Behaviour (Psychology Revivals)

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A01=D. E. Broadbent
Agnostic
animal behaviour studies
anticipatory
Author_D. E. Broadbent
Bird's Nest Building
Bird’s Nest Building
Category=JMAL
Category=JMR
cognitive conflict
effect
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experimental Neurosis
experimental psychology
fractional
Fractional Anticipatory Goal Responses
goal
Guided Missile
Hebb's Theory
Hebb's View
Hebb’s Theory
Hebb’s View
Herring Gull
Hull's Approach
Hull's Method
Hull’s Approach
Hull’s Method
Human Suffering
Hypothetico Deductive Method
information processing models
law
learning theory
Lighted Alley
Piccadilly Circus
reinforcement mechanisms
responses
scientific analysis of human actions
Separate Chunks
Sickle Cell Anaemia
Switch Board
Switchboard
theory
Thunder Storms
time
Tol- Man
Tolman's Theory
tolmans
Tolman’s Theory
Vice Versa
Visual Projection Area
Watson's Successors
Watson's Time
watsons
Watson’s Successors
Watson’s Time

Product details

  • ISBN 9781848723351
  • Weight: 550g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Nov 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Original blurb from 1961: For most laymen the science of behaviour hardly exists. Few people have any clear idea of its methods, its history or, above all, its significance. Beside the popular interest aroused, for example, by the achievements of Freud, the work of the behaviourists is almost unknown. Yet this is a science which is of the highest importance, has practical applications of immediate use, and offers the hope of profound insights into the human mind.

What distinguishes the behaviourists is their insistence on exact scientific verification. Introspection may suggest a theory but only objective experiments will be admitted as evidence in its favour. The observation of how a rat behaves in a maze may seem a far cry from the study of mankind but it has the supreme advantage that what is observed can be exactly recorded and analysed. Progress by such methods is slow but what is discovered is much less likely to be upset by future discoveries than is work based on subjective judgments.

Some of the results already obtained are fruitful and suggestive. Mr Broadbent’s treatment of rewards and punishments is most striking, both for the importance of the results and for the precision of the methods by which they are obtained. To reward a child for doing something or to punish him for abstaining might seem to be equally effective methods, to be distinguished only on ethical grounds. Mr Broadbent, however, sets out modern evidence and opinion about the means by which each method operates and so demonstrates that there exist sharp and general rules governing the situations in which each is likely to be effective. He describes the state of ‘neurotic’ conflict produced when a reward and a punishment are both associated with the same object and again a series of simple, controlled experiments throws light on a basic human problem.

The science of behaviour is closely linked with other branches of research such as the theory of information and the development of electronic and mechanical ‘brains’, and this common field of research promises exciting results. Mr Broadbent shows how behaviourism has grown towards such sophisticated developments from the beginnings of such men as Watson and Pavlov.

To any intelligent reader this book will give not only the pleasure of watching a series of brilliantly devised experiments gradually giving birth to a new and important science, but also the insight which comes from examining such basic concepts as memory and learning, of discovering how much of what we think we know is merely an unexamined assumption, and of being forced to think again in precise terms. For anyone willing to make this effort Behaviour is an exceptionally rewarding book.

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