Type a term, then click a field below.

Search | advanced search

keepers


Type a term, then click a field below.

Search | simple search





1 subtopic

 

  • Magic

SuperstitionsFollow by RSS 

You've reached a pubget topic page. Below are the latest papers on this topic, with subtopics on the left.

keywords > Social Sciences > Anthropology > Anthropology, Cultural > Culture > Superstitions

Latest papers

[Attitudes of medieval doctors on birth].

Dreams of tigers and flowers: child gender predictions and preference in an urban mainland Chinese sample during pregnancy.

A midwife's guide to birth fairies.

Lacking control increases illusory pattern perception.

Near miss, gambler's fallacy and entrapment: their influence on lottery gamblers in Thailand.

Atheism could be science's contribution to religion.

A cross-cultural comparison of British and Pakistani medical students' understanding of schizophrenia.

Sleep deprivation reduces perceived emotional intelligence and constructive thinking skills.

[Schizophrenia and religiousness--a comparative study at the time of the two German states].

More than superstition: differential effects of featural heterogeneity and change on subitizing and counting.

Sidestepping superstitious learning, ambiguity, and other roadblocks: a feedback model of diagnostic problem solving.

Influence of emotional content and perceived relevance on spread of urban legends: a pilot study.

An ethical solution to the challenges in teaching anatomy with dissection in the Chinese culture.

Driving effective communication through anatomy.

The Tao of bao: a randomised controlled trial examining the effect of steamed bun consumption on night-call inpatient course and mortality.

Superstition but not distrust in the medical system predicts the use of complementary and alternative medicine in a group of patients with acute leukemia.

Premonitions.

Transplants, cellular memory, and reincarnation.

An unexplored domain of nonlocality: toward a scientific explanation of instrumental transcommunication.

Spontaneous Precognition: A Bibliographical Note

page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ...