Behavior or behaviour (see spelling differences) refers to the actions or reactions of an object or organism, usually in relation to the environment. Behavior can be conscious or subconscious, overt or covert, and voluntary or involuntary.

Contents

In animals

In animals, behavior is controlled by the endocrine system and the nervous system. The complexity of the behavior of an organism is related to the complexity of its nervous system. Generally, organisms with complex nervous systems have a greater capacity to learn new responses and thus adjust their behavior. Behaviors can be either innate or learned.

In psychology

Human behavior (and that of other organisms and mechanisms) can be common, unusual, acceptable, or unacceptable. Humans evaluate the acceptability of behavior using social norms and regulate behavior by means of social control. In sociology, behavior is considered as having no meaning, being not directed at other people and thus is the most basic human action, although can play a part in diagnosis of disorders such as autism. Animal behavior is studied in comparative psychology, ethology, behavioral ecology and sociobiology.

Behavior became an important construct in early 20th century Psychology with the advent of the paradigm known subsequently as "behaviorism". Behaviorism was a reaction against so-called "faculty" psychology which purported to see into or understand the mind without the benefit of scientific testing. Behaviorism insisted on working only with what can be seen or manipulated and in the early views of John B. Watson, a founder of the field, nothing was inferred as to the nature of the entity that produced the behavior. Subsequent modifications of Watson's perspective and that of so-called "classical conditioning" (see under Ivan Pavlov) led to the rise of operant conditioning, a theory advocated by B.F. Skinner, which took over the academic establishment up through the 1950s and was synonymous with "behaviorism" for many.

For studies on behavior, ethograms are used.

Outside psychology

Behavior outside of psychology includes physical property and chemical reactions.

Behavior as used in computer science is an anthropomorphic construct that assigns “life” to the activities carried out by a computer, computer application, or computer code in response to stimuli, such as user input. Also, "a behavior" is a reusable block of computer code or script that, when applied to an object (computer science), especially a graphical one, causes it to respond to user input in meaningful patterns or to operate independently. The term can also be applied to some degree to functions in mathematics, referring to the anatomy of curves.

In environmental modeling and especially in hydrology, a behavioral model means a model that is acceptably consistent with observed natural processes, i.e., that simulates well, for example, observed river discharge. It is a key concept of the so-called Generalized Likelihood Uncertainty Estimation (GLUE) methodology to quantify how uncertain environmental predictions are.

See also

Look up behavior in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Categories: Education-related terms | Human behavior | Psychology

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue Nov 3 02:39:09 2009. [ refresh local cache ]
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.


Reality event serves to make parents aware of dangerous teen behavior - Enid News & Eagle
news.google.com
Reality event serves to make parents aware of dangerous teen behavior

Enid News & Eagle

We also have evolved into an understanding of accountability and responsibility for irresponsible behavior . We also know there are more opportunities for ...
Google News Search: Behavior,
Sat Nov 21 10:45:12 2009
image aa behavior assessment jpg
looklocally.com
image aa behavior assessment jpg
230px x 360px | 19.40kB

[source page]

Employee Behavior Assessment and Testing by MBA Measured Behavioral Analysis

Yahoo Images Search: Behavior,
Sat Nov 21 05:08:30 2009
Key Determinants of Mobile Social Networking Behavior : Age and ...
emarketer.com
Key Determinants of Mobile Social Networking Behavior : Age and ...

Noah Elkin

Mon, 16 Nov 2009 20:44:31 GM

The two biggest determining factors in mobile social networking user . behavior. are youth and smartphones.

Google Blogs Search: Behavior,
Fri Nov 20 06:06:43 2009