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Australian State/Territory : QLD
Research Topic : decison-making
Field of Research : Psychology
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Decision Making (4)
Psychology (4)
Industrial and Organisational Psychology (2)
Developmental Psychology and Ageing (1)
Neurocognitive Patterns and Neural Networks (1)
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  • Researchers (11)
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  • Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE160101137

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $373,536.00
    Summary
    The whole is greater than its parts: Improving rail safety through teamwork. This project seeks to develop a train driving risk model that includes human factors, to enable rail organisations to better identify and mitigate safety risks. Train driving is a cognitively demanding task in which errors can quickly lead to catastrophic consequences. Signals passed at danger (SPADs) occur when a train goes past a red light. Despite significant investment in better signalling and communications infrast .... The whole is greater than its parts: Improving rail safety through teamwork. This project seeks to develop a train driving risk model that includes human factors, to enable rail organisations to better identify and mitigate safety risks. Train driving is a cognitively demanding task in which errors can quickly lead to catastrophic consequences. Signals passed at danger (SPADs) occur when a train goes past a red light. Despite significant investment in better signalling and communications infrastructure, SPAD rates remain unacceptably high and are projected to rise. SPAD risk is currently managed with a retrospective approach that fails to consider non-technical human factors such as time pressure, workload and team communications. By including non-technical dimensions, this project seeks to develop a comprehensive model to explain and prevent SPADs.
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    Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP210101572

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $273,850.00
    Summary
    Gaining control of the future: The cognitive development of foresight. Because humans can anticipate their limitations, they can act in the present to shape their future for the better. This project aims to chart four key developmental processes by which children gain this control over their future outcomes. It will use novel experimental paradigms to map children’s growing ability to compensate for their limits with strategic planning, and to improve their future capacities by acquiring new kno .... Gaining control of the future: The cognitive development of foresight. Because humans can anticipate their limitations, they can act in the present to shape their future for the better. This project aims to chart four key developmental processes by which children gain this control over their future outcomes. It will use novel experimental paradigms to map children’s growing ability to compensate for their limits with strategic planning, and to improve their future capacities by acquiring new knowledge and innovating technical solutions. The cognitive underpinnings of these critical behaviours are still poorly understood. This project will therefore provide the essential empirical foundation for fostering the development of wiser, more skilled, and more innovative young people.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE180101340

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $362,103.00
    Summary
    A new state of the art for understanding dynamic self-regulation. This project aims to develop and test a novel mathematical model that explains how people manage competing demands on their time and effort in a dynamic and uncertain environment. The project will use an integrative approach, bringing recent advances in mathematical psychology to bear on a problem of widespread interest within industrial and organisational psychology. The expected outcome is a quantitative theory that achieves a l .... A new state of the art for understanding dynamic self-regulation. This project aims to develop and test a novel mathematical model that explains how people manage competing demands on their time and effort in a dynamic and uncertain environment. The project will use an integrative approach, bringing recent advances in mathematical psychology to bear on a problem of widespread interest within industrial and organisational psychology. The expected outcome is a quantitative theory that achieves a level of precision, generality, and testability that is unmatched in the field. The project will provide the basic research that is needed to extend mathematical models of self-regulation to complex tasks involving rapid decision making.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP130103277

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $95,834.00
    Summary
    Advancing the science of willpower: investigating the mechanisms and processes of self-control. Willpower or 'good' self control is important for success in our academic, occupational, and social lives. This project will use cutting-edge scientific methods to investigate how glucose, the primary fuel for body function, promotes 'good' self-control and stimulates regions in the brain important for self-control.
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    Showing 1-4 of 4 Funded Activites

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