Redalyc.CONTEXT CHANGE EXPLAINS RESURGENCE AFTER
... Basic Features of Resurgence Although they did not call it resurgence, Leitenberg and colleagues published one of the earliest demonstrations of the phenomenon in 1970 (Leitenberg et al., 1970). They found that extinction of an operant response decreased at a greater rate when an alternative one was ...
... Basic Features of Resurgence Although they did not call it resurgence, Leitenberg and colleagues published one of the earliest demonstrations of the phenomenon in 1970 (Leitenberg et al., 1970). They found that extinction of an operant response decreased at a greater rate when an alternative one was ...
Customer Value, Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions
... (1991) found that service buyers have greater confidence in personal sources of information as well as a greater pre-purchase preference for personal information sources. In addition, Ennew et al. (2000) suggest that WoM may also be one of the most powerful forms of communication within financial se ...
... (1991) found that service buyers have greater confidence in personal sources of information as well as a greater pre-purchase preference for personal information sources. In addition, Ennew et al. (2000) suggest that WoM may also be one of the most powerful forms of communication within financial se ...
learning - Science of Psychology Home
... HOW DO PSYCHOLOGISTS DEFINE LEARNING? The principle of learning can help explain much of our everyday behavior. We are born knowing how to perform some behaviors, such as breathing, sneezing, and coughing. Learning can modify even these biologically programmed responses, however. People can learn, f ...
... HOW DO PSYCHOLOGISTS DEFINE LEARNING? The principle of learning can help explain much of our everyday behavior. We are born knowing how to perform some behaviors, such as breathing, sneezing, and coughing. Learning can modify even these biologically programmed responses, however. People can learn, f ...
Thesis
... Despite some evidence of cumulative change in the previous periods, the changes in the Early Dabban signify a much larger and important shift: the different aspects of tool production become integrated and organised. This indicates extensive changes in human behaviour and capabilities. Based on evid ...
... Despite some evidence of cumulative change in the previous periods, the changes in the Early Dabban signify a much larger and important shift: the different aspects of tool production become integrated and organised. This indicates extensive changes in human behaviour and capabilities. Based on evid ...
Optimisation of cognitive performance in rodent operant
... milkshake and super saccharin-reinforced animals were compared on a touchscreen visual discrimination task. Animals reinforced by strawberry milkshake were significantly faster to acquire the discrimination than animals reinforced by super saccharin. Taken together, these results suggest that strawb ...
... milkshake and super saccharin-reinforced animals were compared on a touchscreen visual discrimination task. Animals reinforced by strawberry milkshake were significantly faster to acquire the discrimination than animals reinforced by super saccharin. Taken together, these results suggest that strawb ...
Optimisation of cognitive performance in rodent operant
... milkshake and super saccharin-reinforced animals were compared on a touchscreen visual discrimination task. Animals reinforced by strawberry milkshake were significantly faster to acquire the discrimination than animals reinforced by super saccharin. Taken together, these results suggest that strawb ...
... milkshake and super saccharin-reinforced animals were compared on a touchscreen visual discrimination task. Animals reinforced by strawberry milkshake were significantly faster to acquire the discrimination than animals reinforced by super saccharin. Taken together, these results suggest that strawb ...
Preview Chapter 5 - Macmillan Learning
... Learning can occur in predictable or unexpected ways. It allows us to grow and change, and it is a key to achieving goals. Now let’s see how learning has shaped the lives of Ivonne Mosquera-Schmidt and Jeremy Lin. ...
... Learning can occur in predictable or unexpected ways. It allows us to grow and change, and it is a key to achieving goals. Now let’s see how learning has shaped the lives of Ivonne Mosquera-Schmidt and Jeremy Lin. ...
SOMETHING ELSE Forthcoming in Common Knowledge, Vol. 13
... and personality as a “static gloomy icon,” who had wasted his time pondering “the links between writing and behavior”; as a writer who insisted that “belligerent if elegant imprecision . . . was the most one could expect from the intellectual life earnestly lived”; and as the enforcer of “a conventi ...
... and personality as a “static gloomy icon,” who had wasted his time pondering “the links between writing and behavior”; as a writer who insisted that “belligerent if elegant imprecision . . . was the most one could expect from the intellectual life earnestly lived”; and as the enforcer of “a conventi ...
PRAGMATIC ANTHROPOLOGY
... shock, are an extreme and passing form of weak or frail will, where one is simply overcome by feeling and engages in no reflection at all. Fortunately, affects are passing, and one afflicted by affect can, during cool, calm hours, take steps to prevent further outbursts. Passions, such as vengeful h ...
... shock, are an extreme and passing form of weak or frail will, where one is simply overcome by feeling and engages in no reflection at all. Fortunately, affects are passing, and one afflicted by affect can, during cool, calm hours, take steps to prevent further outbursts. Passions, such as vengeful h ...
Notes on the Ontology of Design
... In 1971, as industrialism and US cultural, military and economic hegemony were coming to their peak, Victor Papanek opened Design for the Real World with the following caustic indictment of the field: “There are professions more harmful than industrial design, but only a very few of them. … Today, i ...
... In 1971, as industrialism and US cultural, military and economic hegemony were coming to their peak, Victor Papanek opened Design for the Real World with the following caustic indictment of the field: “There are professions more harmful than industrial design, but only a very few of them. … Today, i ...
A Hierarchical Instrumental Decision Theory of Nicotine Dependence
... function underpinning tobacco-seeking and self-administration across the extent of a drug user’s drug-taking history. The core proposition is that individuals come in contact with the instrumental contingency between the tobacco-seeking response and the nicotine outcome, and hence propositional exp ...
... function underpinning tobacco-seeking and self-administration across the extent of a drug user’s drug-taking history. The core proposition is that individuals come in contact with the instrumental contingency between the tobacco-seeking response and the nicotine outcome, and hence propositional exp ...
Aalborg Universitet From Modern Utopia to Liquid Modern Anti-Utopia? Jacobsen, Michael Hviid
... Eastern Europe but prior to this he was, according to his wife’s personal memoirs, actually a devoted and loyal member of the Communist Party (J. Bauman, 45). A change occurred in the mid1950s as a result of personal persecution due to his Jewish background and due to accusations of subservient and ...
... Eastern Europe but prior to this he was, according to his wife’s personal memoirs, actually a devoted and loyal member of the Communist Party (J. Bauman, 45). A change occurred in the mid1950s as a result of personal persecution due to his Jewish background and due to accusations of subservient and ...
Instinct in the `50s: The British Reception of Konrad - Philsci
... “Such innate, species-specific motor patterns represent characters that must have behaved like morphological characters in the course of evolution. Indeed, they must have behaved like particularly conservative characters.” (Lorenz 1996, 237, his ...
... “Such innate, species-specific motor patterns represent characters that must have behaved like morphological characters in the course of evolution. Indeed, they must have behaved like particularly conservative characters.” (Lorenz 1996, 237, his ...
DogNostics Definitive Dictionary
... What behavior consultants do by asking clients to gather data both before and after a given intervention/s to ensure that the plan is effective or needs adjusting? This data must be collected by the client so as to prevent a consultant from accidentally biasing results. Acquisition The first phase o ...
... What behavior consultants do by asking clients to gather data both before and after a given intervention/s to ensure that the plan is effective or needs adjusting? This data must be collected by the client so as to prevent a consultant from accidentally biasing results. Acquisition The first phase o ...
Learning and Conditioning Tutorials
... lecture) is probably your foremost image when you think about learning. However, by the time you finish studying this chapter, you should easily associate all of the above examples with some type of learning. The chapter first considers the formal definition of learning used by most psychologists wh ...
... lecture) is probably your foremost image when you think about learning. However, by the time you finish studying this chapter, you should easily associate all of the above examples with some type of learning. The chapter first considers the formal definition of learning used by most psychologists wh ...
Behavioral modernity
Behavioral modernity is a suite of behavioral and cognitive traits that distinguishes current Homo sapiens from anatomically modern humans, hominins, and other primates. Although often debated, most scholars agree that modern human behavior can be characterized by abstract thinking, planning depth, symbolic behavior (e.g. art, ornamentation, music), exploitation of large game, blade technology, among others. Underlying these behaviors and technological innovations are cognitive and cultural foundations that have been documented experimentally and ethnographically. Some of these human universal patterns are cumulative cultural adaptation, social norms, language, cooperative breeding, and extensive help and cooperation beyond close kin. These traits have been viewed as largely responsible for the human replacement of Neanderthals in Western Europe, along with the climatic conditions of the Last Glacial Maximum, and the peopling of the rest of the world.Arising from differences in the archaeological record, a debate continues as to whether anatomically modern humans were behaviorally modern as well. There are many theories on the evolution of behavioral modernity. These generally fall into two camps: gradualist and cognitive approaches. The Later Upper Paleolithic Model refers to the idea that modern human behavior arose through cognitive, genetic changes abruptly around 40–50,000 years ago. Other models focus on how modern human behavior may have arisen through gradual steps; the archaeological signatures of such behavior only appearing through demographic or subsistence-based changes.