51 research outputs found
Social Gerontology- Integrative and Territorial Aspects: A Citation Analysis of Subject Scatter and Database Coverage
To determine the mix of resources used in social gerontology research, a citation analysis was conducted. A representative sample of citations was selected from three prominent gerontology journals and information was added to determine subject scatter and database coverage for the cited materials. Results indicate that a significant portion of gerontology research, even from a social science perspective, relies roughly equally on medical resources as it does social science resources. Furthermore, there is a small but defined core of literature constituting scholarly “territory” unique to gerontology. Analysis of database indexing indicated that broad, interdisciplinary databases provide more comprehensive coverage of the cited materials than do subject-specific databases
Self-productivity and complementarities in human development : evidence from MARS
This paper investigates the role of self-productivity and home resources in capability formation from infancy to adolescence. In addition, we study the complementarities between basic cognitive, motor and noncognitive abilities and social as well as academic achievement. Our data are taken from the Mannheim Study of Children at Risk (MARS), an epidemiological cohort study following the long-term outcome of early risk factors. Results indicate that initial risk conditions cumulate and that differences in basic abilities increase during development. Self-productivity rises in the developmental process and complementarities are evident. Noncognitive abilities promote cognitive abilities and social achievement. There is remarkable stability in the distribution of the economic and socio-emotional home resources during the early life cycle. This is presumably a major reason for the evolution of inequality in human development
Motivation and Action 3/E
This is the third English edition of Motivation and Action, an extensively
revised version of the second English edition and fifth German edition, with
four entirely new chapters. All chapters have been updated to incorporate
current research trends and findings, while new chapters on the motivation of
developmental regulatory behavior as well as the applied fields of school and
college, workplace, and sports were added. The chapters on the affiliation
motive, the power motive, and goals were completely rewritten by new
authors. Each chapter comes with an individual list of references, allowing
instructors to use them separately for their courses. In addition, the Springer
website for the book will provide useful materials for students and instructors
alike, including a glossary with key terms.
The first English edition of Motivation and Action, based on the second
German edition, was written by Heinz Heckhausen, who passed away on
October 30, 1988. Springer and I agreed that a revised edition of this influential textbook on motivational psychology was needed
Allgemeine Psychologie in Experimenten.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 329-343)
Motivation and action /
Includes bibliographical references (p. 445-500) and index.Motivation and action: introduction and overview -- Historical trends in motivation research -- Trait theories of motivation -- Situational determinants of behavior -- Motivation as a function of expectancy and incentive -- Achievement motivation -- Social bonding: affiliation motivation and intimacy motivation -- Power motivation -- Implicit and explicit motives -- Biopsychological aspects of motivation -- Motivation and volition in the course of action -- Individual differences in self-regulation -- Intrinsic motivation and flow -- Causal attribution of behavior and achievement -- Motivation and development
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