YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Cognitive Science Perspectives
Essays 451 - 480
In twelve pages this literature review considers the development of cognitive motor skills and the knowledge of results' effects. ...
This paper consists of an eight page overview, analysis, critique, and current debates concerning Festinger's Cognitive Dissonance...
In five pages this paper examines the argument that as people grow older their behaviors become less based upon behavioral emulati...
In six pages cognitive psychology is examined in terms of processes of problem solving and knowledge transference with Siegler's c...
In a paper consisting of twelve pages worth of essays on the subject of cognitive or behavioral therapy various applicable topics ...
In forty pages decision making and reasoning are examined in this consideration of human behavior theories in a consideration of s...
and the cognitive processes involved. An emphasis is made again (supporting the authors thesis) on the importance of realizing th...
science, man used to think himself a free agent possessing free will. Science gives us, instead, causal determinism wherein every...
In seven pages Lawrence Kohlberg and his theories of cognitive development are discussed in terms of their contributions, research...
This essay includes a self-analysis of level of cognitive development based on three theories. The analysis is made at the end of ...
This essay discusses three developmental areas: physical, cognitive, and psychosocial. Theorists include Piaget, Freud, Erikson, M...
One of the many therapeutic approaches is cognitive therapy. It is founded on the believe that faulty thinking causes us problems....
In five pages this paper compares these two educational theorists' thoughts on education and cognitive growth. Ten sources are ci...
In seven pages the listening skill necessary for counseling is the primary focus of this comparative analysis of cognitive behavio...
is responsible for such behaviors as domestic violence. By exploring how women have dealt with these traumatic and exploitive occ...
involved "between stimulus/input and response/output" (McLeod, 2006). The principal areas of interest in cognitive psychology are ...
Both Plato and Aristotle discussed learning and education, the need for different types of education, the effects of the arts on l...
follow a logical progression. Babies learn to coo, imitate sounds, babble, form their first words, and then their first sentences....
upon as wholly overwhelming. II. SUMMARY The individual conjures up a traumatic memory while the therapist counts from ...
6 years); latency (6 - 11 years); genital (11 to 18 years) (ETR Associates, 2006). Like Piaget, Freud did allow for some flexibili...
Development Institute, 2006). Piaget also noted three fundamental processes that were involved in intellectual growth, assimilat...
symbols, such as numbers in more complex ways; however, their thinking is, as yet, not entirely logical. The full development of c...
also be present, if possible the company should research Y Company to see if there are any personal issues between those who may u...
language and language facilitated thought. Speech, of course, develops in response to a childs interactions with others. This in...
impossible for this individual to learn or achieve in school. This is not because they are not intelligent enough to do so, it is ...
to understand than language that is lacking such support that contains new and/or difficult information (Chamot and OMalley, 1996)...
reality rather than the expectations of the experimenters (Wolf, 2002). The scientific method for determining the nature and cau...
there is no flexibility in the order of stages (Ginn, 2004). Piagets four stages of cognitive development are: 1. Sensorimotor s...
as social learning theory, linguistics, philosophy, neuroscience, and engineering (Boeree, 2000). And, most recently, they come fr...
patients did not respond to the same antidepressant drug. Individuals taking desipramine were successfully switched to amitriptyli...