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Showing papers by "Albert Bandura published in 1972"


Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1972
TL;DR: This chapter discusses the limitations ascribed to modeling in the experimental methodology rather than in the phenomenon itself, and shows that modeling influences effect broader and more complex psychological changes than is commonly assumed.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the limitations ascribed to modeling in the experimental methodology rather than in the phenomenon itself. Several experiments are conducted requiring a higher-order form of modeling. These studies use a paradigm in which persons display a consistent style of behavior to diverse stimuli; tests for generalized modeling effects are subsequently conducted by different experimenters in different social settings with the models absent and with different stimulus items. The results disclose that observers respond to new stimulus situations in a manner consistent with the models' dispositions even though subjects had never observed the models responding to these particular stimuli. It is shown that modeling influences effect broader and more complex psychological changes than is commonly assumed. With few exceptions, the experiments conducted in the laboratory use a nonresponse acquisition procedure in which a person simply observes a model's behavior; however, otherwise the person exhibits neither overt responses nor is administered any reinforcing stimuli during the acquisition period. As in this mode of response acquisition, observers can learn the modeled responses only in representational forms, the modeling paradigm provides an interesting means of studying symbolic processes and their performance guiding functions.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trained pigeons to reward their own performances by eating from a freely available food source only after pecking a disc, and the birds maintained faultless self-reinforcement for hundreds of trials after the punishment contingency was removed so that the birds could safely feed themselves without performing any pecking responses.

35 citations