Results 301 to 310 of about 13,091,254 (361)
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Happiness and Social Behavior

Psychological Science, 2019
It is often assumed that there is a robust positive symmetrical relationship between happiness and social behavior: Social relationships are viewed as essential to happiness, and happiness is thought to foster social relationships. However, empirical support for this widely held view is surprisingly mixed, and this view does little to clarify which ...
Jordi Quoidbach   +4 more
openaire   +5 more sources

Social Behavior as a Transdiagnostic Marker of Resilience.

Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 2021
The recent shift from psychopathology to resilience and from diagnosis to functioning requires the construction of transdiagnostic markers of adaptation. This review describes a model of resilience that is based on the neurobiology of affiliation and the
R. Feldman
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Culture and Social Behavior

Cross-Cultural Explorations, 2019
CHAPTER 1: Introduction: Our Culture Influences Who We Are and Our Understanding of Social BehaviorCHAPTER 2: Why Bother Study Culture-Social Behavior RelationshipsCHAPTER 3: How to Study CulturesCHAPTER 4: The Analysis of Subjective CulturesCHAPTER 5 ...
H. Triandis
openaire   +3 more sources

Social Behavior: Social Neurosciences and Social Behavior: An Introduction

2016
Social neuroscience seeks both to understand how the brain gives rise to cognitive processes required for social interaction and decision making, and to understand the neural mechanisms of and to help design treatments for dysfunctions of social cognition.
Adolphs, Ralph, Spezio, Michael
openaire   +2 more sources

Social Play Behavior

2022
Play is a behavior that fascinates scientists from a wide variety of disciplines. In this chapter, we will take a neurobiological view on this behavior, with a special focus on social play behavior in rats, which is the most widely studied form of play behavior.
Vanderschuren, Louk, Achterberg, Marijke
openaire   +3 more sources

The Behavioral and Social Sciences

Science, 1980
In the social sciences, as in other sciences, progress is often paced by advances in observational techniques and instruments. This article reviews some of the recent technical progress in the social sciences and then discusses three substantive frontier areas that are particularly exciting at present: evolutionary theory, especially in relation to ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Comparative Social Behavior

2012
Evolutionary forces of selfishness, reciprocity, and kin selection can bring groups of animals together. This chapter includes cooperation in birds and invertebrates starting with aggregated nesting in swallows. In swallows, a distinct monogamous pair maintains each nest and the aggregation results from widespread attraction of birds to (limited) good ...
Michael D. Breed, Janice Moore
openaire   +2 more sources

Rationality and social behavior

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2003
This article penetrates the relationship between social behavior and rationality. A critical analysis is made of efforts to classify some behaviors as altruistic, as they simultaneously meet criteria of rationality by not truly being self-destructive. Newcomb's paradox is one attempt to create a hybrid behavior that is both irrational and still meets ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Antipathy and Social Behavior

American Journal of Sociology, 1946
Much of human behavior may be called negative, since it involves avoidance. This behavior is in part rational or intentional, but much of it is nonrational antipathies. Though common, antipathies usually function below the level of attention. They appear to resemble allergies but with significant differences.
openaire   +3 more sources

Social Behavior

Science, 1979
JOHN P. HOUSTON   +3 more
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