I'm pretty sure that it would be illegal now as it is inhumane based on the trauma it would cause the patient. That child was taught to be afraid of anything white and fuzzy, imagine how he went through life suffering from that phobia.
No, it would not be ethical to replicate the Little Albert study today due to its unethical treatment of the child participant. Modern research ethics guidelines protect participants from harm and ensure informed consent, making it impossible to conduct such a study today.
There is no definitive response that can be given because there were two variables in the experiment that could lead to different conclusions.
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.
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.
No, Rosalie only takes care of Bella's dauhter, Renesme, for a little while.
Rosalie Hammerschmidt has written: 'A little book of nurses' rules' -- subject(s): Anecdotes, Aphorisms and Proverbs, Medicine, Nursing, Quotations, maxims
no
John B. Watson conducted the Little Albert experiment in 1920.
Little Albert The Untold Story - 2012 was released on: USA: 29 May 2012
Albert Einstein's little sister Maria "Maja" Einstein did have a job. She was a doctor. She was married to Paul Winteler.
Yes
rosalie means white rose from the latin origin and for all you TWILIGHT lovers, it kinda funny how rosalie hale is very white (because shes a vampire) and her nickname is rose! pretty cool it means really really cool :)
he was poor but tough little boy.