100 things Wiki
Explore
Main Page
Discuss
All Pages
Community
Interactive Maps
Recent Blog Posts
Wiki Content
Recently Changed Pages
100-Things Summary
Déjà vu
Complex span measures of WMC and its relation to processing speed, etc.
Choice Overload
Deficit-based approach & research participants with amnesia (E.P., Clive Wearing, H.M., etc.)
Split Brain Experiments
Hot hand fallacy
Quests
Infobox quest/doc
Infobox quest
Events
Infobox event
Infobox event/doc
Community
Help
FANDOM
Fan Central
BETA
Games
Anime
Movies
TV
Video
Wikis
Explore Wikis
Community Central
Start a Wiki
Don't have an account?
Register
Sign In
Sign In
Register
100 things Wiki
105
pages
Explore
Main Page
Discuss
All Pages
Community
Interactive Maps
Recent Blog Posts
Wiki Content
Recently Changed Pages
100-Things Summary
Déjà vu
Complex span measures of WMC and its relation to processing speed, etc.
Choice Overload
Deficit-based approach & research participants with amnesia (E.P., Clive Wearing, H.M., etc.)
Split Brain Experiments
Hot hand fallacy
Quests
Infobox quest/doc
Infobox quest
Events
Infobox event
Infobox event/doc
Community
Help
Editing
Social Cognition Theory
Back to page
Edit
Edit source
View history
Talk (0)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
Albert Bandura (1961) conducted an experiment with children using Bobo dolls in which children observed adults model violent behavior at the dolls. Subsequently, those children who saw adults being reinforced for the violent behavior exhibited similar violent behavior, and children not exposed to the model of violence did not exhibit said behavior. His findings suggested that humans, in addition to learning through trial and error (classical and operant conditioning) also learn through observational learning. These findings led to Social Cognitive Theory. Within this theory, Bandura proposed that three determinants (personal, behavioral, and environmental) influence the likelihood for an observed behavior to be reproduced, and four components of observational learning: attention, retention, production, and motivational process. Bandura, A., Social foundations of thought and action : a social cognitive theory. 1986, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to the 100 things Wiki are considered to be released under the CC-BY-SA
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Follow on IG
TikTok
Join Fan Lab