Motivation
Theories
Drives/Goals
Needs
Laws/Principles
100

Drives: Physiological & Psychological (push/motive)

What is Internal Motivation

100

Psychological drive emerges from physiological need.  

Ex. Thirstier rats run a T-Maze faster for water.

What is Hull’s drive theory

100

activated when a novel item is in environment

What is Curiosity Drive

100

Need to Achieve Success

What is Achievement 

100

subjective feelings that accompany incentive contrasts.  Positive contrast are pleasant, negative contrast are unpleasant.

What is Law of Hedonic Contrast

200

Incentives and goals (pulls from environment)

What is External Motivation

200

five categories of human needs dictate an individual's behavior: physiological, safety, belonging , esteem, self-actualization

What is Maslow's Theory of Needs

200

unvarying stimulus conditions; seek new stimulation

What is Boredom Drive

200

need for authority over others, to be noticed, have high status type of job often related to this need

What is Power

200

“Final choices of alternative means-routes will always tend to occur in the direction of a minimum expenditure of physical energy.”

What is Tolman - Principle of Least Effort

300

freely chosen, inherent in the activity being performed. There is no external coercion as there is in extrinsic motivation

What is External Intrinsic Motivation

300

Motive to achieve success  and Motive to avoid failure combine to determine tendency to attempt a task.

What is Achievement Motivation Theory

300

satisfaction obtained from achieving a goal.

What is Achievement Valence

300

intimacy/belonging    Need for affiliation: desire to initiate, maintain + restore positive relationships  

What is Relatedness

300

will work if deprived of reinforcer

  Rats: lever press for food 

  Humans: time to earn money

What is Law of scarcity

400

Push into action to comfort, protect body

What is Physiological Need

400

a high probability response can reinforce a low probability response, but a low probability response cannot reinforce a high probability response.

What is Probability -differential hypothesis

400

process by which a person becomes set to achieve a goal.  It includes factors such as:  persistence, determination, effort & time expenditure in pursuit of the goal.

What is Goal Commitment 

400

Cause your own actions

What is Autonomy

400

what you are willing to pay.

    Ex. Gas - higher prices buy less, lower prices buy more

What is Demand Law

500

If hungry food in environment pull you towards it. 

If music too loud and hurting ears you turn it down

What are examples of Physiological Needs

500

adding extrinsic motivation to an intrinsically motivated behavior decreases intrinsic interest because the perceived reason for performing the behavior has changed.  However, it does increase performance.


What Cognitive evaluation theory

500

manner in which a goal is perceived.  Is it the opportunity for making a gain? Or avoiding a loss?

What is Framing 

500

effective in your actions

What is Competence

500

1.Freq. used words have more meanings than infrequently used words.

2. Longer words are used less frequently than shorter words.   Ex. Fridge instead of refrigerator  

What is Zipf’s Principle of Least Effort