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  • All right, the behavioral theory is

  • what we're going to be talking about next.

  • And the behavioral theory says that personality

  • is a result of the interaction between an individual

  • and their environment.

  • So here's our person.

  • And then, this is the environment.

  • Whether it's society-- We'll draw a few houses here.

  • There you go.

  • You get the picture.

  • So basically, what I've drawn here

  • is one island, and another island,

  • and a bridge connecting both.

  • And you'll see why did that in a second.

  • OK, so the behavioral theory says

  • that we interact with our environment.

  • And it's also focused on observable and measurable

  • behavior, rather than mental or emotional behaviors.

  • So there are different types of behaviors.

  • And different theories focus more on one type of behavior

  • over the other.

  • So when looking at this, if this is the behavioral theory--

  • is this island right here.

  • I guess we can say the psychoanalytic theory over here

  • would be the most opposite because this theory focuses

  • on the mental behavior rather than observable behavior.

  • And behavioral theorists don't care

  • for theories that take thoughts and feelings into account.

  • So let's talk about two important theorists

  • of the behavioral theory, and the first is Skinner.

  • So Skinner was a strict behaviorist.

  • And he's associated with the concept

  • of operant conditioning, which you may have heard of before.

  • So operant conditioning uses rewards and punishments

  • to increase or decrease a behavior.

  • And another behaviorist, Pavlov, who was a Russian physiologist,

  • and he's also considered by many as the father of behaviorism,

  • he's associated with classical conditioning.

  • And he used his famous dog example, the Pavlov Dog

  • Experiment, to show what classical conditioning was.

  • It basically places a neutral stimulus

  • with an unconditional stimulus to trigger

  • an involuntary response.

  • So in the case of the dogs, ringing

  • a bell in the presence of food is

  • what caused the dogs to begin salivating.

  • It triggered that involuntary response.

  • So these theorists, Skinner and Pavlov,

  • believed that the environment determines the behavior.

  • So that's why I put ourselves in our environment.

  • We're shaped by the environment.

  • And people have consistent behavior patterns

  • because we have particular kinds of response tendencies.

  • But these responses can change if we

  • encountering new situations.

  • And that's why our personality develops

  • over our entire lifespan.

  • It's constantly evolving and changing.

  • Now, what is this bridge in the middle connecting

  • one extreme of behaviorism to the other,

  • the mental approach to the behavioral approach?

  • Now, it's not to say one is right over the other.

  • They're just two different approaches of personality.

  • OK, so back to this, the bridge.

  • The bridge the middle is what we're

  • going to call the cognitive theory.

  • And the cognitive theory is considered

  • a bridge between classic behaviorism and other theories

  • that emphasize thinking and behavior,

  • such as the psychoanalytic theory.

  • And it's because the cognitive theory

  • treats thinking as a behavior and has

  • much in common with the behavioral theory.

  • So Albert Bandura combines the concepts

  • of observing, thinking, and behaving

  • in the social cognitive theory, which

  • we'll take a look at next.

All right, the behavioral theory is

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B1 中級

行為理論 (Behavioral Theory)

  • 58 6
    Liao Jess 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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