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May 2

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If Drive =10, var = 1. H1 = 4.0 E = 40. H2 = 3.5 E = 38. H3 = 3.1 E = 34. H4 = 3.0 E = 30 ... In a given situation, possible responses vary in habit strength, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: May 2


1
May 2
2
Clark Hulls (1943) Drive Theory
  • Excitatory Potential Drive x Habit Strength
  • (E D x H)

3
Habit HierarchiesD X H
  • If Drive 1, var 1
  • H1 4.0 E 4.0
  • H2 3.5 E 3.5
  • H3 3.1 E 3.1
  • H4 3.0 E 3.0
  • H5 2.0 E 2.0
  • H6 1.0 E 1.0
  • If Drive 10, var 1
  • H1 4.0 E 40
  • H2 3.5 E 38
  • H3 3.1 E 34
  • H4 3.0 E 30
  • H5 2.0 E 20
  • H6 1.0 E 10

Frequency/ ? Probability
E ?
4
Clark Hulls (1943) Drive Theory
  • In a given situation, possible responses vary in
    habit strength, creating a habit hierarchy
  • As drive increases, responses highest in the
    habit hierarchy (dominant responses) become more
    and more likely to occur, at the expense of
    non-dominant responses
  • Increases in drive facilitate
  • Dominant Responses

5
Drive, Task Complexity, and Performance
  • On simple, familiar tasks, the dominant response
    is correct
  • On difficult, novel tasks, the dominant response
    is incorrect
  • As drive increases, performance improves on
    simple tasks and deteriorates on difficult tasks

6
Drive, Task Complexity, and Performance
  • Simple and complex tasks can be used to detect
    changes in drive (arousal)
  • The Stroop task (Stroop Stroop)
  • Cat Girl Wagon Girl Cat Wagon
  • Red Blue Green Green Red Blue
  • Red Blue Green Blue Red Blue

7
Aspects of Good Theory
  • Explanation
  • A good theory explains a large amount of what we
    already know (about what people do)
  • Prediction
  • A good theory allows us to predict what will
    happen (what people will do)
  • Control
  • A good theory tells us how to change (what people
    do)

8
Aspects of Good Theory
  • Falsifiable
  • A good theory can be shown to be wrong it is
    testable
  • Boundary Conditions
  • No theory explains everything a good one
    specifies when it applies and when it does not
  • Heuristic Value
  • A good theory leads us to ask questions that
    otherwise would not have occurred to us

9
The Process of Theory Development
  • We have some theories, relatively old, that have
    stood the test of time and are well understood
  • Current theories are in the process of testing
    and challenging here we tolerate much more
    uncertainty
  • New findings will often change the way we think
    about things, even older well-established
    theories
  • Our current best wrong theory is what we are
    typically using at the frontiers of knowledge

10
Changing Gears The Effects of Groups on
Performance
  • Question do people perform better when they are
    alone, or with others?
  • Two paradigms
  • Coaction (all engaged in the same activity)
  • Audience (being observed by others)

11
Triplett (1898)
Triplett noticed that cyclists were faster
racing in groups than against the clock
Coaction
12
Triplett (1898)
Audience
13
Triplett (1898)
  • Triplett theorized that racing together releases
    the competitive instinct, increases arousal, and
    improves performance
  • Consistent with this hypothesis, when children
    were asked to wind fishing reels, either by
    themselves or in groups (coaction), those in
    groups wound faster

14
Effects of Groups on Performance
  • Unfortunately, many subsequent studies of
    performance alone and in groups generated a very
    inconsistent set of findings sometimes
    performance was better in groups, sometimes it
    was better when alone

15
The Zajonc solution
  • Robert Zajonc
  • Zajonc
  • Science
  • Zajonc, R.B. (1965). Social facilitation.
    Science, 149, 269-274.
  • Hypothesis The mere presence of conspecifics is
    a source of arousal.

16
Zajonc (1965) Theory of Social Facilitation
17
Blatta Orientalis
Photophobic
18
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
19
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
20
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
21
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
22
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
23
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
24
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
25
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
26
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
27
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
28
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
Dependent Variable Running time in seconds
29
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
Dependent Variable Running time in seconds
30
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
Dependent Variable Running time in seconds
31
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
Dependent Variable Running time in seconds
32
Zajonc, Heingartner, Herman (1969)
Dependent Variable Running time in seconds
33
Social Facilitation (Zajonc, 1965)
  • Zajonc argued that it is the mere presence of
    others that causes increased arousal
  • Large number of studies consistent with this
    position
  • Others have suggested that with humans more than
    mere presence is required
  • Evaluation apprehension
  • Social facilitation only occurs when those others
    are seen as potential evaluators
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