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Originally published in 1985, this title was a retrospective
appreciation of the late Richard L. Solomon. His pre- and
postdoctoral students from past years presented the 22 papers which
are published in this volume. The book reflects the breadth of
Solomon's impact through his teaching and research. The first part
contains a chapter that provides a bit of history in a
retrospective appreciation of the several foci of Solomon's
research career. This chapter sets the stage for those that follow
and reduces their diversity by providing a degree of historical
understanding. The second part on the role of properties of fear
contains chapters that address various issues associated with the
role of conditioned fear. The third part contains papers that
address cognitive, information-processing issues in the context of
Pavlovian conditioning of appetitive and aversive events, reasoning
and timing. The fourth part continues the exploration of the
phenomenon of learned helplessness first discovered in Solomon's
laboratory. The fifth part addresses various issues associated with
the Solomon and Corbit opponent-process theory of motivation and
affect. The final part, on applications to human and cultural
issues, contains chapters on such diverse subjects as
cross-cultural analyses of aggressive behavior in children, the
analysis of resistance to change in industrial organizations, the
concept of liberty in formulating research issues in developmental
psychology, and the status of free will in modern American
psychology.
Originally published in 1985, this title was a retrospective
appreciation of the late Richard L. Solomon. His pre- and
postdoctoral students from past years presented the 22 papers which
are published in this volume. The book reflects the breadth of
Solomon's impact through his teaching and research. The first part
contains a chapter that provides a bit of history in a
retrospective appreciation of the several foci of Solomon's
research career. This chapter sets the stage for those that follow
and reduces their diversity by providing a degree of historical
understanding. The second part on the role of properties of fear
contains chapters that address various issues associated with the
role of conditioned fear. The third part contains papers that
address cognitive, information-processing issues in the context of
Pavlovian conditioning of appetitive and aversive events, reasoning
and timing. The fourth part continues the exploration of the
phenomenon of learned helplessness first discovered in Solomon's
laboratory. The fifth part addresses various issues associated with
the Solomon and Corbit opponent-process theory of motivation and
affect. The final part, on applications to human and cultural
issues, contains chapters on such diverse subjects as
cross-cultural analyses of aggressive behavior in children, the
analysis of resistance to change in industrial organizations, the
concept of liberty in formulating research issues in developmental
psychology, and the status of free will in modern American
psychology.
For ten days, a number of neuroscientists met at Reisensburg to
attend a series of lectures and discussions, an Institute, on
animal learning. The students were drawn from a wide variety of
disciplines, including anatomy, biochemistry, pharmacology, physiol
ogy and zoology. It is probably true to say that many of them had
at best a sketchy knowledge about the learning behavior of animals,
about the conditions which are necessary for learning to take place
and about the theories that psychologists have constructed about
the learning processes. Was the Institute of any benefit to those
neuro scientists whose interests lay in studying the functioning of
the nervous system by manipulating it or probing it in some direct
way? Some twenty years ago the answer to this question would
probably have been "No"; and there is a very good reason why this
view might have been held, especially by students of the mammalian
nervous system. At that time most investigators used anaesthetised
animals, or animals immobilized in some other way such as by
surgically isolating the brain from the spinal cord, by dividing
the brain at various levels or through the use of paralyzing
agents. These con ditions achieved two things. On the one hand,
they allowed sub stantial advances to be made, particularly in the
analysis of sensory processing and in the analysis of the neuronal
mechanisms of relatively simple reflex action. On the other hand,
the experi mental conditions virtually eliminated complex
behavior."
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