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  2. Steiner's Taxonomy of Tasks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steiner's_Taxonomy_of_Tasks

    Conjunctive tasks are tasks requiring all group members to contribute to complete the product. [1] In this type of task the group's performance is determined by the most inferior or weakest group member. [2] Examples provided in Forysth's summary of Steiner's work include climbing a mountain and eating a meal as a group. [2]

  3. Conjunctive tasks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conjunctive_tasks

    Conjunctive tasks are tasks where all group members must contribute to the end product in order for it to be completed. [3] On most tasks, a group's performance is the result of a combination of everyone's effort; however, with conjunctive tasks, the group's overall performance depends on the most inferior group member (IGM).

  4. Visual search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_search

    feature based search task. Feature search (also known as "disjunctive" or "efficient" search) [6] is a visual search process that focuses on identifying a previously requested target amongst distractors that differ from the target by a unique visual feature such as color, shape, orientation, or size. [7]

  5. Disjunctive cognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disjunctive_cognition

    Disjunctive cognition is a common phenomenon in dreams, first identified by psychoanalyst Mark Blechner, [1] in which two aspects of cognition do not match each other. The dreamer is aware of the disjunction, yet that does not prevent it from remaining.

  6. Group dynamics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_dynamics

    The history of group dynamics (or group processes) [2] has a consistent, underlying premise: "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts." A social group is an entity that has qualities which cannot be understood just by studying the individuals that make up the group.

  7. Consideration set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consideration_set

    Disjunctive Rule: Similar to the conjunctive rule, consumers may determine a cut-off point for each salient attribute of the products in the consideration set. Then, conversely, the first brand which meets the cut-off point for only one attribute is selected.

  8. Split attraction model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split_attraction_model

    Among his works, he described people who are "konjunktiver Uranodioning" and "disjunktiver Uranodioning" or conjunctive bisexuality and disjunctive bisexuality. The former is described as having tender and passionate feelings for both men and women, which would be a biromantic bisexual in modern times.

  9. Syllogism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syllogism

    In the 19th century, modifications to syllogism were incorporated to deal with disjunctive ("A or B") and conditional ("if A then B") statements. Immanuel Kant famously claimed, in Logic (1800), that logic was the one completed science, and that Aristotelian logic more or less included everything about logic that there was to know. (This work ...