2 Social learning Social learning can be defined as “learning that is influenced by observation of, or interaction with, a conspecific or its products” (Heyes, 1994, p. 207). Social learning can be highly adaptive in many contexts, and animals may rely on it depending on the costs and ...
Akers'social learning theoryfocused onlearning experiencesthat could be measured using survey data and most research on that perspective has used that methodology. As a theory of criminality, social learning theory emerged from a combinations of principles derived from behaviorist operant learning and oth...
An attempt was made to analyze behavioral changes in the adult years as a function of major life events (marriage, parenthood) in terms of social-learning principles. Social-learning theory seems particularly suited for this analysis since, in contrast to most personality theories, it is very sen...
Answer to: Bandura's social cognitive learning theory assumes that the environment, behavior, and person all affect how an individual learns. \\...
States fail when national governments can no longer provide personal security, food security and basicsocialservices such as education and health care. 出自-2016年6月阅读原文 Socialprogress. 出自-2016年6月阅读原文 Socialorder is breaking down in many countries because of food shortages. ...
Social Cognitive Theory Albert Bandura’ssocialcognitivetheory(SCT)‚ is defined as a cognitively oriented learningtheorythat emphasizes observational learning in determining of behavior. SCT is a stem from thesociallearningtheory(SLT)‚ with a back round dating back to the late 1800’s.2 Bandura...
The evolution of cooperation can also be affected by the payoff structure of the social dilemma. Typically, cooperation games assume a prisoner’s dilemma (PD) payoff structure (see Table 1), where game theory always predicts defection as the rational choice [49]. An alternative is the snowdrif...
Success is most apparent when a movement manages to have its power legitimized as authority. In a successful revolution the social movement becomes the new source of authority and respectability, and opposition to its values is defined as counterrevolutionary. In other instances, the movement achiev...
An influence cascade can be defined as the all of the actions in a chain that start from an initial user, who was prompted by an external (outside the social network) stimulus or intrinsic motivation to act, and the actions that the initial user then influences other users to take, and,...
Social learning: Classically defined as “learning that is influenced by observation of, or interaction with, another animal (typically a conspecific) or its products” [38]. Social learning should not be confused with ‘learning by groups’ or societies as a whole. Rather, it is learning by ...