CHARMed, But Not Convinced: Comment on Metcalfe (1990)
... in its current form, CHARM is a model of association, not a model of remembering. Finally, CHARM itself does little to constrain the nature or extent of memory blending because most of the intelligence involved in the simulations lies in the human who runs them rather than in CHARM itself. ...
... in its current form, CHARM is a model of association, not a model of remembering. Finally, CHARM itself does little to constrain the nature or extent of memory blending because most of the intelligence involved in the simulations lies in the human who runs them rather than in CHARM itself. ...
File
... –Conditioned stimulus (CS) in classical conditioning, an originally irrelevant stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus (CS), comes to trigger a conditioned response. ...
... –Conditioned stimulus (CS) in classical conditioning, an originally irrelevant stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus (CS), comes to trigger a conditioned response. ...
DV: recall
... In drug studies, the inactive pill that some participants receive is referred to as a ...
... In drug studies, the inactive pill that some participants receive is referred to as a ...
CHAPTER 7 Memory 1 Lecture Overview
... processes. This basic research also leads to applied research that shows us how to improve our sensory, short-term, & longterm memory. ...
... processes. This basic research also leads to applied research that shows us how to improve our sensory, short-term, & longterm memory. ...
Applying Adaptationism to Human Anger: The Recalibrational
... 1956), dark chub fish (Katano, 1990), hyenas (Owens & Owens, 1996), cockroaches (Ewing, 1967), and every social monkey and ape (Smuts et al. 1987). While dominance hierarchies are talked about as if they were features of a community it is important to remember that the information is stored within t ...
... 1956), dark chub fish (Katano, 1990), hyenas (Owens & Owens, 1996), cockroaches (Ewing, 1967), and every social monkey and ape (Smuts et al. 1987). While dominance hierarchies are talked about as if they were features of a community it is important to remember that the information is stored within t ...
Human relationships google doc summary
... · Research is mainly based on suveys. There is little experimental research. Only correlation, not causation can be inferred. ...
... · Research is mainly based on suveys. There is little experimental research. Only correlation, not causation can be inferred. ...
Recovering the context in posttraumatic stress disorder: The
... (Martín-Baró, 2003; Millon, 1983; Scott, 1990). Nothing new: this can be said of many other theoretical concepts used in psychology, but this is especially so in this instance. The PTSD category was developed in response to pressure from two lobbies: the Vietnam Veterans, and the women’s victims of ...
... (Martín-Baró, 2003; Millon, 1983; Scott, 1990). Nothing new: this can be said of many other theoretical concepts used in psychology, but this is especially so in this instance. The PTSD category was developed in response to pressure from two lobbies: the Vietnam Veterans, and the women’s victims of ...
Behaviorism
... Classroom behavior management Small rewards can motivate students Games with a point system can be used in memorization tasks Keep a pleasant environment during class to avoid conditioning kids to dislike certain subjects Use behaviorist methods (rewards or punishment) to practice what has already b ...
... Classroom behavior management Small rewards can motivate students Games with a point system can be used in memorization tasks Keep a pleasant environment during class to avoid conditioning kids to dislike certain subjects Use behaviorist methods (rewards or punishment) to practice what has already b ...
the case for nietzschean moral psychology
... nature” (BGE 6). Indeed, this explanation of a person's moral beliefs in terms of psychophysical facts about the person is a recurring theme in Nietzsche. “[M]oralities are…merely a sign language of the affects” (BGE 187), he says. “Answers to the questions about the value of existence…may always be ...
... nature” (BGE 6). Indeed, this explanation of a person's moral beliefs in terms of psychophysical facts about the person is a recurring theme in Nietzsche. “[M]oralities are…merely a sign language of the affects” (BGE 187), he says. “Answers to the questions about the value of existence…may always be ...
chapter 6: learning - Mr. Padron`s Psychology
... to switch research to what we now know as conditioning. New research consisted of bell, meat powder, dogs and saliva monitor all in harness. Pavlov would 1) bring out food = dogs salivate, 2) bring out food, ring bell = salivate, (over time) 3) ring bell = salivate ...
... to switch research to what we now know as conditioning. New research consisted of bell, meat powder, dogs and saliva monitor all in harness. Pavlov would 1) bring out food = dogs salivate, 2) bring out food, ring bell = salivate, (over time) 3) ring bell = salivate ...
CHAPTER 6: LEARNING
... APPLICATION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF OPERANT CONDITIONING (continued) Programmed Learning – assumes that any task can be broken down into small steps that can be shaped individually and combined to form the more complicated whole Classroom discipline – using principles of learning to change classroo ...
... APPLICATION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF OPERANT CONDITIONING (continued) Programmed Learning – assumes that any task can be broken down into small steps that can be shaped individually and combined to form the more complicated whole Classroom discipline – using principles of learning to change classroo ...
Leon Festinger
... were discrepancies of opinion or ability among the members of a group, pressures arose to reduce such discrepancies. Dissonance theory was an attempt to determine, at a more basic, purely cognitive level, the origin of such pressures. In essence, dissonance theory was startlingly simple. The key hyp ...
... were discrepancies of opinion or ability among the members of a group, pressures arose to reduce such discrepancies. Dissonance theory was an attempt to determine, at a more basic, purely cognitive level, the origin of such pressures. In essence, dissonance theory was startlingly simple. The key hyp ...
Unit 5 - Psychological Disorders
... Elaboration Likelihood Model: Central/Peripheral Routes Foot-in-the-Door Door-in-the-Face Norms of Reciprocity ...
... Elaboration Likelihood Model: Central/Peripheral Routes Foot-in-the-Door Door-in-the-Face Norms of Reciprocity ...
Michael G. Elasmar (Ed.). The Impact of International Television: A
... television viewing and launch both cross-national and cross-regional levels of examination between countries and regions like the United States, Greece, Argentina, Brazil, and Ecuador. These researchers examine the impact of imported television on local viewers from diverse theoretical perspectives ...
... television viewing and launch both cross-national and cross-regional levels of examination between countries and regions like the United States, Greece, Argentina, Brazil, and Ecuador. These researchers examine the impact of imported television on local viewers from diverse theoretical perspectives ...
Behaviorism: An In-Depth Perspective 1 Running head
... (law of disuse) of certain practices that are meant to being about a specific response. (Blackbourn, 2006). Lastly, Thorndike’s third law, the Law of Effect, focuses on the consequences of a behavior. Simply stated, behavioral responses that elicit positive results or consequences increase the stren ...
... (law of disuse) of certain practices that are meant to being about a specific response. (Blackbourn, 2006). Lastly, Thorndike’s third law, the Law of Effect, focuses on the consequences of a behavior. Simply stated, behavioral responses that elicit positive results or consequences increase the stren ...
Chapter 1
... DV = judgment (one or two points) Within-subjects design: like most research in sensation and perception, this is a situation in which participating in one condition (palm being tested) won’t have much of an effect on being tested in the other condition (back), as long as counterbalancing is used pr ...
... DV = judgment (one or two points) Within-subjects design: like most research in sensation and perception, this is a situation in which participating in one condition (palm being tested) won’t have much of an effect on being tested in the other condition (back), as long as counterbalancing is used pr ...
The evolutionary psychology of the emotions and their relationship to
... distinctive structures? Fighting, falling in love, escaping predators, confronting sexual infidelity, experiencing a failure-driven loss in status, responding to the death of a family member, and so on each involved conditions, contingencies, situations, or event types that recurred innumerable time ...
... distinctive structures? Fighting, falling in love, escaping predators, confronting sexual infidelity, experiencing a failure-driven loss in status, responding to the death of a family member, and so on each involved conditions, contingencies, situations, or event types that recurred innumerable time ...
Emotional episodes facilitate word recall
... studies that employ mood-induction procedures, recall might sometimes be influenced by the conceptual connections between the coherent set of words in each valence category and the materials used in the induction procedure itself (see Parrott & Hertel, 1999). In this regard, Varner and Ellis (1998) ...
... studies that employ mood-induction procedures, recall might sometimes be influenced by the conceptual connections between the coherent set of words in each valence category and the materials used in the induction procedure itself (see Parrott & Hertel, 1999). In this regard, Varner and Ellis (1998) ...
An Exploration of Emotion and Cognition During Polygraph Testing
... distinct patterns, or levels, of appraisal: subconscious and conscious awareness. Both levels of appraisal trigger emotions. We have also seen that the specific emotion triggered can vary widely among individuals based on their prior experiences, values, goals, and expectations and most importantly, ...
... distinct patterns, or levels, of appraisal: subconscious and conscious awareness. Both levels of appraisal trigger emotions. We have also seen that the specific emotion triggered can vary widely among individuals based on their prior experiences, values, goals, and expectations and most importantly, ...
PSYC 1113.702: Introductory Psychology (Hargett)
... PURPOSE: This class is designed to give the student an overview of the field of psychology. It is a survey course, which will introduce the student to many areas of psychology, but will not thoroughly exhaust any one area or discipline of the field. Areas studied will include the environment, motiva ...
... PURPOSE: This class is designed to give the student an overview of the field of psychology. It is a survey course, which will introduce the student to many areas of psychology, but will not thoroughly exhaust any one area or discipline of the field. Areas studied will include the environment, motiva ...
C01 Aronson - Napa Valley College
... Edward Snowden: Traitor or Patriot? This is Edward Snowden, a former computing contractor for the National Security Agency. Snowden’s release in 2013 of thousands of classified documents related to the U.S. government’s surveillance programs led the Department of Justice to charge him with espionag ...
... Edward Snowden: Traitor or Patriot? This is Edward Snowden, a former computing contractor for the National Security Agency. Snowden’s release in 2013 of thousands of classified documents related to the U.S. government’s surveillance programs led the Department of Justice to charge him with espionag ...
A Psychology of Immigration
... would become acculturated. Hence, a third dimension is required: that of the powerful role played by the dominant group in influencing the way in which mutual acculturation would take place (Berry, 1974). The addition of this third dimension produces a duplicate framework (right side of Figure 2). A ...
... would become acculturated. Hence, a third dimension is required: that of the powerful role played by the dominant group in influencing the way in which mutual acculturation would take place (Berry, 1974). The addition of this third dimension produces a duplicate framework (right side of Figure 2). A ...
BUILDING THE ESSAY DRAFT
... Advantages – high degree of realism because are in natural environments, data on large number of variables can be collected at the same time, researcher doesn't have as great an impact on the study as he/she may in other strategies Disadvantages – variables not manipulated by the researcher, unable ...
... Advantages – high degree of realism because are in natural environments, data on large number of variables can be collected at the same time, researcher doesn't have as great an impact on the study as he/she may in other strategies Disadvantages – variables not manipulated by the researcher, unable ...
Sample
... of various early phase interventions. While focusing primarily on RJP, a serendipitous finding indicated that, though DMT and RJP had a similar short-term effect on commitment, DMT was superior to RJP in its long-term effect (Ganzach et al, 2002). The present study focuses solely on the DMT interven ...
... of various early phase interventions. While focusing primarily on RJP, a serendipitous finding indicated that, though DMT and RJP had a similar short-term effect on commitment, DMT was superior to RJP in its long-term effect (Ganzach et al, 2002). The present study focuses solely on the DMT interven ...