Psychology Glossary
Lexicon of Psychology - Terms, Treatments, Biographies,

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Descriptive adequacy

Descriptive adequacy refers to the extent to which a grammar can provide a structural description of a sentence. Please see also Explanatory adequacy and Observational adequacy.

Descriptive behaviorism

Descriptive behaviorism refers to Behaviorism that is positivistic in that it describes relationships between environmental events and behavior rather than attempting to explain those relationships. Skinner's approach to Psychology exemplified Descriptive behaviorism.

Descriptive models of thinking

Descriptive models of thinking refer to models that depict the processes people actually use in making decisions or solving problems.

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Descriptive norm

Descriptive norm refers to a consensual standard that describes how people typically act, feel, and think in a given situation.

Descriptive norms

Descriptive norms refer to people's perceptions of how other people are actually behaving in a given situation, regardless of what behaviors are socially sanctioned

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Descriptive research

Descriptive research refers to a type of research that describes the relationship between variables rather than determining causation. It is a type of research that focuses on describing the behavior and the situation within which it occurs.

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Descriptive research strategy

Descriptive research strategy refers to a general approach to research that involves measuring a variable or set of variables as they exist naturally to produce a description of individual variables as they exist within a specific group.

Descriptive rules

Descriptive rules is defined as rules that describe speakers' linguistic knowledge

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