Introduction to Motivation and Emotion
... • D. Arousal within and among Individuals • Stimulation increases arousal. Individuals vary in degree of increase. ...
... • D. Arousal within and among Individuals • Stimulation increases arousal. Individuals vary in degree of increase. ...
Myers Module Twenty
... Extinction: the diminishing of a conditioned response. Occurs when an unconditioned stimulus does not follow a conditioned stimulus. See m p 281 Fig. 20.5, m271 f7.5: The rising curve shows that the CR rapidly grows stronger as the NS becomes a CS as it is repeatedly paired with the US (acquisition) ...
... Extinction: the diminishing of a conditioned response. Occurs when an unconditioned stimulus does not follow a conditioned stimulus. See m p 281 Fig. 20.5, m271 f7.5: The rising curve shows that the CR rapidly grows stronger as the NS becomes a CS as it is repeatedly paired with the US (acquisition) ...
LT2Ch7
... Conditioned stimuli always produce a response. Discriminative stimuli signal the opportunity to respond. ...
... Conditioned stimuli always produce a response. Discriminative stimuli signal the opportunity to respond. ...
LTNov12
... Conditioned stimuli always produce a response. Discriminative stimuli signal the opportunity to respond. ...
... Conditioned stimuli always produce a response. Discriminative stimuli signal the opportunity to respond. ...
Accession Number
... project or a new question to examine. Curiosity is a heightened state of interest resulting in exploration, and its importance in motivating scholarship cannot be ignored. Curiosity is also a critical component of creativity, and fostering curiosity and creativity in today's learners is a challenge ...
... project or a new question to examine. Curiosity is a heightened state of interest resulting in exploration, and its importance in motivating scholarship cannot be ignored. Curiosity is also a critical component of creativity, and fostering curiosity and creativity in today's learners is a challenge ...
Lecture-12
... transform the sentences in (17.1) into either of the two forms, as we now show. (Notice that we have standardized apart the variable names in these sentences.) T ...
... transform the sentences in (17.1) into either of the two forms, as we now show. (Notice that we have standardized apart the variable names in these sentences.) T ...
Curiosity
Curiosity (from Latin curiosus ""careful, diligent, curious,"" akin to cura ""care"") is a quality related to inquisitive thinking such as exploration, investigation, and learning, evident by observation in human and animal species. Curiosity is heavily associated with all aspects of human development, in which derives the process of learning and desire to acquire knowledge and skill.The term ""curiosity"" can also be used to denote the behavior or emotion of being curious, in regards to the desire to gain knowledge or information. Curiosity as a behavior and emotion is attributed over millennium as the driving force behind not only human development, but developments in science, language, and industry.