Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Dan Bernstein
Does knowing a person s gender give us a reliable sense of how aggressive, competitive, or emotional he or she is? In this volume leading scholars examine different aspects of this issue. Carol Tavris discusses the state of gender research and the reasons for the continuing popularity of essentialist theories of gender opposition. Nicki Crick and a team of researchers reassess stereotyped assumptions about gender and aggression, employing a more comprehensive definition of aggression as damaging relations rather than only bodies. Diane Gill looks at the relationship between gender and sports...
Does knowing a person s gender give us a reliable sense of how aggressive, competitive, or emotional he or she is? In this volume leading scholars exa...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Richard Dienstbier
The study of animal behavior throws light on everything said to be natural: social and family relations, mating, communication, and learning. Comparative Perspectives in Modern Psychology illustrates that human behavior is best understood through a method of comparative psychology, based on evolutionary theory that views behavior as the result of the complex interplay of genetics and environment.
Contents include: The Comparative Psychology of Monogamy by Donald A. Dewsbury; Coming to Terms with the Everyday Language of Comparative Psychology by Meredith J. West and Andrew P. King;...
The study of animal behavior throws light on everything said to be natural: social and family relations, mating, communication, and learning. Compa...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Gary B. Melbon
The effect of the law on human behavior is contemporary society nothing less is the concern of this important book. It is curious that scholars in psychology and law have largely neglected this topic because studies of the effects of law on behavior may have much to teach about the role of social regulation in human motivation more generally. Similarly, such studies may offer jurisprudential scholars new ways of thinking about the role of law in human experience.Here seven leading experts on law and the social sciences discuss the contributions their research c an make to the legal system....
The effect of the law on human behavior is contemporary society nothing less is the concern of this important book. It is curious that scholars in psy...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium P. Clayton Rivers
Alcohol and drug abuse are among the gravest and most widespread problems clinical psychologists must treat. Though the problems seem perennial, diagnosis and treatment have been steadily refined, allowing professional psychologists to assess more variables and to offer more effective help. This volume surveys thelatest advances in research and therapy and reconsiders standard treatment practices.
The contributors to Alcohol and Addictive Behavior, all of them established professionals, focus on such key issues as the effect of addiction on the family, the influence of genetics, and...
Alcohol and drug abuse are among the gravest and most widespread problems clinical psychologists must treat. Though the problems seem perennial, diagn...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Theo B. Sonderegger
Gender, an important concept in psychology, is brought into sharp focus in the 1984 Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, which presents important new findings in eight papers, four dealing with sex differences and four with gender as a variable.
The papers on sex differences with Ann Anastasi's "Reciprocal Relations between Cognitive and Affective Development with Implications for Sex Differences," in which the author relates aptitudes aboutthe sex appropriateness of behaviors to attitudes and task performance. The effects of prenatal sex hormones on gender identity and gender-rolebehavior are...
Gender, an important concept in psychology, is brought into sharp focus in the 1984 Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, which presents important new fin...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Theo B. Sonderegger
The prestigious group of scholars assembled for this thirty-ninth volume of the Nebraska Symposium on Motivation address important issues in "Psychology and Aging." In the first chapter, James E. Birren and Laurel M. Fisher consider slowness of behavior as a general condition often associated with advancing age and explore its implications of a wide range of hierarchical functions. In succeeding chapters Martha Storandt assesses memory-skills training for older adults, and Irene Mackintosh Hulicka offers, in a previously unpublished G. Stanley Hall lecture, cogent reasons for teaching about...
The prestigious group of scholars assembled for this thirty-ninth volume of the Nebraska Symposium on Motivation address important issues in "Psycholo...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium Richard Dienstbier
The study of animal behavior throws light on everything said to be natural: social and family relations, mating, communication, and learning. Comparative Perspectives in Modern Psychology illustrates that human behavior is best understood through a method of comparative psychology, based on evolutionary theory that views behavior as the result of the complex interplay of genetics and environment.
Contents include: The Comparative Psychology of Monogamy by Donald A. Dewsbury; Coming to Terms with the Everyday Language of Comparative Psychology by Meredith J. West and Andrew P. King;...
The study of animal behavior throws light on everything said to be natural: social and family relations, mating, communication, and learning. Compa...
The effect of the law on human behavior is contemporary society nothing less is the concern of this important book. It is curious that scholars in psychology and law have largely neglected this topic because studies of the effects of law on behavior may have much to teach about the role of social regulation in human motivation more generally. Similarly, such studies may offer jurisprudential scholars new ways of thinking about the role of law in human experience.Here seven leading experts on law and the social sciences discuss the contributions their research c an make to the legal system....
The effect of the law on human behavior is contemporary society nothing less is the concern of this important book. It is curious that scholars in psy...
Nebraska Symposium Nebraska Symposium P. Clayton Rivers
Alcohol and drug abuse are among the gravest and most widespread problems clinical psychologists must treat. Though the problems seem perennial, diagnosis and treatment have been steadily refined, allowing professional psychologists to assess more variables and to offer more effective help. This volume surveys the latest advances in research and therapy and reconsiders standard treatment practices.
The contributors to Alcohol and Addictive Behavior, all of them established professionals, focus on such key issues as the effect of addiction on the family, the influence of genetics,...
Alcohol and drug abuse are among the gravest and most widespread problems clinical psychologists must treat. Though the problems seem perennial, diagn...