• Thumbnail for Albert Bandura
    Albert Bandura (December 4, 1925 – July 26, 2021) was a Canadian-American psychologist. He was a professor of social science in psychology at Stanford...
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  • psychologists and scientists who have studied self-regulatory processes. Albert Bandura, a cognitive psychologist had significant contributions focusing on...
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  • collective name for a series of experiments performed by psychologist Albert Bandura to test his social learning theory. Between 1961 and 1963, he studied...
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  • experiences, and outside media influences. This theory was advanced by Albert Bandura as an extension of his social learning theory. The theory states that...
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  • is a landmark work in psychology published in 1986 by Albert Bandura. The book expands Bandura's initial social learning theory into a comprehensive theory...
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  • the research and experiments of Psychologists such as Julian Rotter, Albert Bandura and Robert Sears. In 1954, Julian Rotter developed his social learning...
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  • imitated by others. This process is most commonly discussed for children. Albert Bandura most memorably introduced the concept of behavioral modeling in his...
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  • social factors are explored as functions of growth and development. Albert Bandura also believes that moral development is best understood by considering...
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  • important roles of various internal processes in the learning individual. Albert Bandura is known for studying this theory. In the 1940s, B. F. Skinner delivered...
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  • Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control is a psychology book written by Albert Bandura in 1997 on self-efficacy, i.e. a person's belief in their own competence...
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  • specific goals. The concept was originally proposed by the psychologist Albert Bandura in 1977. Self-efficacy affects every area of human endeavor. By determining...
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  • strictures of psychoanalysis. Albert Bandura helped along the transition in psychology from behaviorism to cognitive psychology. Bandura and other social learning...
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  • capabilities to match the schematic labels. Social learning theorists, like Albert Bandura, suggest that adults not only provide models for children to imitate...
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  • deem other inappropriate behavior acceptable through poor modeling. Albert Bandura claims that children continually learn desirable and undesirable behavior...
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  • Ballantine Press, 1978, pp. 91–92. Albert Bandura (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York: Freeman. Albert Bandura, Self-Efficacy: The Exercise...
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  • concept of observational learning was introduced by Albert Bandura, whose social cognitive theory Bandura believes that people learn best by observing others...
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  • psychologist Albert Bandura which states that a person's behavior both influences and is influenced by personal factors and the social environment. Bandura accepts...
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  • formed their own self-defense organizations. In 1990, psychologist Albert Bandura used Model Mugging for a psychology study where he and Elizabeth Ozer...
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  • Joffe-Ellis. Prometheus Books, 2009. ISBN 1-59102-452-8. Alfred Adler Albert Bandura Aaron T. Beck William Glasser George Kelly Alfred Korzybski Maxie Clarence...
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  • and coaching should bring about 'self efficacy' in the trainee, as Albert Bandura formulated: a person's belief about his capabilities to produce effects...
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  • Thumbnail for Association for Psychological Science
    Albert Bandura Graduate Research Award: By recognizing and awarding the most outstanding graduate, empirical research paper, the APS Albert Bandura Graduate...
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  • Thumbnail for Motivational speaker
    Brought into perspective by Victor Vroom, B.F Skinner, Ruth Kanfer, and Albert Bandura, it addresses the needs of learning and expectancy and realizes that...
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  • personality trait— in contrast, "self-efficacy" is defined by psychologist Albert Bandura as a "belief in one's ability to succeed in specific situations or accomplish...
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  • death in 1989. Following B. F. Skinner, Jean Piaget, Sigmund Freud, and Albert Bandura, Festinger was the fifth most cited psychologist of the 20th century...
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  • determinists would most likely adopt a similar point of view. Psychologist Albert Bandura has observed that moral agents engage in selective moral disengagement...
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  • this research has been guided by social learning theory, developed by Albert Bandura. Social learning theory suggests that one way in which human beings...
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  • Thumbnail for American Psychological Association
     Theodore H. Blau 1976  Wilbert J. McKeachie 1975  Donald T. Campbell 1974  Albert Bandura 1973  Leona E. Tyler 1972  Anne Anastasi 1971  Kenneth B. Clark 1970...
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  • 473.2026. doi:10.1080/0305724022014322. S2CID 146449693. Bandura (1999). p. 196. Bandura, Albert (2002-06-01). "Selective Moral Disengagement in the Exercise...
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  • Thumbnail for Marshall Rosenberg
    Thomas Szasz and Asylums by Erving Goffman. He also remembered reading Albert Bandura on "Psychotherapy as a learning process". Rosenberg's practicum placements...
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  • with the publication of his book, The Myth of Mental Illness. 1961 – Albert Bandura published the Bobo doll experiment, a study of behavioral patterns of...
    159 KB (16,506 words) - 08:40, 18 July 2024