Incentive relativity / Charles F. Flaherty.

By: Flaherty, Charles FMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Problems in the behavioural sciences: Publisher: [S.l.] : Cambridge University Press, 1999Description: 227 p. ; 23 cmISBN: 0521658632 (paperback); 9780521658638 (paperback)Subject(s): Incentive (Psychology) | Psychology, Comparative | Reinforcement (Psychology) | Reward (Psychology)DDC classification: 156.23224 LOC classification: BF505.R48Online resources: Amazon.com Summary: Incentive relativity is the study of the disappointment and irritation shown by animals and humans when they fail to obtain an expected reward. This book provides a full account of the subject, focusing on animals' responses to the relative value of rewards. These relativity effects cause stress in animals but they may also inspire adaptation beneficial to survival. This text shows how animal research may lead to an understanding of individual differences in discernment and susceptibility to disappointment, and to an understanding of both the advantages and disadvantages of dissatisfaction.
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Item type Current location Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Centre for International Peace & Stability (CIPS)
Centre for International Peace & Stability (CIPS)
NFIC General Stacks 156.23224 FLA 1996 (Browse shelf) Available CIPS0000854
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155.2 RYC 2000 Theories of personality / 155.33 HAM 2008 Cognition and sex differences / 155.4123 PAY 2005 Human motor development : 156.23224 FLA 1996 Incentive relativity / 158.1 COV 1994 First things first : 158.1 MEN 2013 Self-Empowerment 158.1 TAH 2013 Books that changed my life :

Incentive relativity is the study of the disappointment and irritation shown by animals and humans when they fail to obtain an expected reward. This book provides a full account of the subject, focusing on animals' responses to the relative value of rewards. These relativity effects cause stress in animals but they may also inspire adaptation beneficial to survival. This text shows how animal research may lead to an understanding of individual differences in discernment and susceptibility to disappointment, and to an understanding of both the advantages and disadvantages of dissatisfaction.

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