Examples of incentive in the following topics:
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- According to incentive theory, behavior is primarily motivated by the incentive of extrinsic factors.
- In general, motivators provide some sort of incentive for completing a task.
- Social and emotional incentives like praise and attention are also extrinsic motivators since they are bestowed on the individual by another person.
- In those cases, extrinsic motivators can backfire: instead of serving as an incentive for the desired behavior, they undermine a previously held intrinsic motivation.
- Differentiate between intrinsic and extrinsic incentives as related to theories of motivation
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- Motivation involves providing someone with an incentive to do something; proper incentives should outweigh the cost of the actions required to achieve them.
- Motivation can be intrinsic (consisting of internal factors within a person, such as the desire to succeed) or extrinsic (consisting of external factors, such as monetary incentives).
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- Stress is a necessity for life and is a primary biological incentive for all.
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- Tolman theorized that the rats in the third group had indeed been learning a "cognitive map" of the maze over the first ten days; however, they'd had no incentive to run the maze without any errors.
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- It remains when the subjects are offered money as an incentive to be accurate, or when they are explicitly told not to base their judgment on the anchor.
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- Compound schedules are often seen in the workplace: for example, if you are paid at an hourly rate (fixed-interval) but also have an incentive to receive a small commission for certain sales (fixed-ratio), you are being reinforced by a compound schedule.
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- and the parents offer the child an incentive by giving him an allowance.