This article considers the application of the Attitude framework (Martin & White 2005) to study the evaluation of human behaviour. The distinction between inscribed (explicit) and invoked (indirect) attitude is re-examined and systematised to better operationalise the analysis of the evaluation of behaviour. General linguistic evaluation triggers are identified for inscribed and invoked evaluations, and the annotation scheme is applied in a corpus of texts from different registers (a psychiatric manual, educational guidelines and informal online exchanges) concerned with ADHD. Indirect evaluations of behaviour are described as attitudinal inferences derived from (i) the behaviours of the individuals, (ii) the behavioural outcomes, (iii) the...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
A need for measurement exists not only in academic events but also in the affective domain. The auth...
Attitudes-cognitive representations of our evaluation of ourselves, other people, things, actions, e...
This article considers the application of the Attitude framework (Martin & White 2005) to study the ...
In this article, we address how attitudes are acquired. We present evaluative conditioning (EC) as a...
Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective knowle...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Interpersonal or evaluative meaning has been described in systemic functional linguistics with the h...
Historical developments regarding the attitude concept are reviewed, and set the stage for considera...
This article proposes a model describing the nature of associative processes as diagnostic cues for ...
Attitude is certainly the most typical and essential concept all over the world. There are number of...
Abstract It is well-known to researchers on opinions, attitudes and corresponding behaviour that the...
Past literature has identified several putative precursors of use, as well as alternative forms of u...
Distinct automatic and controlled processes are presumed to influence social evaluation. Most empiri...
The ability to produce meaningful evaluations of the external world (i.e., attitudes) is critical fo...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
A need for measurement exists not only in academic events but also in the affective domain. The auth...
Attitudes-cognitive representations of our evaluation of ourselves, other people, things, actions, e...
This article considers the application of the Attitude framework (Martin & White 2005) to study the ...
In this article, we address how attitudes are acquired. We present evaluative conditioning (EC) as a...
Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective knowle...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Interpersonal or evaluative meaning has been described in systemic functional linguistics with the h...
Historical developments regarding the attitude concept are reviewed, and set the stage for considera...
This article proposes a model describing the nature of associative processes as diagnostic cues for ...
Attitude is certainly the most typical and essential concept all over the world. There are number of...
Abstract It is well-known to researchers on opinions, attitudes and corresponding behaviour that the...
Past literature has identified several putative precursors of use, as well as alternative forms of u...
Distinct automatic and controlled processes are presumed to influence social evaluation. Most empiri...
The ability to produce meaningful evaluations of the external world (i.e., attitudes) is critical fo...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
A need for measurement exists not only in academic events but also in the affective domain. The auth...
Attitudes-cognitive representations of our evaluation of ourselves, other people, things, actions, e...