Other (Word)
... mistaken about the personal importance these states play in creating our sense of self. To admit, to ourselves, that our emotions and thoughts are nothing more than mechanical effects, leaves us grasping for the meaning of our lives that we have pieced together to understand ourselves. The second r ...
... mistaken about the personal importance these states play in creating our sense of self. To admit, to ourselves, that our emotions and thoughts are nothing more than mechanical effects, leaves us grasping for the meaning of our lives that we have pieced together to understand ourselves. The second r ...
Models in Psychopathology
... Recent variations of behavioral theory Social learning theory Delay of reinforcement Social modeling ...
... Recent variations of behavioral theory Social learning theory Delay of reinforcement Social modeling ...
Chapter 2 - Biological Basis of Behavior
... Complex cable of nerves that connects brain to rest of the body Carries motor impulses from the brain to internal organs and muscles Carries sensory information from extremities and internal organs to the brain ...
... Complex cable of nerves that connects brain to rest of the body Carries motor impulses from the brain to internal organs and muscles Carries sensory information from extremities and internal organs to the brain ...
Is anterior cingulate cortex necessary for cognitive control?Brain, 128
... of group membership and level of conflict on the Stroop interference effect and go–no go error rates using repeated measures ANOVA, with significance set at P < 0.05, two tailed. This analysis supported the null hypothesis, which could in principle be due to inadequate statistical power to detect di ...
... of group membership and level of conflict on the Stroop interference effect and go–no go error rates using repeated measures ANOVA, with significance set at P < 0.05, two tailed. This analysis supported the null hypothesis, which could in principle be due to inadequate statistical power to detect di ...
Critical psychology in South Africa:
... An overview of critical tendencies and traditions in South African psychology may seem somewhat pointless for another reason as well, namely the minuscule size of the discipline in this country. There are, after all, a mere eight thousand or so registered psychologists in South Africa – compared wi ...
... An overview of critical tendencies and traditions in South African psychology may seem somewhat pointless for another reason as well, namely the minuscule size of the discipline in this country. There are, after all, a mere eight thousand or so registered psychologists in South Africa – compared wi ...
Randomness increases self-reported anxiety and
... this information, at least according to Niels Bohr, who famously stated ‘Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it’ (Bohr, 1998). Bohr’s comment speaks to a remarkable aspect of human nature: people are consistently able to come to terms with even the most puzzling truths abo ...
... this information, at least according to Niels Bohr, who famously stated ‘Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it’ (Bohr, 1998). Bohr’s comment speaks to a remarkable aspect of human nature: people are consistently able to come to terms with even the most puzzling truths abo ...
Chapter 2 An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology
... Abnormal Psychology: An Integrative Approach, 4th Edition, David H. Barlow Chapter 2: An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology ...
... Abnormal Psychology: An Integrative Approach, 4th Edition, David H. Barlow Chapter 2: An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology ...
AP Final Ex Review 1 2017
... 23. Summarize what has been learned about memory from the famous case of H.M., including Brenda Milner and Suzanne Corkin’s work with this patient. 25. Describe the roles of different brain structures in normal memory. 26. Describe the underlying causes and typical course of Alzheimer’s disease, inc ...
... 23. Summarize what has been learned about memory from the famous case of H.M., including Brenda Milner and Suzanne Corkin’s work with this patient. 25. Describe the roles of different brain structures in normal memory. 26. Describe the underlying causes and typical course of Alzheimer’s disease, inc ...
Chapter 15 Power Point: Psychological Therapies
... • Therapy: treatment methods aimed at making people feel better and function more effectively • Two broad categories: – one based primarily in psychological theory and techniques – the other uses medical intervention to bring symptoms under control ...
... • Therapy: treatment methods aimed at making people feel better and function more effectively • Two broad categories: – one based primarily in psychological theory and techniques – the other uses medical intervention to bring symptoms under control ...
Phraseology and linguistic theory
... As to the third criterion, it is probably fair to say that there is little work which has defined phraseologisms solely on the basis of some quantitative criterion based on their frequency of occurrence (and/or additional frequency information). True, some scholars have used a threshold of absolute ...
... As to the third criterion, it is probably fair to say that there is little work which has defined phraseologisms solely on the basis of some quantitative criterion based on their frequency of occurrence (and/or additional frequency information). True, some scholars have used a threshold of absolute ...
Reciprocal influences of physical function and cognitive inhibition in
... Recent studies have attempted to integrate the reduced physical function (Andrews et al., 2012) and cognitive deficits (Moriarty et al., 2011) associated with chronic pain. In a sample of heterogeneous chronic pain patients, physical function, cognitive performance and pain intensity were all found ...
... Recent studies have attempted to integrate the reduced physical function (Andrews et al., 2012) and cognitive deficits (Moriarty et al., 2011) associated with chronic pain. In a sample of heterogeneous chronic pain patients, physical function, cognitive performance and pain intensity were all found ...
CONTEXT AND COGNITION: KNOWLEDGE FRAMES AND
... typical speech act sequences 4 of which the structure has a more or less conventional or ritual character, such as giving lectures, preaching, making everyday conversation, or writing love letters. In such cases we clearly have a number of different (speech) acts, of which each may have a characteri ...
... typical speech act sequences 4 of which the structure has a more or less conventional or ritual character, such as giving lectures, preaching, making everyday conversation, or writing love letters. In such cases we clearly have a number of different (speech) acts, of which each may have a characteri ...
Swarm Intelligence: Humans — Actual, Imagined and Implied
... norms that the person is exposed to and the learning acquired through individual experience. 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 tende ...
... norms that the person is exposed to and the learning acquired through individual experience. 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 tende ...
- City Research Online
... After editing our respective books on computational models of conditioning (Schmajuk, 2010; Alonso & Mondragón, 2011) we started thinking about evaluating the performance of current computational models of classical conditioning by applying them to a common data base, and suggested this as the topic ...
... After editing our respective books on computational models of conditioning (Schmajuk, 2010; Alonso & Mondragón, 2011) we started thinking about evaluating the performance of current computational models of classical conditioning by applying them to a common data base, and suggested this as the topic ...
Ch_6_Learning_PP
... Operant conditioning techniques work best with behaviors that would typically occur in a specific situation, or naturally for a given subject. Superstitious behavior: Tendency to repeat behaviors that are followed closely by a reinforcer, even if they are not related. For example, a particular p ...
... Operant conditioning techniques work best with behaviors that would typically occur in a specific situation, or naturally for a given subject. Superstitious behavior: Tendency to repeat behaviors that are followed closely by a reinforcer, even if they are not related. For example, a particular p ...
Successful Aging: A Developmental Approach
... correlated with various indices of context (e.g., marital status, socioeconomic status, health). A priori theoretical accounts of why certain variables are likely to be correlated with life satisfaction are missing, and obtained findings are left in a sort of explanatory ambiguity. Even the recent c ...
... correlated with various indices of context (e.g., marital status, socioeconomic status, health). A priori theoretical accounts of why certain variables are likely to be correlated with life satisfaction are missing, and obtained findings are left in a sort of explanatory ambiguity. Even the recent c ...
Language
... Wellness cognitive appraisal and coping strategies © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ...
... Wellness cognitive appraisal and coping strategies © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ...
An analytical study of “introspection” in Buddhist and
... major reason to reject introspection in western psychology is the belief that data obtained with this method are not reliable. In other words, psychologists have been worried that individuals cannot provide reliable data about the feelings they experience, like anger sorrow, happiness etc. just by r ...
... major reason to reject introspection in western psychology is the belief that data obtained with this method are not reliable. In other words, psychologists have been worried that individuals cannot provide reliable data about the feelings they experience, like anger sorrow, happiness etc. just by r ...
A Cognitive Computation Fallacy?
... Abstract The journal of Cognitive Computation is defined in part by the notion that biologically inspired computational accounts are at the heart of cognitive processes in both natural and artificial systems. Many studies of various important aspects of cognition (memory, observational learning, dec ...
... Abstract The journal of Cognitive Computation is defined in part by the notion that biologically inspired computational accounts are at the heart of cognitive processes in both natural and artificial systems. Many studies of various important aspects of cognition (memory, observational learning, dec ...
Curriculum
... development of teams, services, and organisations. The importance of continuing professional development is emphasised, both with respect to the individual’s personal plans and in relation to supporting and supervising others in developing psychological skills. Thus, through the emphasis in the curr ...
... development of teams, services, and organisations. The importance of continuing professional development is emphasised, both with respect to the individual’s personal plans and in relation to supporting and supervising others in developing psychological skills. Thus, through the emphasis in the curr ...
Attitudes - Mrs. Harvey`s Social Psychology Class
... How Attitudes Are Formed • Mere-exposure effect: – The tendency for people to come to like things simply because they see or encounter them repeatedly. – Exception - If you dislike something initially, repeated exposure will not change that attitude • Stimuli may be presented at subliminal level ...
... How Attitudes Are Formed • Mere-exposure effect: – The tendency for people to come to like things simply because they see or encounter them repeatedly. – Exception - If you dislike something initially, repeated exposure will not change that attitude • Stimuli may be presented at subliminal level ...
Similarity and Distance in Information Spatializations Sara Irina
... or across regions, and are strengthened or weakened appropriately by region hues. Distance judgments more-or-less ignore region membership and hue, with the caveat that region membership in displays of points has been shown to affect distance judgments (Steiner, 2001), and they do so to some degree ...
... or across regions, and are strengthened or weakened appropriately by region hues. Distance judgments more-or-less ignore region membership and hue, with the caveat that region membership in displays of points has been shown to affect distance judgments (Steiner, 2001), and they do so to some degree ...
Paper titles and abstracts Dan Arnold: "Perception and the
... recognition that his account really makes sense only as an idealist account. Vincent Eltschinger: "Dharmakīrti, Apoha, and the Two Truths" Dharmakīrti (600?) is well known for his dual system of epistemology: whereas perception relies on, and is caused by, real particulars, inference deals with conc ...
... recognition that his account really makes sense only as an idealist account. Vincent Eltschinger: "Dharmakīrti, Apoha, and the Two Truths" Dharmakīrti (600?) is well known for his dual system of epistemology: whereas perception relies on, and is caused by, real particulars, inference deals with conc ...