Search results for “documental de áfida”

Do you want to save someone's life | DKMS Germany

Of course you would save someone's life! But why don't you do it? 🤔 It's mega easy! In our video, we'll tell you just three short steps. 💪 It's really easy: open your mouth. Chopsticks in. Be a donor. Order your registration set on dkms.de/yt-registrierung and become a stem cell donor. Maybe you

Video Games and Education

"Playing is the highest form of research," Einstein is said to have said. Nowadays, gaming also happens in video games, and teachers use it in class or for homework. For this video, we teamed up with the folks at G2A – the world's largest gaming marketplace. We'll learn about the three dimensions of

Skinner's Operant Conditioning

Operant conditioning, also known as learning from success, is based on the assumption that we can reinforce or decrease a certain behavior by adding a consequence. For example, if a dog makes a pile on the carpet, we can either reinforce the behavior so that the dog does it again. Or we punish him

Freud's 5 Stages of Psychosexual Development

Freud's theory of psychosexual development states that we go through five critical phases in the course of our growing up. Our sex drive, which Freud called the libido, is concentrated in a different erogenous zone at each stage. The phases are called: oral, anal, phallic, latency and genital. If

Exam Anxiety - Research on Learning and Anxiety

We can only remember certain moments or movies because they have been stored in our memory under the influence of emotions. When we win or fail, cry or celebrate, we learn quickly, intensively and a lot. But when we are afraid, our brain limits our ability to think. And for good reason. Anxiety is

John B. Watson – Behavioral Science

John B. Watson had famously claimed that he, a dozen healthy infants, could mold into anything. To doctors, lawyers, artists, beggars or thieves, regardless of their origin or genetic predisposition. Special thanks to our Patreons: Avigail, Badrah, Cedric Wang, David Markham, Denis Kraus, Don Bone,

Dunning Kruger Effect

The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias that makes people believe that they are smarter and more capable than they actually are. The effect is related to people's general inability to recognize their lack of skills. You can find out how this effect comes about and what you can do to prevent it