Science and Human BehaviorFree Press, 1965 - 461 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 66
Seite 69
... seen to decline slowly , perhaps over a period of many hours . The curves reveal properties which could not possibly be observed through casual inspection . We may " get the impression " that an organism is responding less and less ...
... seen to decline slowly , perhaps over a period of many hours . The curves reveal properties which could not possibly be observed through casual inspection . We may " get the impression " that an organism is responding less and less ...
Seite 267
... seen . " Conditioned seeing may combine with responses to unconditioned stimuli . We see familiar objects more readily and easily than unfa- miliar objects ; the stimuli actually present upon a given occasion may be effective both as ...
... seen . " Conditioned seeing may combine with responses to unconditioned stimuli . We see familiar objects more readily and easily than unfa- miliar objects ; the stimuli actually present upon a given occasion may be effective both as ...
Seite 278
... seen . To say that one sees an image of the thing when the thing itself is absent appears to solve the problem of the existence of what is seen . But the solutions are spurious . One still has to explain how the distant thing can ...
... seen . To say that one sees an image of the thing when the thing itself is absent appears to solve the problem of the existence of what is seen . But the solutions are spurious . One still has to explain how the distant thing can ...
Inhalt
II | 28 |
THE ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR | 43 |
555 | 59 |
Urheberrecht | |
14 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abulia achieve aggressive appears aversive consequences aversive stimulation avoid behave Chapter characteristic child circumstances complex conditioned aversive conditioned reinforcers conditioned stimuli contingencies controllee countercontrol cultural practices deprivation described discriminative educational effect emitted emotional engage escape established ethical evoke example explain extinction fact field functional analysis given governmental agency governmental control havior human behavior important increase individual kinds manipulate ment negative reinforcer object observed occur operant behavior organism particular patient pattern physical physical restraint pigeon positive reinforcement possible prediction primary reinforcers probability problem properties psychotherapy punishment reduce reflex rein relevant religious agency repertoire respondent conditioning result satiation schedule science of behavior scientific self-control sense sexual behavior similar simply smooth muscles social environment solution sort specific stimuli strength strengthened superego supply survival therapist therapy tion traditional usually variables verbal behavior verbal response vidual