Understanding human motivation: what makes people tick ? (Record no. 47474)
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000 -LEADER | |
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fixed length control field | 00722 a2200181 4500 |
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION | |
fixed length control field | 140323b2004 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 9780631219835 |
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 159.4 |
Item number | L2U6 |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Laming, Donald |
9 (RLIN) | 26300 |
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Understanding human motivation: what makes people tick ? |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc | Oxford |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc | Blackwell Publishing |
Date of publication, distribution, etc | 2004 |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | xvi, 311 p. |
365 ## - TRADE PRICE | |
Price amount | UKP 19.99 |
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE | |
Bibliography, etc | <br/>Table of contents<br/><br/>Preface and Acknowledgments xii<br/><br/>INTRODUCTION: THREE FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS 1<br/><br/>What is “Motivation”? 2<br/><br/>How Can We Study Human Motivation? 3<br/><br/>The use of anecdotal material 3<br/><br/>Three Fundamental Ideas 6<br/><br/>Quasi-mechanical behavior 6<br/><br/>Personal view and camera view 6<br/><br/>Social extrusion 7<br/><br/>Some omissions 8<br/><br/>The Plan of this Book 9<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 10<br/><br/>1 DETERMINISM AND FREE WILL 11<br/><br/>Determinism 12<br/><br/>Psychological theory treats behavior as determinate 13<br/><br/>Free Will 14<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 20<br/><br/>2 TERROR 21<br/><br/>The Origins of Fear 23<br/><br/>Components of Fear 25<br/><br/>Two stages in the genesis of fear 27<br/><br/>Fear as Instinct 30<br/><br/>Pathological fear 32<br/><br/>The Experience of Fear 33<br/><br/>Companionship 33<br/><br/>Military combat 34<br/><br/>Being in control 34<br/><br/>Training and skill 35<br/><br/>The Persistence of Fear 35<br/><br/>The persistence of memory 35<br/><br/>Recurrence of fear 36<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 37<br/><br/>3 SEX 38<br/><br/>Personal View and Camera View 40<br/><br/>Which view – personal view or camera view? 42<br/><br/>Lay psychology 43<br/><br/>Sexual Behavior is Quasi-Mechanical 45<br/><br/>“Mechanical” 45<br/><br/>“Substantially mechanical” 46<br/><br/>Acquisition of patterns of sexual behavior 47<br/><br/>The pleasure principle 49<br/><br/>Some Questions about Sexual Behavior 51<br/><br/>1 What are the extraneous signals which trigger sexual behavior? 51<br/><br/>2 What other signals or social constraints act to modify sexual behavior? 52<br/><br/>3 What about the intense feelings that accompany sexual activity? 53<br/><br/>4 What has this to do with the survival of the species? 54<br/><br/>5 What about the variation in sexual behavior from one adult to another? 56<br/><br/>6 Does sexual behavior have to match between male and female? 56<br/><br/>7 How much of our sexual behavior is innate and how much acquired?<br/><br/>4 CONSCIOUSNESS 60<br/><br/>Two Views of What People Do 61<br/><br/>The Meaning of “Consciousness” 62<br/><br/>Philosophical inquiry into consciousness 64<br/><br/>The neural signature of consciousness 65<br/><br/>Personal view and camera view 67<br/><br/>The Relationship of Subjective Experience to Objective Observation 69<br/><br/>The split brain 75<br/><br/>Why is consciousness important to the study of motivation? 79<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 80<br/><br/>5 BOREDOM 81<br/><br/>The Political Background 82<br/><br/>“Brainwashing” 83<br/><br/>Sensory Deprivation 84<br/><br/>Hallucinations 85<br/><br/>Disturbances of perception 92<br/><br/>Cognitive deficits 94<br/><br/>What does it all signify? 96<br/><br/>Boredom 96<br/><br/>Boredom at work 97<br/><br/>Leisure activities 97<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 102<br/><br/>6 SOCIAL CONVENTIONS 103<br/><br/>Milgram’s Experiments 104<br/><br/>Proximity of teacher and pupil 104<br/><br/>What is going on? 106<br/><br/>Relaxation of the conflict 108<br/><br/>The importance of social structure 109<br/><br/>Social Conventions 111<br/><br/>Social conventions are different in different societies 113<br/><br/>Social conventions also differ between subgroups within the one society 116<br/><br/>Understanding Milgram’s Results 117<br/><br/>Military obedience 119<br/><br/>The Stanford County Prison Experiment 120<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 123<br/><br/>7 THE RATE FOR THE JOB 124<br/><br/>How Much Do Different People Earn? 124<br/><br/>1 People doing the same job get paid the same (irrespective of how well they do it), unless, sometimes, they happen to be women 125<br/><br/>2 Those people closest to the money are paid the most 125<br/><br/>3 If someone can earn more by negotiating a private deal, well, good luck to her or him 128<br/><br/>Boardroom pay 130<br/><br/>MPs’ financial interests 134<br/><br/>What has this chapter really been about? 137<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 139<br/><br/>8 LONELINESS 140<br/><br/>The Experience of Being Alone 140<br/><br/>Applications of research into social isolation 143<br/><br/>“Brainwashing” 144<br/><br/>Feral Children 147<br/><br/>What may we conclude from the attempted rehabilitation of these three children? 151<br/><br/>Conclusions on Social Isolation 153<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 155<br/><br/>9 THE MORAL SANCTION 156<br/><br/>The Moral Sanction 157<br/><br/>An experimental study of extrusion 157<br/><br/>Whistleblowers 159<br/><br/>Examples from the wider society 162<br/><br/>Some Interim Conclusions on Extrusion 167<br/><br/>1 Extrusion is spontaneous 167<br/><br/>2 Moral constraints are subconscious 169<br/><br/>3 The sanction of extrusion is powerful 171<br/><br/>4 The underclass 171<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 173<br/><br/>10 PEER PRESSURE 174<br/><br/>Social Conformity 174<br/><br/>Informational and Normative Influences 177<br/><br/>Informational influence 178<br/><br/>Normative influence 179<br/><br/>Group cohesiveness 180<br/><br/>What Happens if the Majority is Not Unanimous? 181<br/><br/>Inversion of majority and minority 184<br/><br/>How Large Does the Majority Have to Be? 185<br/><br/>Individual differences between participants 186<br/><br/>Interrogation by the police 188<br/><br/>Summary 192<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 194<br/><br/>11 THE CROWD 195<br/><br/>The Problem 195<br/><br/>The flashpoint 196<br/><br/>“Group mind” 197<br/><br/>The random evolution of crowd behavior 197<br/><br/>1 Social Attitudes, Standards, Conventions Evolve 197<br/><br/>2 Social Conventions Can Evolve Rapidly 198<br/><br/>3 The Evolution of Social Conventions is Essentially Random 202<br/><br/>Rumor 202<br/><br/>Public protest 203<br/><br/>4 The Likelihood of Disorder, of Riot, Depends on the Crowd’s Reason for Being 205<br/><br/>5 The Likelihood of Disorder, of Riot, also Depends on the Social Setting 207<br/><br/>Summary 209<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 209<br/><br/>12 RAGE . . . 210<br/><br/>Why Are People Aggressive? 211<br/><br/>Frustration 212<br/><br/>Negative affect 212<br/><br/>Retaliation 213<br/><br/>Aggression as Instinct 213<br/><br/>The “terrible twos” 213<br/><br/>Instrumental and Emotional Aggression 214<br/><br/>Experimental Methods 215<br/><br/>The Buss aggression apparatus 216<br/><br/>The effects of alcohol 218<br/><br/>Aggression in Everyday Life 220<br/><br/>Domestic violence 220<br/><br/>Road rage 222<br/><br/>Social cognition 223<br/><br/>Crowding 225<br/><br/>Three principal factors 226<br/><br/>Summary 228<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 229<br/><br/>13 . . . AND ARE WE PROVOKED TO VIOLENCE BY THE MEDIA? 230<br/><br/>Video Nasties 230<br/><br/>“Copycat” Murders 231<br/><br/>Boxing 234<br/><br/>The effect of watching a boxing match 235<br/><br/>Neighbor Disputes 236<br/><br/>Sympathetic motivation 237<br/><br/>Suicides 238<br/><br/>The Long-Term Effect of Television Violence 239<br/><br/>Summary 243<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 244<br/><br/>14 MONEY 245<br/><br/>Two ways to become rich 246<br/><br/>The Psychopathic Personality 247<br/><br/>Machiavellianism 248<br/><br/>The $10 game 249<br/><br/>The con game 250<br/><br/>Pawnbroking 252<br/><br/>Eye contact 253<br/><br/>Credibility when lying 253<br/><br/>Pyramid selling 256<br/><br/>Commissions for financial services 257<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 261<br/><br/>15 GAMBLING 262<br/><br/>The Prevalence of Gambling 262<br/><br/>Rationality 264<br/><br/>The estimation of probabilities 265<br/><br/>Blackjack 268<br/><br/>How gamblers play blackjack 269<br/><br/>Roulette 270<br/><br/>Betting systems 271<br/><br/>Luck 272<br/><br/>Personal view and camera view 274<br/><br/>Sales Promotions 276<br/><br/>Questions for discussion 277<br/><br/>16 HUMAN MOTIVATION: HOW DOES IT WORK? 278<br/><br/>Three Fundamental Ideas 278<br/><br/>Personal view and camera view 278<br/><br/>Quasi-mechanical behavior 279<br/><br/>Social conventions 280<br/><br/>How Does it All Work? 281<br/><br/>Hormones 282<br/><br/>References 284<br/><br/>Index 302<br/> |
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC. | |
Summary, etc | Understanding Human Motivation is a lively presentation of how factors such as biological nature, instinct, past experience, and society determine what we do.<br/><br/><br/> Draws on many different domains of human behavior and links together many motivational factors such as fear, sex, consciousness, and rage.<br/> Illustrates the theoretical bases of motivation through real-life examples and case studies.<br/> Written in accessible manner for use in courses.<br/><br/>https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Understanding+Human+Motivation%3A+What+Makes+People+Tick%3F-p-9780470775189 |
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM | |
Topical term or geographic name as entry element | Motivation (Psychology) |
9 (RLIN) | 16485 |
852 ## - LOCATION/CALL NUMBER | |
Classification part | L2U6 |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Item type | Books |
Source of classification or shelving scheme | Dewey Decimal Classification |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Damaged status | Not for loan | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Item location | Full call number | Barcode | Date last seen | Koha item type |
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Vikram Sarabhai Library | Vikram Sarabhai Library | General Stacks | 04/05/2009 | Rack 6-A / Slot 170 (0 Floor, West Wing) | 159.4 L2U6 | 156023 | 04/09/2009 | Books |