OMB No. 0925-0046, Biographical Sketch Format Page
... 4. Working with collaborators and members of my lab group, I have also used both ancient and modern DNA datasets to evaluate changes in the Native American gene pool over time. In one analysis of 63 ancient and 98 modern populations from the Americas, we showed that continent-wide patterns have not ...
... 4. Working with collaborators and members of my lab group, I have also used both ancient and modern DNA datasets to evaluate changes in the Native American gene pool over time. In one analysis of 63 ancient and 98 modern populations from the Americas, we showed that continent-wide patterns have not ...
Unit 11 - Personality PP
... categories/traits. Ex: talkative, friendly, outgoing, social….all cluster and we call it “extroversion.” Ex: punctuality, diligence, neatness, hard working cluster and we ...
... categories/traits. Ex: talkative, friendly, outgoing, social….all cluster and we call it “extroversion.” Ex: punctuality, diligence, neatness, hard working cluster and we ...
How to Unify Knowledge
... cal basis and evolutionary history of all forms of human social behavior. Finally, there is environmental biology, providing an ever deeper understanding of the living world in which the human species evolved and to which it is exquisitely adapted in both body and mind. From the side of the social s ...
... cal basis and evolutionary history of all forms of human social behavior. Finally, there is environmental biology, providing an ever deeper understanding of the living world in which the human species evolved and to which it is exquisitely adapted in both body and mind. From the side of the social s ...
Alfred Adler - Twinsburg City Schools
... Studied conformity- subjects were shown lines of different lengths and asked which of the lines matched an example line that they were shown, his accomplices gave the wrong answer to see how the actual subject would react to finding that their opinion differed from the group opinion, subjects confor ...
... Studied conformity- subjects were shown lines of different lengths and asked which of the lines matched an example line that they were shown, his accomplices gave the wrong answer to see how the actual subject would react to finding that their opinion differed from the group opinion, subjects confor ...
Chapter 11: Male-Female Differences The Psychoanalytic Approach
... 3. Karl Marx: psychosocial attributes such as alienation and selfishness could be traced directly to the economic structure of a capitalist society. 4. Erich Fromm: believed that societies could be created that promoted self-fulfillment through an emphasis on community, love, and mutuality Language: ...
... 3. Karl Marx: psychosocial attributes such as alienation and selfishness could be traced directly to the economic structure of a capitalist society. 4. Erich Fromm: believed that societies could be created that promoted self-fulfillment through an emphasis on community, love, and mutuality Language: ...
Chapter 2
... has demonstrated that the birds must learn to sing a particular dialect of the full song of their species. This finding eliminates the genetic differences hypothesis for the song differences between white-crowns in Marin and in Berkeley. Would we be right, therefore, to conclude that the genetic inf ...
... has demonstrated that the birds must learn to sing a particular dialect of the full song of their species. This finding eliminates the genetic differences hypothesis for the song differences between white-crowns in Marin and in Berkeley. Would we be right, therefore, to conclude that the genetic inf ...
Leadership Theory
... The great man theory of leadership became popular during the 19th-century. The mythology behind some of the world's most famous leaders such as Abraham Lincoln, Julius Caesar, Mahatma Gandhi, and Alexander the Great helped contribute to the notion that great leaders are born and not made. In many ex ...
... The great man theory of leadership became popular during the 19th-century. The mythology behind some of the world's most famous leaders such as Abraham Lincoln, Julius Caesar, Mahatma Gandhi, and Alexander the Great helped contribute to the notion that great leaders are born and not made. In many ex ...
Chapter 1 Development Across the Lifespan
... that is the result of our genetic inheritance from our ancestors. * grew out of the work of Charles Darwin who argued in The Origin of the Species that a process of natural selection creates traits in a species that are adaptive to their environment * argues that our genetic inheritance determines n ...
... that is the result of our genetic inheritance from our ancestors. * grew out of the work of Charles Darwin who argued in The Origin of the Species that a process of natural selection creates traits in a species that are adaptive to their environment * argues that our genetic inheritance determines n ...
Laws of association
... • The doctrine of the Blank Slate • denying that human nature exists “Man has no nature; what he has is history.” • apparently solves the problem of differences among races, sexes, and classes • held out the hope of unlimited social progress • equality does not happen because people are all innately ...
... • The doctrine of the Blank Slate • denying that human nature exists “Man has no nature; what he has is history.” • apparently solves the problem of differences among races, sexes, and classes • held out the hope of unlimited social progress • equality does not happen because people are all innately ...
Personality traits
... All people, especially children, have feelings of inferiority. Children are driven by these inner feelings of inferiority to adapt and develop skills. However, some people suffer from an exaggerated sense of inferiority, or an inferiority complex. These people may try to make themselves look better ...
... All people, especially children, have feelings of inferiority. Children are driven by these inner feelings of inferiority to adapt and develop skills. However, some people suffer from an exaggerated sense of inferiority, or an inferiority complex. These people may try to make themselves look better ...
Lecture 18 evo wrap up Behaviorism and Learning
... • Anyone’s personality can be formed or changed through patterns of reinforcement and punishment • If you are extraverted, that’s because extraverted behaviors were rewarded by the people who raised you ...
... • Anyone’s personality can be formed or changed through patterns of reinforcement and punishment • If you are extraverted, that’s because extraverted behaviors were rewarded by the people who raised you ...
Social-Cognitive Perspective
... How can we “predict” behavior? Socialcognitive psychologists’ answer Behavior is the product of personality and the ...
... How can we “predict” behavior? Socialcognitive psychologists’ answer Behavior is the product of personality and the ...
Environmental Effects on Personality
... One way of becoming more self-aware is to notice the words you use to describe yourself. Some important facts about our “public selves” are revealed on the official forms we fill out, when we give our name, age, birthplace, marital status, etc. Other, more subtle aspects of our self-images are revea ...
... One way of becoming more self-aware is to notice the words you use to describe yourself. Some important facts about our “public selves” are revealed on the official forms we fill out, when we give our name, age, birthplace, marital status, etc. Other, more subtle aspects of our self-images are revea ...
History and Approaches - Steilacoom School District
... Functionalism William James (1842-1910) American Focused on how the mind allows people to function in the real world Heavily influenced by Darwin ...
... Functionalism William James (1842-1910) American Focused on how the mind allows people to function in the real world Heavily influenced by Darwin ...
COURSES r
... What is nature? How does it shape culture, and vice versa? Do societies have a simple choice between causing environmental collapse and living in harmony with the natural world? This class explores the insights that anthropology, the study of human cultures, gives us about questions concerning the c ...
... What is nature? How does it shape culture, and vice versa? Do societies have a simple choice between causing environmental collapse and living in harmony with the natural world? This class explores the insights that anthropology, the study of human cultures, gives us about questions concerning the c ...
Unit 1 review
... students that are doing well in school and compare the cultures they are from to see if there is a cultural correlation to grades. What type of psychologist would do this research? ...
... students that are doing well in school and compare the cultures they are from to see if there is a cultural correlation to grades. What type of psychologist would do this research? ...
Chapter 2
... consistent behavior. In other words, an individual will display this trait in most situations. • Examples of traits include: Quiet, impulsive, outgoing, moody, calm, optimistic, anxious, reliable, etc. ...
... consistent behavior. In other words, an individual will display this trait in most situations. • Examples of traits include: Quiet, impulsive, outgoing, moody, calm, optimistic, anxious, reliable, etc. ...
Personality Types
... two choices for method of information intake, sensing (S) or intuition (N); two choices for method of judgment, thinking (T) or feeling (F); two choices as to which function is used in the outer world, judgment (J) or perception (P). ...
... two choices for method of information intake, sensing (S) or intuition (N); two choices for method of judgment, thinking (T) or feeling (F); two choices as to which function is used in the outer world, judgment (J) or perception (P). ...
Paradigms in Personality Psychology
... “why people do what they do”? “The disposition a person brings to the experiment is probably less important a cause of his behavior than most readers assume….. Often, it is not so much the kind of person a man is as the kind of situation in which he finds himself that determines how he will act.” (M ...
... “why people do what they do”? “The disposition a person brings to the experiment is probably less important a cause of his behavior than most readers assume….. Often, it is not so much the kind of person a man is as the kind of situation in which he finds himself that determines how he will act.” (M ...
File
... 3. For each approach KNOW: - Common aspects/ ideas of the approach- for example: Trait theory- does not consider the biology of where traits come from, just that they exist. All trait theorists agree upon that human have certain ranges of traits Psycho-analytics deals with the unconscious, past expe ...
... 3. For each approach KNOW: - Common aspects/ ideas of the approach- for example: Trait theory- does not consider the biology of where traits come from, just that they exist. All trait theorists agree upon that human have certain ranges of traits Psycho-analytics deals with the unconscious, past expe ...
Chapter 12: Personality: Theory, Research, and Assessment
... subjective view of reality. They are also applauded for focusing attention on the issue of what constitutes a healthy personality. • They are criticized for lacking a strong research base, poor testability, and what may be an overly optimistic view of human nature (Maslow had a hard time finding liv ...
... subjective view of reality. They are also applauded for focusing attention on the issue of what constitutes a healthy personality. • They are criticized for lacking a strong research base, poor testability, and what may be an overly optimistic view of human nature (Maslow had a hard time finding liv ...
The Psychology of the Person
... fate, and to what extent are our behaviors determined by forces outside our control? This is an issue that has spilled from philosophy. Radical behaviorism, as represented by Skinner, argued that our behavior is not freely chosen, but rather the result of environmental stimuli to which we are expose ...
... fate, and to what extent are our behaviors determined by forces outside our control? This is an issue that has spilled from philosophy. Radical behaviorism, as represented by Skinner, argued that our behavior is not freely chosen, but rather the result of environmental stimuli to which we are expose ...
Personality and Its Assessment
... Helps us answer existential questions: Why am I here? What is the meaning of life? Culture creates stories and traditions that gives us a sense of being part of an enduring legacy; that life extends beyond death. Beliefs give us a sense of order, meaning and context that soothes our fear of death. ...
... Helps us answer existential questions: Why am I here? What is the meaning of life? Culture creates stories and traditions that gives us a sense of being part of an enduring legacy; that life extends beyond death. Beliefs give us a sense of order, meaning and context that soothes our fear of death. ...
Nature versus nurture
The phrase nature and nurture relates to the relative importance of an individual's innate qualities (""nature"" in the sense of nativism or innatism) as compared to an individual's personal experiences (""nurture"" in the sense of empiricism or behaviorism) in causing individual differences, especially in behavioral traits. The alliterative expression ""nature and nurture"" in English has been in use since at least the Elizabethan period and goes back to medieval French.The combination of the two concepts as complementary is ancient (Greek: ἁπό φύσεως καὶ εὐτροφίας).The phrase in its modern sense was popularized by the English Victorian polymath Francis Galton in discussion of the influence of heredity and environment on social advancement,Galton was influenced by the book On the Origin of Species written by his half-cousin, Charles Darwin.The view that humans acquire all or almost all their behavioral traits from ""nurture"" was termed tabula rasa (""blank slate"") by John Locke in 1690. A ""blank slate view"" in human developmental psychology assuming that human behavioral traits develop almost exclusively from environmental influences, was widely held during much of the 20th century (sometimes termed ""blank-slatism"").The debate between ""blank-slate"" denial of the influence of heritability, and the view admitting both environmental and heritable traits, has often been cast in terms of nature versus nurture. These two conflicting approaches to human development were at the core of an ideological dispute over research agendas during the later half of the 20th century.As both ""nature"" and ""nurture"" factors were found to contribute substantially, often in an extricable manner, such views were seen as naive or outdated by most scholars of human development by the 2000s.In their 2014 survey of scientists, many respondents wrote that the dichotomy of nature versus nurture has outlived its usefulness, and should be retired.The reason is that in many fields of research, close feedback loops have been found in which ""nature"" and ""nurture"" influence one another constantly (as in self-domestication), while in other fields, the dividing line between an inherited and an acquired trait becomes unclear (as in the field of epigenetics or in fetal development).