Tough times, meaningful music, mature performers: popular
... and mature facial features. When socioeconomic conditions are threatening, individuals should become aware of a heightened need for security and should then be motivated to select others whose mature features convey an ability to satisfy those needs. Threatening situations, such as war and terrorism ...
... and mature facial features. When socioeconomic conditions are threatening, individuals should become aware of a heightened need for security and should then be motivated to select others whose mature features convey an ability to satisfy those needs. Threatening situations, such as war and terrorism ...
Swarm Intelligence: Humans — Actual, Imagined and Implied
... Upon evolution, individual’s adaptations - and their subsequent probability of survival and reproduction – depended jointly on their individual experience and on what they learned from society. Further tendency to learn more in one way or the other was also genetically evolved. ...
... Upon evolution, individual’s adaptations - and their subsequent probability of survival and reproduction – depended jointly on their individual experience and on what they learned from society. Further tendency to learn more in one way or the other was also genetically evolved. ...
WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY?
... _____ 4. A research method in which psychologists collect data by asking questions of people in a particular group _____ 5. A statement that attempts to explain why things are the way they are and happen the way they do _____ 6. Type of psychologists who focus on helping people with psychological di ...
... _____ 4. A research method in which psychologists collect data by asking questions of people in a particular group _____ 5. A statement that attempts to explain why things are the way they are and happen the way they do _____ 6. Type of psychologists who focus on helping people with psychological di ...
Advanced Placement Psychology
... Homework: Homework is assigned nightly in the form of reading assignments, note taking, short answers and various worksheets which will be reviewed at the beginning of each class. Additional assignments and activities will be made as required. Assignments will be passed in at the beginning of class ...
... Homework: Homework is assigned nightly in the form of reading assignments, note taking, short answers and various worksheets which will be reviewed at the beginning of each class. Additional assignments and activities will be made as required. Assignments will be passed in at the beginning of class ...
Course Description: Advanced Placement Psychology Honors
... Homework: Homework is assigned nightly in the form of reading assignments, note taking, short answers and various worksheets which will be reviewed at the beginning of each class. Additional assignments and activities will be made as required. Assignments will be passed in at the beginning of class ...
... Homework: Homework is assigned nightly in the form of reading assignments, note taking, short answers and various worksheets which will be reviewed at the beginning of each class. Additional assignments and activities will be made as required. Assignments will be passed in at the beginning of class ...
Ritzer, Introduction to Sociology, Second Edition Instructor
... geographic location to another, one culture to another, and from one group to another. As a culture’s norms and laws shift, so too often does its definition of deviance. f. Global Flows and Deviance: Deviance can be seen as a global flow – both people and definitions of deviance flow easily from soc ...
... geographic location to another, one culture to another, and from one group to another. As a culture’s norms and laws shift, so too often does its definition of deviance. f. Global Flows and Deviance: Deviance can be seen as a global flow – both people and definitions of deviance flow easily from soc ...
1 An Introduction to Sociology
... examine what influences behavior, attitudes, and culture. By applying systematic and scientific methods to this process, they try to do so without letting their own biases and pre-conceived ideas influence their conclusions. Studying Patterns: How Sociologists View Society All sociologists are inter ...
... examine what influences behavior, attitudes, and culture. By applying systematic and scientific methods to this process, they try to do so without letting their own biases and pre-conceived ideas influence their conclusions. Studying Patterns: How Sociologists View Society All sociologists are inter ...
Understanding Social Capital
... association with immediate family members, friends and neighbours. Contrary to this, bridging social capital implies those social ties in which people are associated with different socio-economic positions like ties with more distant colleagues and associates. These two concepts are considered to il ...
... association with immediate family members, friends and neighbours. Contrary to this, bridging social capital implies those social ties in which people are associated with different socio-economic positions like ties with more distant colleagues and associates. These two concepts are considered to il ...
Empowering the Shamed Self: Recognition and Critical
... Critical social work has a vital role to play here in addressing how emancipatory action might be curtailed by this psychological reaction. For example, The Disability Rights movement in the UK has not only re-defined our understanding of what types of services should be provided but also who shoul ...
... Critical social work has a vital role to play here in addressing how emancipatory action might be curtailed by this psychological reaction. For example, The Disability Rights movement in the UK has not only re-defined our understanding of what types of services should be provided but also who shoul ...
Intro to Clinical Psychology
... “ Integrates science, theory and practice to understand, predict, and alleviate maladjustment, disability and discomfort as well as to promote human adaptation, adjustment, and personal development. Clinical psychology focuses on the intellectual, emotional, biological, social and behavioral aspects ...
... “ Integrates science, theory and practice to understand, predict, and alleviate maladjustment, disability and discomfort as well as to promote human adaptation, adjustment, and personal development. Clinical psychology focuses on the intellectual, emotional, biological, social and behavioral aspects ...
Forensic Social Case Work: An Analytical Survey
... "being regular", being easy marks", etc. Administrative policies and supervisory coordination can, of course, help to reduce these variations, but cannot eliminate them. Carl Rogers' non-directive counseling approach' ° is in many respects similar to the approach of relationship therapy, and Rogers ...
... "being regular", being easy marks", etc. Administrative policies and supervisory coordination can, of course, help to reduce these variations, but cannot eliminate them. Carl Rogers' non-directive counseling approach' ° is in many respects similar to the approach of relationship therapy, and Rogers ...
THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF INDUSTRIAL NETWORKS
... Post-industrial conditions affecting contemporary interorganizational marketing could be related to such developments as increasing interorganizational resource dependence, fragmentation of larger industrial networks into smaller cooperative nets characterized by efficient interaction and the comple ...
... Post-industrial conditions affecting contemporary interorganizational marketing could be related to such developments as increasing interorganizational resource dependence, fragmentation of larger industrial networks into smaller cooperative nets characterized by efficient interaction and the comple ...
Behaviorism
... the bond. Thorndike’s analysis of this behavior was that the behavior that produced the desired effect became dominate and therefore, occurred faster in the next experiments. He argued that more complicated behavior was influenced by anticipated results, not by a triggering stimulus as Pavlov had su ...
... the bond. Thorndike’s analysis of this behavior was that the behavior that produced the desired effect became dominate and therefore, occurred faster in the next experiments. He argued that more complicated behavior was influenced by anticipated results, not by a triggering stimulus as Pavlov had su ...
Causal Mechanisms in Comparative Historical Sociology
... mechanisms … as rational-choice accounts of how a specified combination of preferences and constraints can give rise to more complex social outcomes” (Cowen 1998 : 125). The account offered in this article is not limited to rational choice mechanisms, however. ...
... mechanisms … as rational-choice accounts of how a specified combination of preferences and constraints can give rise to more complex social outcomes” (Cowen 1998 : 125). The account offered in this article is not limited to rational choice mechanisms, however. ...
Ruling out latent homophily in social networks
... Whereas, homophily posits that individuals form connections in the network precisely because they are already similar. Distinguishing true sources of influence is very important in situations where we might like to affect the influencer to promote a desired change as in, e.g., social policy or viral ...
... Whereas, homophily posits that individuals form connections in the network precisely because they are already similar. Distinguishing true sources of influence is very important in situations where we might like to affect the influencer to promote a desired change as in, e.g., social policy or viral ...
myth of us
... ultimately government (which needs large media to provide the means for assuming that it can still talk to its population) and advertisers, or least those advertisers still interested in buying access to whole populations or segments of them. The ‘myth of us’ has, as its domain, our activities of so ...
... ultimately government (which needs large media to provide the means for assuming that it can still talk to its population) and advertisers, or least those advertisers still interested in buying access to whole populations or segments of them. The ‘myth of us’ has, as its domain, our activities of so ...
Welcome to Psychology, The First Assessment
... experiments have proven successful on animals does – but humans are much more complex so we need to take care when generalising results across species suggesting what is true of animals may also apply to humans). However, it is highly testable & has given rise to many successful applications, e.g. t ...
... experiments have proven successful on animals does – but humans are much more complex so we need to take care when generalising results across species suggesting what is true of animals may also apply to humans). However, it is highly testable & has given rise to many successful applications, e.g. t ...
Knowing your publics: the use of social media analytics in local
... circulate in the local public sphere, identifying key influencers who are well connected in social media and web networks. ...
... circulate in the local public sphere, identifying key influencers who are well connected in social media and web networks. ...
The History of Behaviorism designed by: Dylan Osborne
... a communal nursery, and grow and build much of what they need. The standard workday lasts only four hours, or less; no one is paid wages-but nothing at Walden Two costs money (SparkNotes Editors, n.d.). How does Walden Two achieve this utopia? Through a science of behavior. Everything that is done a ...
... a communal nursery, and grow and build much of what they need. The standard workday lasts only four hours, or less; no one is paid wages-but nothing at Walden Two costs money (SparkNotes Editors, n.d.). How does Walden Two achieve this utopia? Through a science of behavior. Everything that is done a ...
jolene sy cv - UMBC Psychology
... Principles in Laboratory and Clinical Contexts. Paper presented at the 37th annual meeting of the Association for Behavior Analysis - International, Denver, CO. Sy, J. R., Donaldson, J. M., & Vollmer, T. R. (2011). An evaluation of the factors that influence instruction-following behavior. In Paige ...
... Principles in Laboratory and Clinical Contexts. Paper presented at the 37th annual meeting of the Association for Behavior Analysis - International, Denver, CO. Sy, J. R., Donaldson, J. M., & Vollmer, T. R. (2011). An evaluation of the factors that influence instruction-following behavior. In Paige ...
Theories and methods in comparative social policy
... rates for different countries and to compare the role of the primary income distribution, cash benefits and income taxes in generating (and ameliorating) poverty. Mitchell (1991) used LIS to evaluate the `targeting efficiency' and `poverty reduction efficiency' of ten countries' social security syst ...
... rates for different countries and to compare the role of the primary income distribution, cash benefits and income taxes in generating (and ameliorating) poverty. Mitchell (1991) used LIS to evaluate the `targeting efficiency' and `poverty reduction efficiency' of ten countries' social security syst ...
Values Versus Interests in the Explanation of Social Conflict
... notebook and systematically committed them to memory, perhaps because he found it easier to fit in by being funny.2" For much of his adult life, the training he undertook to improve his social skills served him adequately. He never came close to being comfortable with the glad-handing that politicia ...
... notebook and systematically committed them to memory, perhaps because he found it easier to fit in by being funny.2" For much of his adult life, the training he undertook to improve his social skills served him adequately. He never came close to being comfortable with the glad-handing that politicia ...
Section: Setting the Stage: Past and Future
... In 1961, Rose and Peterson's book, Older People and Their Social World, the result of conferences of the Midwest Sociological Society, was published. This was only the beginning. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, three more important books had been published on aging: Aging and Society: An Inventor ...
... In 1961, Rose and Peterson's book, Older People and Their Social World, the result of conferences of the Midwest Sociological Society, was published. This was only the beginning. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, three more important books had been published on aging: Aging and Society: An Inventor ...
Americans with Disabilities Act Policy
... asks him to do simple chores like making his bed and picking up his clothes. She has found that if she rewards him after completing the task, he is more likely to comply the next time she asks. a. What do you see as positive or negative about this type of reinforcement? b. What will you do different ...
... asks him to do simple chores like making his bed and picking up his clothes. She has found that if she rewards him after completing the task, he is more likely to comply the next time she asks. a. What do you see as positive or negative about this type of reinforcement? b. What will you do different ...