresnahan

This is Ndotto an orphaned elephant sponsored by the Bresnahan family through the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust. He was found last August at 2 days old wandering with a herd of goats and sheep--poor baby!  Become a sponsor through the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust adoption program.  With poaching and human interference, many elephant babies are abandoned.  The Trust does magnificent work and needs your help :)



Tuesday, March 10, 2015

guilt and smoking

Psychology, Health & Medicine
Publication details, including instructions for authors and
subscription information:
http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cphm20
Roles of guilt and culture in normative influence: testing moderated mediation in the anti-secondhand smoking
context
Hyegyu Leea & Hye-Jin Paek

This study simultaneously explored direct, indirect, and joint effects of types of
norm messages, guilt, and culture on smokers’ behavioral intentions in the antisecondhand
smoking context. An online study among 310 smoking students in an
individualistic (United States) and a collectivistic (Korea) country indicated that (1)
norm messages had no conditional indirect effects on behavioral intention, (2) guilt
arousal had a strong and direct impact on behavioral intention, and (3) guilt arousal
and its impact on behavioral intention were stronger among Korean smokers than
among US smokers.
Keywords: antismoking ad; culture; guilt; secondhand smoke; social norms

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Consider contributing to the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

https://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/asp/fostering.asp
Sponsor an orphaned baby elephant for $50 a year
This is Suswa.


Welcome Prabu David

Welcome to Prabu David, new Dean of the College of Communication Arts and Sciences at MSU!


Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Information Manipulation Theory 2

 

McCornack, S. A., Morrison, K., Paik, J. E., Wisner, A. M., & Zhu, X. (2014). Information Manipulation Theory 2 A Propositional Theory of Deceptive Discourse Production. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 33(4), 348-377.

Information Manipulation Theory 2

A Propositional Theory of Deceptive Discourse Production

  1. Steven A. McCornack1
  2. Kelly Morrison1
  3. Jihyun Esther Paik2
  4. Amy M. Wisner1
  5. Xun Zhu3
  1. 1Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA
  2. 2University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI, USA
  3. 3Pennsylvania State University, USA
  1. Steven A. McCornack, Department of Communication, Michigan State University, 467 CAS, 404 Wilson Road, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA. Email: mccornac@msu.edu

Abstract

Information Manipulation Theory 2 (IMT2) is a propositional theory of deceptive discourse production that conceptually frames deception as involving the covert manipulation of information along multiple dimensions and as a contextual problem-solving activity driven by the desire for quick, efficient, and viable communicative solutions. IMT2 is rooted in linguistics, cognitive neuroscience, speech production, and artificial intelligence. Synthesizing these literatures, IMT2 posits a central premise with regard to deceptive discourse production and 11 empirically testable (that is, falsifiable) propositions deriving from this premise. These propositions are grouped into three propositional sets: intentional states (IS), cognitive load (CL), and information manipulation (IM). The IS propositions pertain to the nature and temporal placement of deceptive volition, in relation to speech production. The CL propositions clarify the interrelationship between load, discourse, and context. The IM propositions identify the specific conditions under which various forms of information manipulation will (and will not) occur.

Remembering Joshua Fishman


 In 1978, I attended a Summer Sociolinguistics Institute at Champaign-Urbana and Professor Fishman was my teacher.

Joshua A. Fishman (1926-2015)

A beloved teacher and influential scholar, Joshua A. Fishman passed away peacefully in his Bronx home, on Monday evening, March 1, 2015.  He was 88 years old. Joshua A. Fishman leaves behind his devoted wife of over 60 years, Gella Schweid Fishman, three sons and daughters-in-law, nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. But he also leaves behind thousands of students throughout the world who have learned much from him about sociology of language, the field he founded, and also about the possibility of being a generous and committed scholar to language minority communities. As he once said, his life was his work and his work was his life.

Joshua A. Fishman, nicknamed Shikl, was born in Philadelphia PA on July 18, 1926. Yiddish was the language of his childhood home, and his father regularly asked his sister, Rukhl, and him: ?What did you do for Yiddish today?? The struggle for Yiddish in Jewish life was the impetus for his scholarly work. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania with a Masters degree in 1947, he collaborated with his good friend, Max Weinreich, the doyen of Yiddish linguistics, on a translation of Weinreich?s history of Yiddish. And it was through Yiddish that he came to another one of his interests ??that of bilingualism. In 1948 he received a prize from the YIVO Institute for Yiddish Research for a monograph on bilingualism. Yiddish and bilingualism were interests he developed throughout his scholarly life.

After earning a PhD in social psychology from Columbia University in 1953, Joshua Fishman worked as a researcher for the College Entrance Examination Board. This experience focused his interest on educational pursuits, which eventually led to another strand of his scholarly work ?? that on bilingual education. It was around this time that he taught what came to be the first sociology of language course at The City College of New York. In 1958, he was appointed associate professor of human relations and psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, and two years later, moved to Yeshiva University. At Yeshiva University he was professor of psychology and sociology, Dean of the Ferkauf Graduate School of Social Science and Humanities, Academic Vice President, and Distinguished University Research Professor of Social sciences. In 1988, he became Professor Emeritus and began to divide the year between New York and California where he became visiting professor of education and linguistics at Stanford University. In the course of his career, Fishman held visiting appointments at over a dozen universities in the USA, Israel, and the Philippines, and fellowships at the Center for Advanced study (Stanford), the East West Center (Hawai?i) the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study, and the Israel Institute for Advanced Study.