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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments

Computational and Clinical Approaches to Pattern Recognition and Concept Formation - Quantitative Analyses of Behavior, Volume... Computational and Clinical Approaches to Pattern Recognition and Concept Formation - Quantitative Analyses of Behavior, Volume IX (Hardcover)
Michael L. Commons, Richard J. Herrnstein, Stephen M. Kosslyn, David B. Mumford
R3,829 Discovery Miles 38 290 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The ninth volume in this highly acclaimed series discusses the computational and clinical approaches to pattern recognition and concept formation regarding: visual and spatial processing models; computational models, templates and hierarchical models. An ideal reference for students and professionals in experimental psychology and behavioral analysis.

Computational and Clinical Approaches to Pattern Recognition and Concept Formation - Quantitative Analyses of Behavior, Volume... Computational and Clinical Approaches to Pattern Recognition and Concept Formation - Quantitative Analyses of Behavior, Volume IX (Paperback)
Michael L. Commons, Richard J. Herrnstein, Stephen M. Kosslyn, David B. Mumford
R1,293 Discovery Miles 12 930 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The ninth volume in this highly acclaimed series discusses the computational and clinical approaches to pattern recognition and concept formation regarding: visual and spatial processing models; computational models, templates and hierarchical models. An ideal reference for students and professionals in experimental psychology and behavioral analysis.

The Bell Curve - Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life (Paperback, 1st Ed): Richard J. Herrnstein, Charles Murray The Bell Curve - Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life (Paperback, 1st Ed)
Richard J. Herrnstein, Charles Murray
R578 R407 Discovery Miles 4 070 Save R171 (30%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The seminal book about IQ and class that ignited one of the most explosive controversies in decades, now updated with a new Afterword by Charles Murray

Breaking new ground and old taboos, Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray tell the story of a society in transformation. At the top, a cognitive elite is forming in which the passkey to the best schools and the best jobs is no longer social background but high intelligence. At the bottom, the common denominator of the underclass is increasingly low intelligence rather than racial or social disadvantage.

The Bell Curve describes the state of scientific knowledge about questions that have been on people's minds for years but have been considered too sensitive to talk about openly -- among them, IQ's relationship to crime, unemployment, welfare, child neglect, poverty, and illegitimacy; ethnic differences in intelligence; trends in fertility among women of different levels of intelligence; and what policy can do -- and cannot do -- to compensate for differences in intelligence. Brilliantly argued and meticulously documented, The Bell Curve is the essential first step in coming to grips with the nation's social problems.

A Source Book in the History of Psychology (Hardcover): Richard J. Herrnstein, Edwin G. Boring A Source Book in the History of Psychology (Hardcover)
Richard J. Herrnstein, Edwin G. Boring
R4,103 R3,698 Discovery Miles 36 980 Save R405 (10%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This is a source book unique in its scope, clarity, and general interest. Its 116 excerpts range in time from Epicurus (ca. 300 B.C.) to the turn of the present century and sometimes, when continuity requires, a little beyond (as to K. S. Lashley, 1929). It includes excerpts from Kepler (1604) on the inverted retinal image, Descartes (1650) on the soul's interaction with the machine of the body, Newton (1675) on the seven colors of the spectrum, Locke (1700) on association of ideas, Whytt (1751) on the spinal reflex, Weber (1834) on Weber's law, Darwin (1859) on evolution, Sechenov (1863) on reflexology, Hughlings Jackson (1884) on nervous dissolution, William James (1890) on associationism, Thorndike, Pavlov, Wertheimer, Watson, and 70 other great figures in the history of psychology.

Arranged by topic rather than in the usual strict chronological order, each of the first fourteen chapters traces the development of one important subject in experimental and quantitative psychology. The final chapter discusses the history of thinking about the nature of psychology itself. The editors provide an introduction to each chapter and each excerpt, indicating the significance of the content to follow and establishing historical continuity.

Crime Human Nature - The Definitive Study of the Causes of Crime (Paperback): Richard J. Herrnstein, James Q Wilson Crime Human Nature - The Definitive Study of the Causes of Crime (Paperback)
Richard J. Herrnstein, James Q Wilson
R815 Discovery Miles 8 150 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

From Simon & Schuster, Crime & Human Nature is the definitive study of the causes of crime. Assembling the latest evidence from the fields of sociology, criminology, economics, medicine, biology, and psychology and exploring the effects of such factors as gender, age, race, and family, two eminent social scientists frame a groundbreaking theory of criminal behavior.

The Matching Law - Papers in Psychology and Economics (Paperback, Revised): Richard J. Herrnstein The Matching Law - Papers in Psychology and Economics (Paperback, Revised)
Richard J. Herrnstein; Edited by Howard Rachlin, David I. Laibson
R1,305 Discovery Miles 13 050 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This impressive collection features Richard Herrnstein's most important and original contributions to the social and behavioral sciences--his papers on choice behavior in animals and humans and on his discovery and elucidation of a general principle of choice called the matching law. In recent years, the most popular theory of choice behavior has been rational choice theory. Developed and elaborated by economists over the past hundred years, it claims that individuals make choices in such a way as to maximize their well-being or utility under whatever constraints they face; that is, people make the best of their situations. Rational choice theory holds undisputed sway in economics, and has become an important explanatory framework in political science, sociology, and psychology. Nevertheless, its empirical support is thin. The matching law is perhaps the most important competing explanatory account of choice behavior. It views choice not as a single event or an internal process of the organism but as a rate of observable events over time. It states that instead of maximizing utility, the organism allocates its behavior over various activities in exact proportion to the value derived from each activity. It differs subtly but significantly from rational choice theory in its predictions of how people exert self-control, for example, how they decide whether to forgo immediate pleasures for larger but delayed rewards. It provides, through the primrose path hypothesis, a powerful explanation of alcohol and narcotic addiction. It can also be used to explain biological phenomena, such as genetic selection and foraging behavior, as well as economic decision making.

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