| 26. | Rapport congruency | is the Human tendency to form rapport with someone who seems to be portraying a common role, such as a friend. When someone acts like a friend or an enemy, the Human mind is more likely to More… 0.3 KB |
| 27. | Rashomon effect | is the effect of the subjectivity of perception on recollection, by which observers of an event are able to produce substantially different but equally plausible accounts of it. It is named More… 0.5 KB |
| 28. | Rational choice theory | Also known as rational action theory, is a framework for understanding and often formally modeling social and economic behavior. It is the dominant theoretical paradigm in microeconomics. It More… 1.9 KB |
| 29. | Rational temperament | The Rational temperament comprises the following role variants: Architect, Mastermind, Inventor, and Fieldmarshal. Rationals trust reason implicitly, relying on objective observations and More… 1.1 KB |
| 30. | Rational-emotive therapy | rational-emotive therapy A form of PSYCHOTHERAPY, most closely related to BEHAVIOUR THERAPY, developed by the American psychologist Albert Ellis. It attempts to meet irrational ideas More… 0.4 KB |
| 31. | Rational-emotive therapy - (RET) | A cognitive-restructuring-behavior therapy introduced by Albert Ellis and based on the assumption that much disordered behavior is rooted in absolutistic demands that people make upon More… 0.3 KB |
| 32. | Rationalisation | rationalisation In PSYCHOANALYSIS, aDEFENCE MECHANISM where a person justifies BEHAVIOUR about which he has UNCONSCIOUS GUILT feelings. |
| 33. | Rationality | Rationality as a term is related to the idea of reason, a word which following Webster's may be derived as much from older terms referring to thinking itself as from giving an account More… 1.4 KB |
| 34. | Rationalization | A defense mechanism in which a plausible reason reason is unconsciously invented by the ego to protect itself from confronting the real reason for an action, thought, or emotion. For More… 0.3 KB |
| 35. | Raw data | is a term for unprocessed data, it is also known as primary data. It is a relative term. Raw data can be input to a computer program or used in manual analysis procedures such as gathering More… 2.1 KB |
| 36. | Raymond Cattell | (20 Mar 1905 – 2 Feb 1998) was a British and American psychologist known for his exploration of a wide variety of substantive areas in psychology. These areas included: the basic dimensions More… 2.0 KB |
| 37. | Raymond Dean | Raymond Dean (born September 24, 1946 in New York) is the George and Frances Ball Distinguished Professor of Neuropsychology and professor of psychology at Ball State University. His More… 3.1 KB |
| 38. | Raymond Moody | (born June 30, 1944) is a psychologist and medical doctor. He is most famous as an author of books about life after death and near-death experiences (NDE), a term which he coined in 1975. More… 1.1 KB |
| 39. | Raynauds disease | A psychophysiological disorder in which capillaries, especially of the fingers and toes, are subject to spasm. It is characterized by cold, moist hands, is commonly accompanied by pain, and More… 0.2 KB |