| behaviorism |
Belief that learning results in a change in the learner's behavior. The focus of behaviorists is on the outputs of the learning process. The study of learning only through the examination and analysis of objectively observable and quantifiable behavioral events, in contrast with subjective mental states.
Ãâó: www.neiu.edu/~dbehrlic/hrd408/glossary.htm
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| behaviorism |
School of psychological thought founded by John B. Watson that regards only measurable and observable behavior as the appropriate subject matter for human psychology; in its strictest form, behaviorism holds that human behavior can be described in terms of principles that do not require consideration of unobservable mental events, such as ideas and emotions. See also behavior therapy.
Ãâó: www.ohpsych.org/Public/glossary.htm
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| behaviorism |
Behaviorism is a psychological theory first put forth by John Watson (1925), and then expounded upon by BF Skinner. Attempting to answer the question of human behavior, proponents of this theory essentially hold that all human behavior is learned from one's surrounding context and environment.
Ãâó: www.apologetics.org/glossary.html
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| behaviorism |
A sociological school which asserts that human minds are not capable of making rational choices. It studies human action according to the methods of animal and infant psychology. It seeks to investigate reflexes and instincts, automatisms and unconscious reactions, without reference to consciousness and aiming at end. Behaviorists consider all human actions to be implicit reactions to prior conditioning. ...
Ãâó: www.mises.org/easier/B.asp
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| behaviorism |
is an approach to studying psychology that argued that actual behavior was the only event worthy of analysis
Ãâó: academics.tjhsst.edu/psych/oldPsych/ch1/terms.html
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