Functional Measurement in the Field of Empirical Bioethics
We present, in a synthetic way, some of the main findings from five studies that were conducted in the field of empirical bioethics, using the Functional Measurement framework. These studies were about (a) the rationing of rare treatments, (b) adolescents’ abortions, (c) end-oflife decision-making regarding damaged neonates, (d) end-of-life decision making regarding terminally-ill patients, and (e) sexuality among persons with learning disabilities. The paper also discusses what these findings tell [...]
Beyond imagination: Perspective change problems revisited
Traditional models of perspective change problems (i.e., judgment of egocentric target [...]
Remembered landmarks enhance the precision of path integration
When navigating by path integration, knowledge of one’s position becomes increasingly [...]
Preface
The idea for the edition of a special volume dedicated [...]
Structural Equation Modelling of Multiple Facet Data: Extending Models for Multitrait-Multimethod Data
This paper is about the structural equation modelling of quantitative [...]
