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behavior that can be observed directly by others
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behavior occuring inside a person not visible by others |
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an approach within the environmental strategy that focuses on external, directly observable factors as determinants of personality |
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- the position that psychology should be concerned with only objective environmental events and overt behaviors
- formalized by Watson
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methodological behaviorism |
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an approach that emphasizes objectivity, direct observation of phenomena, precise definitions, and controlled experimentation |
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learning process in which a stimulus comes to elicit a response because the stimulus is now associated with another stimulus that already elicits the response |
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learning process in which a behavior is strengthened or weakened by its consequences |
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the process by which the behavior of one person is changed through observation of another (rather than through direct experience) |
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- all of the behaviors and attitudes construed as appropriate for a specific, socially defined group or status
- one person can simultaneously occupy several roles
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- environmentally driven consensual dictates of appropriate behavior
- tend to be accepted and perpetuAted over time
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environmental strategy research and theories |
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- situationally specific behavior
- predominately carried out through nomothetic research
- tend to be parsimonious
- make minimal use of theoretical constructs
- attempt to minimize inferences
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process of looking inward and examining one's own thoughts and feelings |
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an initially neutral stimulus that acquires the ability to elicit a response after it has been paired with an unconditional stimulus |
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a response acquired through pairing an initially neutral stimulus with a stimulus that already elicits the response in question |
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in classical conditioning, the response elicited by an unconditioned stimulus |
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in classical conditioning, a stimulus that naturally or automatically elicits a particular response |
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in observational learning, the stage at which the model's behavior is recognized and stored in memory |
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failue of a stimulus similar in some characteristics to the conditioned stimulus to evoke the conditioned response |
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the "spread" of a conditioned response to a stimulus similar, but not identical, to the conditioned stimulus |
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cessation of responding when a learned response is no longer enforced; also, a cessation of reinforcement for a previously reinforced response |
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in classical conditioning, the return of a conditioned reponse after extinction |
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- said that 1.) organisms might be more prepared to form associations based on taste than sight or sound (more inherent)
- 2.) taste might be especially salient to the animal because it remains constant and is always recognized
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- refers to the situation in which the expected effect of pairing a stimuli doesn't result in the CS producing the CR
- may occur because the pairing of stimuli was inconsistent, or the CS preceded the UCS or was temporally seperated from it
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contextual stimuli that become associated with a particular substance, so that environmental cues alone can elicit a conditioned reponse like that to a drug |
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when the individuals become more sensitized to contextual cues, they often need more and more of a drug in order to experience the same intensity of response
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learning process in which a behavior is strengthened or weakened by its consequences |
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believed that behavior is primarily determined by external environmental influences, particularily consequences of actions |
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Skinner and Watson's two goals of psychology |
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functional analyses of behavior |
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term used by Skinner to describe his complete, detailed descriptions of discrete behaviors, incl. their antecedents and consequences |
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behaviors that an organism emits in such a way to "operate" on the environment |
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elicited by some identifiable stimulus in the environment; the subject is responding to something already present |
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stimuli that signals that a response is now appropriate and likely to be reinforced |
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behavior that occurs only when certain environmental circumstances are prsent |
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most commonly used measure of operant behavior |
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the tendency for the frequency of a response to change merely because it is being observed and recorded |
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consequence that reduces the likelihood of the behavior that preceded it; usually an aversive consequence |
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the process that occurs whenever an event that follows a behavior increases the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated |
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single subject reversal design |
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idiographic approach employed by researchers; usually applied to animal models and operant-based treatments on people |
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reminding or instructing a person to perform a behavior so that it can be reinforced |
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in operant behavior therapy, the gradual removal of prompts so that the person finally performs that reponse without cues |
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reinforcing progessively close approximations to the desired behavior |
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continuous reinforcement schedule |
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a schedule of reinforcement in which the individual is reinforced every time the behavior to be strengthened in emitted
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intermittent reinforcement schedule |
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a pattern of reinforcement in which only some of the instances of the desired response are reinforced |
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a schedule of reinforcement in which the individual is reinforced for the first response made after a set amount of time has elapsed |
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- a schedule of reinforcement in which the individual is reinforced after a set number of responses
- usually produce a higher rate of responding
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variable interval schedules |
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Yale Group: this happens through classical conditioning and stimulus generalization |
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Yale Group: instrumental conditioning and response generalization does this |
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Yale Group: failure in discrimination |
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view of agression by Freud VS. Yale group |
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- B= (f) Drives(arousal) X Habits(associations between stimulus and response)
- Example: Running away(fear=arousal) X fear of object(stimulus) and reponse is to run away
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FREUD vs Yale Group, Displacement |
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Defense mechanisms vs avoidance tendencies |
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FREUD vs YALE GROUP, Regression |
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Fixation and unconsciousness VS habit hierarchies |
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Identification with the agressor |
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Yale Group thought that the primary drive was the primary reinforcer, and the secondary drive was the secondary reinforcer |
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FREUD vs Yale GROUP, Repression |
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Unconscious VS instrumental conditioning/avoidance
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Some strengths of Yale Group's theory |
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- provided explanations for phobias, neuroses, aggression, regression, displacement, repression, and identification
- Showed treatment for phobias(systematic desensitization) through
- 1.a hierarchy of feared stimulus
- 2.relaxation skills
- 3. gradual exposure to feared stimuli
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Definition
- Developemental stages?
- ignorance of biology and its influences
- paid no attention to social cognition
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Berkowitz's 2 factor model |
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Definition
Emotional agression=readiness to agress (emotions like jealousy, anger, pain, excitement) X eliciting cues (stimuli assoc. with agression like perpetrators, situations, or objects) |
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situationally specific behaviorist view by Rotter |
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Definition
Behavior potential=(f) R.V (reward value) X expectations
(that Behavior = rewards) |
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cross-situationally specific behavior by Rotter |
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Definition
- Npotential (several behaviors, persons, and contexts over time) =
- Nvalue (value of all rewards over time)
X
- Freedom of movement (generalized expectancy)
- ALSO an example of multiple act criterion
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- intrensic/extrensic motivation
- introversion/extroversion
- efficacy expectations
- Npower
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Definition
Locus of control is NOT.... |
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This is a trait that determines if someone believes that their behavior matters or not
High external=My behavior doesn't matter
High internal=my behavior matters, I'm in controL! |
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Childhood: parents encouraged independence (authoritative) |
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Child: Parents Encouraged dependence (authoritarian) |
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Problems with retrospective studies |
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- memory decay
- " " distortions
- Socially desirable responding
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- studies in which diff. people at the same time are studied
- find that with increasing age the amount of control increases until elderly age
- CONFOUND: Age and generation (historical)
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better alternative to cross sectional study, although these are timely and costly
COMPROMISE: Cohort-sequential design because it usually produces a happy medium between cross-sectional and longitudinal studies |
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Definition
Biological genotype for heritability coefficient: ???
Psychological phenotype " ": L.O.C. |
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- Highly related to the LOCUS OF CONTROL
- high correlation between R.L.O.C and GPA
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LOC highly correlated with this
RLOC highly correlated with situational issues and dispositions |
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- very powerful predictor of behavior because one measure doesn't describe all
- the focus is on a continuum, a person can be high in some areas (like relationships or academia), and low in some
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variable interval schedules |
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Definition
a schedule of reinforcement in which the individual is reinforced for the first response made after a period of time that varies randomly around a specified time value |
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Definition
a schedule of reinforcement in which the number of responses required for reinforcement varies randomly around a particular number of responses |
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theory predicting that the frequency of engaging in each of a number of alternative behaviors will be directly proportional to the amount of reinforcement recieved for each |
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- those conditions that, when present, increase the likelihood of occurence of specific behaviors.
- EXAMPLE: Thirst is a ___ ____ for drinking, whereas the presence of water may be a discriminant stimulus for drinking
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- theory thought of by Bandura and Walters
- an approach that views personality as acquired through conditioningm, modeling, and the family and cultural environment
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- in observational learning, behavioral examples that influence how an observer acts, thinks, and behaves
- Dollard and Miller's idea
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- specific component's of a model's behavior
- can be live or symbolic
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the observation of the behavior of models in the flesh-physically present models |
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the direct observation of the behavior of models, such as in movies or by behavior |
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observation of modeling cues; the first stage in observational learning |
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a covert behavior that is the second step of the observational learning theory |
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- third stage of the observational learning theory
- refers to whether observers actually use the modeling cues as a guide for their own actions
- can take two forms of behavior: imitation or counterimitation
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performing the general type of class or behavior that one has seen a model perform |
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indirect counterimitation |
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avoiding the general type or class of behavior that one has seen a model perform |
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avoiding the specific behavior that one has seen a model perform |
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behaving in a way opposite to the model's behavior |
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rewards and punishments administered to a model that influence the observer's subsequent likelihood of performing the model's behavior |
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an observed consequence recieved by a model that's percieved by the observer as positive or desirable |
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an observed consequence recieved by a model that is percieved by the observer as negative or desirable |
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Will modeling cues be accepted?
DETERMINANTS |
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Definition
- is the behavior of model similar to the observer?
- number and consistency of the models to whom the observer has been exposed
- consistent model reactions to situations
- more competent models=more commonly emulated
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credibility and representativeness of modeling cues as percieved by an observer |
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a few weaknesses of the environmental strategy |
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Definition
1.) does not try to provide a comprehensive account of personality 2.) no specific theories underlie environmental therapies 3.) error of affirming the consequent 4.) overdependance on unreliable lab experiments and situational tests 5.)limited acceptability 6.) simplistic view of personality/deterministic stance
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error of affirming the consequent |
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assuming that "because a behavior is generated under one set of circumstances, every time this or similar behavior occurs in nature, it had developed because of the same set of controlling conditions" |
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four basic construct's of Rotter's expectancy-evaluation theory |
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Definition
- psychological situation
- reinforcement value
- expectancy
- behavior potential
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behavior potential (Rotter) |
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Definition
the likelihood that a given behavior will occur in a particular situation |
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reinforcement value (Rotter) |
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Definition
a person's subjective preference for a given reinforcer relative to other possible reinforcers in a given situation |
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Definition
the subjective probability that a given behavior will result in a given reinforcer |
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specific expectancy VS generalized expectancy |
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a person's subjective estimate of the chances of obtaining a particular outcome by performing a particular behavior
VS
expectations that apply across a range of situations |
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Definition
the existing circumstances from each individual's perspective |
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the generalized way that the person percieves the source of his or her outcomes |
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triadic reciprocal determinism(Bandura) |
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Definition
the theoretical assumption that personality develops through a continuing interaction among person, behavior, and environmental factors |
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theory of percieved self-efficacy (Bandura) |
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Definition
people's beliefs that they can successfully execute behavior required to produce a desired outcome, which is partially independent of one's ability |
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Definition
people's convictions that they can successfully execute the behavior required to produce a desired outcome in a particular situation |
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percieved self efficacy(bandura) |
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Definition
people's beliefs that they can execute behavior required to produce a desired outcome, which is partially independent of one's actual ability |
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Definition
the belief that one can peform the behaviors neccessary to achieve a desired outcome |
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sources of efficacy expectations |
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Definition
- performance accomplishments
- vicarious experience
- vicarious persuasion
- emotional arousal
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personality coefficient (Mischel) |
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Definition
term coined to describe the small correlation ( between .2 and .3) that is typically found when any personality dimension measured by a questionnare is related to another type of measure of the same characterstic |
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consistency paradox (Mischel) |
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Definition
the fact that people tend to see others' behavior as quite consistent across situations when there is actually much cross-situational inconsistency |
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individual behaving the same way in the same basic situation but at different times |
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overt/covert behaviors that a person is capable of engaging in when the circumstances call for them |
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encoding strategies and personal constructs |
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the specific ways of sorting and categorizing the interpersonal and physcial events we encounter |
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self regulatory systems and plans |
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Definition
- self-imposed rewards and personal goals of an individual
- provide motivation and direction for behavior
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behavior determinants according to Mischel |
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Definition
1. demands and restrictions of the situation
2. individual's person variables
3. interaction of situational and person variables |
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most often the consistency in a person's behavior is of ____ consistency, not cross-situational consistency
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You only need _____ to information to learn, according to Bandura |
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efficacy expectations are |
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Definition
percieved competence and (f) situation...
NOT self esteem |
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Definition
are cognitive and situationally specific |
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Definition
behavior is a result of direct experiences
VS
outcome is the result of indirect experiences |
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sources of efficacy expectations |
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Definition
1. performance accomplishments(mastery expect.)
2. vicarious expectancy (monkey see, monkey do)
3. verbal influence (persuasion)
4. physiological feedback |
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STRENGTHS(links) of Rotter's LOC theory |
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Definition
academic achievement
social cognition
health
conformity
social influence |
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STRENGTHS of Bandura's self-efficacy expect.
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Definition
academic achievement
atheleticism
marriage
health
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Strengths (explanations) of Bandura's vicarious conditions through modeling |
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Definition
aggression
prosocial behavior
self regulation(moral develop.)
sex-typing |
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Definition
words and actions mismatch...they do what they see not hear |
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Usual tendencies in imitation |
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Definition
Warm/similar models (percieved)
boys- dad (masculine)
girls- mom (feminine) |
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experiment about seeking approval
D.V. is children's toys |
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Definition
Observer present- boys play with trucks and action figures
girls play with dolls and ovens
Observer absent- boys play with dolls and ovens
girls play with trucks and action figures |
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Definition
aggressions VS personal aggression
r= high kids
shock level VS peer ratings
r=high adults |
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Mundane realism
VS
experimental realism |
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Definition
appearance VS functional
EXPERIMENTAL REALISM FAR MORE IMPORTANT |
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Weaknesses of social learning theory |
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Definition
- 1.) Absence of biological influences (attachment)
- 2.) Role of affect (emotion) not present
- 3.) Developemental stages not present
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Definition
these two factors were shown to effect behavior strongly in studies involving helping others
Good mood=higher level of help
bad mood= lower " " |
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