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Mary Ickes "Polly" Watson born in 1905 and John Ickes "Little John" Watson born in 1906. Polly was the mother of actress Mariette Hartley.
yes, im pretty sure she did for a little while
i recall that a TV movie had aired sometime after the series was cancelled, & in this tv movie Albert contracts leukemia & dies.
Sherlock Holmes speaks to Watson as if he was Sherlock's student. But then again Watson really is his student--he follows him around on his cases and learns from him by watching him use his deductive reasoning and observation skills. Hardly ever will you find a scenario where Sherlock speaks kindly or with feeling towards Watson. Watson even described him once as an "unfeeling robot set to solve crimes and shun the monotony of life." But of few of the quotes in which a little of Sherlock's inner self shines through include the following: -"Come, friend Watson, the curtain rings up for the last act." -"Watson, if it should ever strike you that I am getting a little over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it deserves, kindly whisper `Norbury` in my ear, and I shall be infinitely obliged to you." -"[Watson and I] also have our diplomatic secrets." -"This is my dear friend and associate, Doctor Watson--the sole of discretion, before whom you can speak as freely as before myself." -"If you had killed Watson, you would not have made it out of this room alive."
Yes, they are adopted brothers in real life.
Classical conditioning.
John B. Watson, an American psychologist, was responsible for the Little Albert experiment. It involved classical conditioning with a young boy named Albert to demonstrate how fear can be acquired through conditioning.
Watson and Rayner's study of Little Albert demonstrated how specific fears can be acquired through classical conditioning. The study conditioned a fear response to a white rat in Little Albert by pairing it with a loud noise, showing that fear can be learned through association.
John B. Watson and Rosalie Raynor are most famous for their "little albert" study in which they observed a young child known only as "Albert B." and his reactions to classical conditioning.
John Watson wanted to demonstrate the principles of classical conditioning by showing that fear could be conditioned in a child (Little Albert) through association with a loud noise (unconditioned stimulus). The experiment aimed to prove that emotions and behavior could be manipulated through conditioning.
No, the famous study of Little Hans was conducted by Sigmund Freud, not John B. Watson. Freud used the case study to explore psychoanalytic concepts such as the Oedipus complex and phobias in children. Watson, on the other hand, was known for his work in behaviorism and classical conditioning.
John B. Watson is often credited with demonstrating conditioning on a human infant in his famous "Little Albert" experiment. By pairing a loud noise with a white rat, Watson conditioned fear in the infant, providing evidence for classical conditioning in humans.
John B. Watson conducted the Little Albert experiment in 1920.
Little Albert was a nine month old baby who J.B Watson and his assistant Rosalie Rayner conditioned into having a phobia of a white rat using classical conditioning. Every time the rat was produced to Albert, either Watson or Rayner stood behind him and struck a steel bar with a hammer. Because Albert disliked the noise, they kept banging and producing the rat until eventually Albert developed a phobia. Hope this explanation helps.
White Rat
John B. Watson is considered the founder of behaviorism. He believed that psychology should focus on observable behaviors rather than internal mental processes. Watson is known for his famous experiments with Little Albert, which demonstrated how behaviors can be learned through conditioning.
Yes, John Watson studied salivation in dogs to examine the concept of habituation. In his famous experiment, Watson conditioned a fear response in a young boy known as "Little Albert" using a similar method to Pavlov's classical conditioning with dogs, to study the formation and extinction of phobias.