com] • Schwartz‚ J. (May 6‚ 2004). Simulated prison in ’71 showed a fine line between ’normal ’ and ’monster. ’ New York Times‚ p. A20. • Zimbardo‚ P. G. (2004). A situationist perspective on the psychology of evil: Understanding how good people are transformed into perpetrators (pp. 21-50). In A. G. Miller (Ed.)‚ The social psychology of good and evil. New York: Guilford Press. • Zimbardo‚ P. G.‚ Maslach‚ C.‚ & Haney‚ C. (2000). Reflections on the Stanford Prison Experiment: Genesis‚ transformations
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Abstract This experiment involves a social dilemma‚ where participants had to choose whether or not to betray their partner. In 1950‚ while researching game theory‚ Flood & Dresher devised a model‚ that Albert Tucker later interpreted and named the Prisoners Dilemma. The participant receives a high reward of they betray their partner and their partner does not betray them‚ a medium reward if they and their partner both don’t betray each other‚ and no reward if they both betray each other. In Tuckers
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Describe the physiological approach to the study of the mind. Explain how Donders experiment can be repeated in a modern laboratory using the physiological approach to the study of the mind Donder’s work attempts to describe the processes going on in the mind‚ by analyzing cognitive activity into separate stages. Until Donder’s work‚ many scientists had assumed that the mental operations involved in responding to a stimulus occurred instantaneously. Donder was particularly interested in "timing
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politician Hamilton Fish‚ a distant relative. His father was 43 years older than his mother[9] and 75 years old at the time of his birth. Fish was the youngest child and had three living siblings: Walter‚ Annie‚ and Edwin Fish. He wished to be known as "Albert" after a dead sibling and to escape the nickname "Ham & Eggs" that he was given at an orphanage in which he spent much of his childhood. His family had a history of mental illness. His uncle suffered from religious mania. A brother was confined in
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KF 1(a) SOLUBILITY OF AN SALT BY TITRATION Date : __________________________ Name : _____________________________________________________ Matric no. : __________________________ 1. Objective(s) of Experiment To measure the change in solubility product of potassium periodate (KIO4)‚ when an inert salt (NaNO3) is added to the solution. 2. Why important to determine solubility? The solubility product expression can be used for predicting whether or not precipitation will occur
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C) Cognitive (J.Piaget‚ L. Vygotsky ) They posited children learn from hand on experiences. However unlike Piaget he claimed that timely and sensitive invention by adults when children are learning a new task (zone of proximal development) could help children to learn new tasks. Vygotsky also stressed the importance of social interaction he felt other children can guide each other’s development as well as adults. Vygotsky also thought that children needed to be active in their own learning and
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I like ponies alot because they are just soooo cool.3 Discussion Voice Activity 1.03 Discussion Voice Activity 11/26/13 9:12 PM 58 176 All 2 1.05 Discussion Voice Activity 1.05 Discussion Voice Activity 12/010 AM 52 191 All 3 1.06 Discussion Voice Activity 1.06 Discussion oice Activity 12/01/2 PM 46 141 All 4 1.08 Discussion Voice Activity 1.08 Discussion Voice Activity 11/2 47 122 All 5 2.04 Discussion Voice Activity 2.04 DActivity 11/21/13 9:34 PM 114 All 6 2.06 Discussion Voice Activity
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Experiments: Doctors‚ Experiments‚ and Results Melissa Anjeanette Edwards POLYTECH High School of Kent County‚ Woodside‚ Delaware Abstract During World War II experiments were done on the prisoners of war in Nazi Germany. Doctors for these camps came in all shapes and sizes including former S.S. Troops‚ Women‚ and a variety of prisoner doctors. The experiments differed as much as the doctors themselves; however they stayed the same in one factor‚ medical curiosity become killing in atrocious
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Ms. Chinea Albert Einstein – a Condensed Biography Einstein. Is there a single person in our day and age who has not heard that name? For just about everyone‚ the name ‘Einstein’ conjures up images of an almost supernatural genius‚ whose intellectual abilities far surpassed that of the rest of the population. His name has even grown to become an adjective – describing someone as an ‘Einstein’ implies that they are incredibly smart‚ perhaps even on genius level. What made Albert Einstein so well
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Throughout the experiments the size of the balloons stayed about the same size except for in experiment 3. Also the bottles that had more sugar had a stronger scent of alcohol and also contained more foam on top of the liquid. All yeast in each of the bottles seemed to have fermented at the same time and stopped/slowed down‚ the growing process‚ at the same time. Bottle 3 also would always overflow and the foam would fill the ballon in every experiment. Another trend with bottle 3 was that in the
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