This essay will look at the work of two very famous behaviourists. It will consider the differences and similarities as well as give descriptive detail of their actual experiments and see if any contribution was provided to mankind. It will focus on the theory of learning based upon the idea that all behaviors are acquired through conditioning which occurs through interaction with the environment. As this was done by experimenting with animals, it is also necessary to consider the rules and restrictions that are needed to be kept in mind as research ethics applies to any experiments done on any living thing.…
Behaviorism had many shortfalls with its primary one being that it excluded the effect of genetics entirely. It only accounted for what had been learned through reward and punishment only. Questions were raised and answers were missing when examining the question through the lens of behaviorism only. One area where ethologists observed discrepancies were in fixed-action patterns and critical periods in animals. Fixed-action patterns were behaviors that received little to no reward or punishment in which the animals engaged in and critical period referred to a specific period of time in which if a…
Due to lack of funds he was not able to enroll himself at the medical college. He worked as a biology teacher and a coach in Morgan College (Morgan State University,…
Alfred Kinsey was born in New Jersey on June 23, 1894 to Alfred Kinsey and Sarah Charles. As a young boy he suffered many illnesses such as rheumatic fever and typhoid. In high school, he began his interest in biology and botanical studies with the influence of his teacher. He started his career in biology as a zoologist and entomologist but later found interest in sexology. His parents were very religious therefore not agreeing with his choice of career. Due to this he considered his father’s wishes by studying engineering but decided that he was better off with biology.…
About Animals". In this article he sheds light on the human like qualities of animals,…
He came up with the idea of “natural selection” or “survival of the fittest.” (When environment favors one trait on animal so animal can live)…
believed in the harmony of the world, and it was Darwin himself who said that…
The evolutionary theory of attachment originates with the work of John Bowlby whom was inspired by the work of renowned ethologist Konrad Lorenz into studying animal attachment to their mothers; in an experiment Lorenz tested both the idea that goslings latch onto the first animate object they see within the first few hours, and how this would affect them throughout the course of their lives. To do so Lorenz divided a groups of unhatched goslings into two, the conditions of this research were that once hatched one group would be allowed to interact with their mother upon hatching but the other would be hatched directly into an incubator.…
Darwin died in 1882, since then there have been many developments that have added support to Darwin’s concepts…
The animal that I selected to observe is the meerkat. This research paper will explain the behavior patterns and social structures of the meerkat. After touring the entire zoo, I selected the meerkats because they were more active than any other species and their location was closer to view than any other animal. The weather was cloudy and warm and it was about 1500 hours when I arrived at the site to observe them.…
Sigmund Freud emphasizes on the role of using the past to create great things in the…
The development of behaviorism in one of the four key milestones that led to the development of cognitive psychology because it aided in finding the gap created when looking at human behavior. In the 1905s, “behaviorism was perceived by psychologists as proposing that the experiences of an animal during its lifetime completely determined its behavior-in other words, that the animal’s genetic inheritance counted for nothing and that what the animal did was a function of what it had been rewarded and punished for doing” (Willimgham, 2007, p. 22).…
Douglas Spalding was the architect of ethology, the scientific study of animal behavior. He started his research in the mid 1800s. His studies discounted British empiricist claims that animal skill regarding depth, distance; perception and sound localization were learned by the animals while they were young. Spalding study of ethology involved the determiner of behavior such as instinct is behavior that is predisposed or shaped by natural selection or innate pre-programmed behavior.…
Gregor Mendel was an Austrian Monk and scientist who is often referred to as the “Father of Genetics.” He was born on July, 22, 1822 in Heizendorf, Austria now known as Hyncice the Czech Republic. He was born into a poor pheasant family. Due to his farm-oriented upbringing, Mendel had shared an interest with the study of hybridization from the very young age of nine or ten. He became a monk at a monastery in Brunn, Moravis (now Brno in the Czech Republic. This was where he was given the name Gregor, the monastery belonged to the Augustinian Order of St. Thomas. While at the monastery, Mendel became interested with selective breeding in animals. Many people involved in the church believed that such experimentation was tampering with God’s way of life. They believed that certain experiments were acceptable in plants but such experiments with animals were not found acceptable in the church.…
| What did Lorenz demonstrate? Every species had a biolgically preprogrammed attachment response that appeared at a specific point soon after birth.…