The Law of Effect suggests that behavioral changes change due to this.
What are consequences?
You decide to go to a new restaurant and order some sushi along with some home-made cherry bubble tea. Later that day, you end up feeling pretty sick. Still, you give the sushi restaurant a second chance, and you eat the meal with the order of the same cherry bubble tea. You later learn that you were sick because the restaurant was serving bad fish. Unfortunately, now the sight of the cherry bubble tea alone makes you nauseous.
In this scenario, what is the conditioned stimulus?
What is the cherry bubble tea?
What is extraversion?
Goals that are specific to you are called this.
What are idiographic goals?
Emotions consist of three general parts, which are...
What is arousal, conscious awareness, and behaviors?
Watson believed that we learn our behaviors from external factors, which is another name for...
What are stimulus-response patterns?
You decide to go to a new restaurant and order some sushi along with some home-made cherry bubble tea. Later that day, you end up feeling pretty sick. Still, you give the sushi restaurant a second chance, and you eat the meal with the order of the same cherry bubble tea. You later learn that you were sick because the restaurant was serving bad fish. Unfortunately, now the sight of the cherry bubble tea alone makes you nauseous.
In this scenario, what was the unconditioned stimulus?
What is the sushi?
A person with this trait will probably visit the new art exhibit.
What is openness.
Self-determination theory suggests that we have three basic motivations. The motivation that captures your desire to be good at stuff is this.
What is competence?
The strength of the physical reaction that an emotion elicits in you is called this.
What is arousal?
Unlike other "passive" behaviorists like Watson, Skinner was interested organisms as active agents in their environment by examining how they..
Skinner was interested in how the schedule of behavioral reinforcement affects whether organisms display said behavior. One day, he decides to study how he can get rats to press on red buttons. He would give the rats a food pellet after they press the button five times. Thus, Skinner was using this schedule of reinforcement.
What is fixed-ratio?
A person with this trait will probably go along with what the group agreed to do in their project.
What is agreeableness.
This type of thinking is effortful and involves aspects like logic.
What is rational thinking?
According to this theory of emotion, both emotions and physiological responses come at the same time.
What is the Cannon-Bard theory?
What are reinforcements?
Skinner was interested in how the schedule of behavioral reinforcement affects whether organisms display said behavior. One day, he decides to study how he can get rats to press on red buttons. He would give the rats a food pellet two seconds after they press the button. Thus, Skinner was using this schedule of reinforcement.
What is fixed-interval?
This is the person who's often moody.
What is neuroticism?
Self-determination theory suggests that we have three basic motivations. The motivation that captures your desire to make your own decisions is this.
What is autonomy?
This theory suggests that physical response comes first, and emotions comes second.
What is the James-Lange theory?
Punishment aims to do this to a behavior.
What is decrease it?
Skinner was interested in how the schedule of behavioral reinforcement affects whether organisms display said behavior. One day, he decides to study how he can get rats to press on red buttons. In the first few sessions, he would give the rats a food pellet after they press the button five times; in the second few sessions, he gave the rats food after they pressed the button three times. Thus, Skinner was using this schedule of reinforcement.
What is variable-ratio?
A person with this trait will probably have their entire week planned out.
What is conscientiousness?
Goals that can be regarded as "universal," something that all people share, are called this.
What are nomothetic goals?
The degree to which an emotion is positive or negative is called this.
What is valence?