Using social cognitive theory to explain consumers' behavioral intentions in response to direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising. Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, 1(2), 270-288. :Young, H. N., Lipowski, E. E., & Cline, R. J. W. (2005). Using social cognitive ...
Purpose The aim of this study was to test the hypothesized structural paths in Bandura's social-cognitive theory (SCT) model on adolescent girls' physical activity following a 12-month physical activity and dietary intervention to prevent obesity. Method We conducted a 12-month follow-up study ...
How is trait theory different from other theories of personality? What are the different personality theories in psychology? How do biology, psychology, society and culture influence aggressive behavior? Explain the social-cognitive perspective on personality. ...
Answer to: Identify and explain skills (cognitive, social, emotional, etc.) that the visual and word texts can help develop in the learner. By...
In this secondary analysis we examined the mediation effects of 14 psychosocial constructs across 3 major social-cognitive theories which were operationalized for the intervention materials and measured at baseline, 6 and 12-months. We examined change in PA and change in the psychological constructs ...
Deep neural networks (DNNs) models have the potential to provide new insights in the study of cognitive processes, such as human decision making, due to their high capacity and data-driven design. While these models may be able to go beyond theory-driven models in predicting human behaviour, ...
Piaget Cognitive Theory And Social Learning Theory Jean Piaget discovered that our capacity for reasoning is developed in four stages: sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operations, and formal operations stage (Hutchinson, 2015). Sensorimotor (birth to 2 years) is when and infant gradually learns ...
Lévi-Strauss, C. The social and psychological aspects of chieftainship in a primitive society: The Nambikwara.Trans. N. Y. Acad. Sci.2(1944). Ewens, W. J. The sampling theory of selectively neutral alleles.3, 87–112 (1972).
According to time geography theory (H€agerstrand 1970), people's daily activities are constrained by a series of spatial-temporal factors. Such constraints play an important role in determin- ing when, where, and what activities people conduct in their daily life. With more time spent on ...
How is the social identity theory effective? What is the difference between self-concept and self-image? What is social class identity? Explain the difference between identity shift and cognitive dissonance? include illustrative examples. How does the social identity theory explain prejudice?