Volume 1, Issue 4
4th Quarter, 2006


Strategies for Personality Transfer

William Sims Bainbridge

page 15 of 15

Additional References
Gemmell, Jim, Lyndsay Williams, Ken Wood, Gordon Bell, and Roger Lueder. 2004.  “Passive Capture and Ensuing Issues for a Personal Lifetime Store,” Proceedings of The First ACM Workshop on Continuous Archival and Retrieval of Personal Experiences (CARPE ‘04), Oct. 15, 2004, New York, pp. 48-55.

Glueck, Sheldon, and Eleanor Glueck. 1950.  Unraveling Juvenile Delinquency.  New York: Commonwealth Fund.

Goldberg, Lewis R. 1999. “A Broad-bandwidth, Public Domain, Personality Inventory Measuring the Lower-level Facets of Several Five-factor Models.” Pp. 7-28 in volume 7 of Personality Psychology in Europe, edited by I. Mervielde, I. Deary, F. De Fruyt, and F. Ostendorf. Tilburg, The Netherlands: Tilburg University Press.

Johnson, Peter C.  2003.  “Implication of the Continuum of Bioinformatics.” Pp. 207-213 in Converging Technologies for Improving Human Performance edited by Mihail C. Roco and William Sims Bainbridge. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer.

Prokosch, Mark D., Ronald A. Yeo, and Geoffrey F. Miller.  2005. “Intelligence tests with Higher g-Loadings Show Higher Correlations with Body Symmetry: Evidence for a General Fitness Factor Mediated by Developmental Stability,” Intelligence 33: 203–213.

Schank, Roger C.  1999.  Dynamic Memory Revisited.  Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

Sternberg, Saul. 1966.  “High-Speed Scanning in Human Memory,” Science, 153: 652-654.

 

Bainbridge PhotoWilliam Sims Bainbridge is an Adjunct Professor with the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at George Mason University. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard. He serves as the Program Director for Science and Engineering Informatics with the Division of Information and Intelligent Systems at the National Science Foundation.

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