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Sims, Chris R.; Neth, Hansjorg; Jacobs, Robert A.; Gray, Wayne D. – Psychological Review, 2013
Melioration--defined as choosing a lesser, local gain over a greater longer term gain--is a behavioral tendency that people and pigeons share. As such, the empirical occurrence of meliorating behavior has frequently been interpreted as evidence that the mechanisms of human choice violate the norms of economic rationality. In some environments, the…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Correlation, Learning Experience, Behavior Patterns
Stroebe, Wolfgang; van Koningsbruggen, Guido M.; Papies, Esther K.; Aarts, Henk – Psychological Review, 2013
Theories of eating regulation often attribute overweight to a malfunction of homeostatic regulation of body weight. With the goal conflict model of eating, we present a new perspective that attributes the difficulty of chronic dieters (i.e., restrained eaters) in regulating their food intake to a conflict between 2 incompatible goals--namely,…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Body Weight, Nutrition, Eating Habits
Van Orden, Kimberly A.; Witte, Tracy K.; Cukrowicz, Kelly C.; Braithwaite, Scott R.; Selby, Edward A.; Joiner, Thomas E., Jr. – Psychological Review, 2010
Suicidal behavior is a major problem worldwide and, at the same time, has received relatively little empirical attention. This relative lack of empirical attention may be due in part to a relative absence of theory development regarding suicidal behavior. The current article presents the interpersonal theory of suicidal behavior. We propose that…
Descriptors: Suicide, Interpersonal Relationship, Habituation, Behavior Theories
Purcell, Braden A.; Heitz, Richard P.; Cohen, Jeremiah Y.; Schall, Jeffrey D.; Logan, Gordon D.; Palmeri, Thomas J. – Psychological Review, 2010
Stochastic accumulator models account for response time in perceptual decision-making tasks by assuming that perceptual evidence accumulates to a threshold. The present investigation mapped the firing rate of frontal eye field (FEF) visual neurons onto perceptual evidence and the firing rate of FEF movement neurons onto evidence accumulation to…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Perception, Behavior Theories, Evidence
Verguts, Tom; Notebaert, Wim – Psychological Review, 2008
The conflict monitoring model of M. M. Botvinick, T. S. Braver, D. M. Barch, C. S. Carter, and J. D. Cohen (2001) triggered several research programs investigating various aspects of cognitive control. One problematic aspect of the Botvinick et al. model is that there is no clear account of how the cognitive system knows where to intervene when…
Descriptors: Conflict, Models, Behavior Theories, Self Control
Regenwetter, Michel; Ho, Moon-Ho R.; Tsetlin, Ilia – Psychological Review, 2007
This project reconciles historically distinct paradigms at the interface between individual and social choice theory, as well as between rational and behavioral decision theory. The authors combine a utility-maximizing prescriptive rule for sophisticated approval voting with the ignorance prior heuristic from behavioral decision research and two…
Descriptors: Internet, Heuristics, Voting, Elections
Huang, Liqiang; Pashler, Harold – Psychological Review, 2007
A theory is presented that attempts to answer two questions. What visual contents can an observer consciously access at one moment? Answer: only one feature value (e.g., green) per dimension, but those feature values can be associated (as a group) with multiple spatially precise locations (comprising a single labeled Boolean map). How can an…
Descriptors: Attention, Search Strategies, Attention Control, Visual Stimuli
Ashby, F. Gregory; Ennis, John M.; Spiering, Brian J. – Psychological Review, 2007
A biologically detailed computational model is described of how categorization judgments become automatic in tasks that depend on procedural learning. The model assumes 2 neural pathways from sensory association cortex to the premotor area that mediates response selection. A longer and slower path projects to the premotor area via the striatum,…
Descriptors: Biology, Computation, Models, Classification
Epley, Nicholas; Waytz, Adam; Cacioppo, John T. – Psychological Review, 2007
Anthropomorphism describes the tendency to imbue the real or imagined behavior of nonhuman agents with humanlike characteristics, motivations, intentions, or emotions. Although surprisingly common, anthropomorphism is not invariant. This article describes a theory to explain when people are likely to anthropomorphize and when they are not, focused…
Descriptors: Motivation, Cultural Influences, Social Influences, Behavior Theories

McHose, James H.; Moore, John N. – Psychological Review, 1976
Focuses on the effects of unsignaled changes in reinforcement schedules on the level of responding in instrumental conditioning and, particularly, on the theoretical bases of the "elation" and "depression" effects associated with increases and decreases in the parameters of reinforcement. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Expectation, Psychological Studies, Reinforcement

Klinger, Eric – Psychological Review, 1975
This article proposes a theoretical framework for accommodating psychological aspects of incentive relationships. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Behavioral Objectives, Charts, Concept Formation

Kukla, Andre; Scher, Hal – Psychological Review, 1986
A recent article by Nicholls on achievement motivation is criticized on three points: (1) definitions of achievement motives are ambiguous; (2) behavioral consequences predicted do not follow from explicit theoretical assumptions; and (3) Nicholls's account of the relation between his theory and other achievement theories is factually incorrect.…
Descriptors: Achievement, Behavior Theories, Goal Orientation, Motivation

Nicholls, John G. – Psychological Review, 1986
The author replies to criticism of his interpretation of achievement motivation. A distinction between goals of demonstrating and developing ability cannot be made in task involvement. Attempts to extend the author's theory by adding this distinction suffer from a failure to predict when these different goals will predominate. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Achievement, Behavior Theories, Goal Orientation, Motivation

Phillips, D. C.; Orton, Rob. – Psychological Review, 1983
Several criticisms of Bandura's "reciprocal determinism" are offered: the unidirectional causal account works in cases cited by Bandura; Mackie's criticism of Russell's view of causation also applies to Bandura; and "reciprocal determinism" is a misleading expression when stressing person/environment interactions. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Behavior, Behavior Theories, Individual Differences, Models

Bandura, Albert – Psychological Review, 1983
In their analysis of reciprocal determinism, Phillips and Orton (TM 509 061) mistakenly assume that behavior, cognitive and other personal factors, and environmental events operate as a simultaneous wholistic interaction. Contrary to this belief, the interactants in triadic reciprocality work their mutual effects sequentially over variable time…
Descriptors: Behavior, Behavior Theories, Individual Differences, Sequential Approach