Posted Last post to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
From everything we've done this semester and all the topics we've covered, the one subject I will remember the most clearly and definitely five years from now is chapter 5 from our text book on altered states of consciousness, more...
Posted Life-long affects of attachment to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
John Bowlby, M.D., a British psychologist who is considered the father of the attachment theory claims that the process of attachment which occurs very early in our life, will affect us our whole life. As stated in this video troubles...
Posted weighing the chances to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
According a myth found on snoops.com A woman over the age of 40 has a better chance of being victim of a terrorist attack than getting married. There are a few principles of scientific thinking that would prove this to...
Posted Reinforcement with Autism to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
The little girl Lisa from the Autism video at https://www2.webvista.umn.edu:443/webct/cobaltMainFrame.dowebct?appforward=%2Fwebct%2FviewMyWebCT.dowebct is a great example of the concept of reinforcement and extinction from chapter 6 in our textbook. Lisa's teacher uses positive reinforcements to teach her to sit in a chair...
Posted hypnosis and weight loss to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
There's a section in chapter five that describes hypnosis because it's an altered state of consciousness. As Katherine Zeratsky, a nutritionist for the Mayo Clinic, says in a Q and A with an expert found at , "When you're under...
Posted blind girl sees to Section 16 and 17 F11 PSY 1001
I found a story about a girl named Georgia Green who was a college student when the first atomic bomb was being tested in the U.S. Georgia Green was functionally blind, and this meant that she couldn't see mostly everything...
Posted blind girl sees to Blind girl sees
I found a story about a girl named Georgia Green who was a college student when the first atomic bomb was being tested in the U.S. Georgia Green was functionally blind, and this meant that she couldn't see mostly everything...