Definition of "Grassroots Associations":
... socializing with each other, seeing and touching each other, and so on, a highly emotional process. In this they are both participants and observers, as exemplified by in-group hairstyles, bodily modifications, and items of apparel. This produces a sort of solidarity among members not unlike that fo ...
... socializing with each other, seeing and touching each other, and so on, a highly emotional process. In this they are both participants and observers, as exemplified by in-group hairstyles, bodily modifications, and items of apparel. This produces a sort of solidarity among members not unlike that fo ...
Chapter 9 Behaviorism: Antecedent Influences
... behavior – Associated reflexes • Reflexes that ca be elicited not only by unconditional stimuli but also by stimuli that have become associated with the unconditioned stimuli • This is actually Pavlov’s conditioned response but with a motor learning bent • Behkterev postulated that higher-level proc ...
... behavior – Associated reflexes • Reflexes that ca be elicited not only by unconditional stimuli but also by stimuli that have become associated with the unconditioned stimuli • This is actually Pavlov’s conditioned response but with a motor learning bent • Behkterev postulated that higher-level proc ...
Behavior Modification
... Development of Techniques which Control the Act of Eating To become more aware of the speed of their eating, patients were asked to count their bites and to put down their utensils ...
... Development of Techniques which Control the Act of Eating To become more aware of the speed of their eating, patients were asked to count their bites and to put down their utensils ...
WHY STUDY MOTIVATION
... Originally, motivation theorists studied physiological or internal reasons for motivation (hunger, thirst, desire, etc.). Later they emphasized how behavior could be externally motivated through the creation of needs created by an appealing or available goal. Later motivation theorists (associated w ...
... Originally, motivation theorists studied physiological or internal reasons for motivation (hunger, thirst, desire, etc.). Later they emphasized how behavior could be externally motivated through the creation of needs created by an appealing or available goal. Later motivation theorists (associated w ...
The Behavioral
... and enrolled at the University of Petersburg to study the natural sciences. He received his doctorate in 1879. In the 1890s, Pavlov was investigating the digestive process in dogs by externalizing a salivary gland so he could collect, measure, and analyze the saliva produced in response to food un ...
... and enrolled at the University of Petersburg to study the natural sciences. He received his doctorate in 1879. In the 1890s, Pavlov was investigating the digestive process in dogs by externalizing a salivary gland so he could collect, measure, and analyze the saliva produced in response to food un ...
Interpretivism in Aiding Our Understanding of the Contemporary
... the fact that, if there are (and there must be) hidden patters, underlying rule formations, which govern the observed parts of reality, and whose exploration can contribute to explaining these observed parts, then this should also be a legitimate area of social research. It is because of these limit ...
... the fact that, if there are (and there must be) hidden patters, underlying rule formations, which govern the observed parts of reality, and whose exploration can contribute to explaining these observed parts, then this should also be a legitimate area of social research. It is because of these limit ...
Personality traits
... Freud’s Psychosexual stages of development Freud believed that personality was fixed by about age 5. Freud believed adult’s psychological problems have their roots in early childhood and can be traced to unresolved conflicts then. When a conflict is not adequately resolved, an individual becomes fi ...
... Freud’s Psychosexual stages of development Freud believed that personality was fixed by about age 5. Freud believed adult’s psychological problems have their roots in early childhood and can be traced to unresolved conflicts then. When a conflict is not adequately resolved, an individual becomes fi ...
Key Learning Guide - City Vision University
... w. Examples are when people do not speak out on current issues because they think they have no influence or when Christians give up on the local church because it is “beyond help.” x. The model that explains how much of the behavior we exhibit has been learned or modified by watching models engage i ...
... w. Examples are when people do not speak out on current issues because they think they have no influence or when Christians give up on the local church because it is “beyond help.” x. The model that explains how much of the behavior we exhibit has been learned or modified by watching models engage i ...
Topic 1
... • His work centered on investigations of the sensory perceptions of the honey bee. • He was the first to discern and translate the meaning of the honeybee “waggle dance.” • His theory was disputed by other scientists and greeted with skepticism at the time. ...
... • His work centered on investigations of the sensory perceptions of the honey bee. • He was the first to discern and translate the meaning of the honeybee “waggle dance.” • His theory was disputed by other scientists and greeted with skepticism at the time. ...
Module 71 - Behavioral Therapy
... • Eventually bladder tension (CR) causes the child to awaken (CR). • It is effective in about 75 percent of school-age children who have difficulties with bedwetting. ...
... • Eventually bladder tension (CR) causes the child to awaken (CR). • It is effective in about 75 percent of school-age children who have difficulties with bedwetting. ...
defense Mechanisms in Psychology
... and the morals of the superego, seeking compromises to pacify both. • Superego: The superego contains ...
... and the morals of the superego, seeking compromises to pacify both. • Superego: The superego contains ...
Key Learning Guide - City Vision University
... w. Examples are when people do not speak out on current issues because they think they have no influence or when Christians give up on the local church because it is “beyond help.” x. The model that explains how much of the behavior we exhibit has been learned or modified by watching models engage i ...
... w. Examples are when people do not speak out on current issues because they think they have no influence or when Christians give up on the local church because it is “beyond help.” x. The model that explains how much of the behavior we exhibit has been learned or modified by watching models engage i ...
John B. Watson
... phenomena of behavior are ever to be brought within the sphere of scientific control. 4. By eliminating states of consciousness as proper objects of investigation, Watson sought to remove the barrier of subjectivity from psychology which exists between it and the other sciences. The findings of psyc ...
... phenomena of behavior are ever to be brought within the sphere of scientific control. 4. By eliminating states of consciousness as proper objects of investigation, Watson sought to remove the barrier of subjectivity from psychology which exists between it and the other sciences. The findings of psyc ...
Punctuation Power - Centre for Writers
... Big four comma rules: 1. Insert a comma between an introductory element and the rest of the sentence. An introductory element can be a single word, a phrase, or an entire clause. ...
... Big four comma rules: 1. Insert a comma between an introductory element and the rest of the sentence. An introductory element can be a single word, a phrase, or an entire clause. ...
Negative Affect and Emotional Trade-off Difficulty
... emotion activates a predisposition to appraise future events in line with the central appraisal dimension that triggers the emotion’. For example, they find that fearful people make pessimistic risk assessments and future events judgments whereas angry people make optimistic assessments in the same ...
... emotion activates a predisposition to appraise future events in line with the central appraisal dimension that triggers the emotion’. For example, they find that fearful people make pessimistic risk assessments and future events judgments whereas angry people make optimistic assessments in the same ...
What is the Eros Effect?
... established reasoning, episodes of collective behavior--crowds, fashions, panics, crazes, and riots--were fundamentally spontaneous and emotional phenomena; at a minimum, they were certainly non-rational forms of actions which were to be understood in contrast to normal institutional behavior (Smel ...
... established reasoning, episodes of collective behavior--crowds, fashions, panics, crazes, and riots--were fundamentally spontaneous and emotional phenomena; at a minimum, they were certainly non-rational forms of actions which were to be understood in contrast to normal institutional behavior (Smel ...
“Two decades discourse about globalizing social sciences
... As much as it is the case, that the world beyond the secluded nation social entities has gained the attention of social science theorizing, there is also no doubt, that the main body of these globalized theories consist of comparing phenomena, which are inter-nationally defined topics, but which sti ...
... As much as it is the case, that the world beyond the secluded nation social entities has gained the attention of social science theorizing, there is also no doubt, that the main body of these globalized theories consist of comparing phenomena, which are inter-nationally defined topics, but which sti ...
“Two decades discourse about globalizing social sciences
... As much as it is the case, that the world beyond the secluded nation social entities has gained the attention of social science theorizing, there is also no doubt, that the main body of these globalized theories consist of comparing phenomena, which are inter-nationally defined topics, but which sti ...
... As much as it is the case, that the world beyond the secluded nation social entities has gained the attention of social science theorizing, there is also no doubt, that the main body of these globalized theories consist of comparing phenomena, which are inter-nationally defined topics, but which sti ...
What develops
... motivation to reach more advanced levels of maturity; people naturally seek to reach full potential How development proceeds: Free of supernaturalism, approach recognizes human beings as a part of nature and holds that values (religious, ethical, social, or political) have their source in human expe ...
... motivation to reach more advanced levels of maturity; people naturally seek to reach full potential How development proceeds: Free of supernaturalism, approach recognizes human beings as a part of nature and holds that values (religious, ethical, social, or political) have their source in human expe ...
department of sociology
... methodology. Yet, if one can attend to the technical issues without becoming lost in the wizardry, one can find at the center a substantive debate with potentially large implications for our understanding of inequality and power in society. And what could be more important for our time? Why is it th ...
... methodology. Yet, if one can attend to the technical issues without becoming lost in the wizardry, one can find at the center a substantive debate with potentially large implications for our understanding of inequality and power in society. And what could be more important for our time? Why is it th ...
Places of Encounters / Prostori soočenja
... established views on this topic. In showing how individuals' and local groups' experiences of community, of seasons, rituals, and of wider influences linked up with their temporal life experiences, Borut Brumen demonstrated how smaller and larger systemic analyses can be integrated with an understan ...
... established views on this topic. In showing how individuals' and local groups' experiences of community, of seasons, rituals, and of wider influences linked up with their temporal life experiences, Borut Brumen demonstrated how smaller and larger systemic analyses can be integrated with an understan ...
chapter 1: sociological perspectives and sociological
... 4. List 4 or 5 topics or social problems that sociologists examine (may be major earth shattering events or simply everyday life occurrences). 5. Explain what Peter Burger means by “sociology is a debunking science” and tie this to “discovering inconvenient facts.” 6. Define the following sociologic ...
... 4. List 4 or 5 topics or social problems that sociologists examine (may be major earth shattering events or simply everyday life occurrences). 5. Explain what Peter Burger means by “sociology is a debunking science” and tie this to “discovering inconvenient facts.” 6. Define the following sociologic ...
Cultural Diversity - School District #83
... are comparing groups defined socially, not biologically. Moreover, in nearly every trait studied, from blood proteins to intelligence test scores, individual differences within racial groups greatly exceed the small differences between groups. Different “racial groups are much more alike than they a ...
... are comparing groups defined socially, not biologically. Moreover, in nearly every trait studied, from blood proteins to intelligence test scores, individual differences within racial groups greatly exceed the small differences between groups. Different “racial groups are much more alike than they a ...
Lecture 14 - jan.ucc.nau.edu
... 1. Habit strengths could form in a single trial, but were strengthened through repetition and reinforcement Complex behaviors : different stimuli may become associated with other stimuli and with more than one response ...
... 1. Habit strengths could form in a single trial, but were strengthened through repetition and reinforcement Complex behaviors : different stimuli may become associated with other stimuli and with more than one response ...