Many of the participants of the Stanford Prison Experiment have gone on to lead successful lives in various fields, while some have faced challenges related to their experiences in the study. Some have become prominent figures in academia, psychology, and other professions, while others have chosen to remain private about their involvement in the experiment.
Born 9MAR1919. After the experiment, he was sent home back to his mother. Around this time he was 8 months and 26 days old. On 10MAY1925 he later died of hydrocephalus (water in the brain). It is now believed that Little Albert was disabled at birth and Dr. Watson knew so. His experiment has been declared null and void due to these new findings.
He has not died he is working in Stanford. Okay (I think he is 86 by now) and born December 4, 1925, in Mundare, Alberta, Canada. Thank You!
The little Albert experiment proved that psychological fears could be influence by classical conditioning. Little Albert, an infant, was first shown a white rat. At first, he was not afraid of the white rat. However, John Watson, leader of the experiment, presented the white rat repeatedly with a frightening high pitched noise (unconditioned stimulus) which scared little Albert (the unconditioned response). After five times, the infant became frightened whenever the white rat was presented (conditioned response). The white rat was what he associated with the fear of the loud noise and was now the conditioned stimulus.
Alfred Binet was a French psychologist who is most famous for coming up with the first, real intelligence test (he also coined the term "sexual fetish"). He developed the intelligence test shortly after the time when France passed a law for mandatory school attendance for children. The IQ test was primarily designed to distinguish between the abilities of normal, abnormal, and retarded children; by distinguishing between the groups, the ones that needed extra assistance could be given it. The Binet IQ test was further reformed by Lewis Terman, an American professor at Stanford. The IQ test is now referred to as the Stanford-Binet test.
It means that when you start to feel anger, you should think about what would happen if you act upon it. Anger is just the feeling and aggression is violent behavior, and you don't have to let the feeling of anger cause you to act aggressively. For instance, let's say someone cussed you out and you start to feel angry. Now, at that moment, you have a choice. You can choose to walk away, you can choose to tell them that is wrong, or you can punch them. Now, if you think about the consequences, you might realize that if you punch them, they could beat you up or you might go to jail. Even worse, you might accidentally kill them, and you will have to spend many years in prison, if not the rest of your life. So if someone is that disrespectful to you that you'd want to hit them, are they worth going to the hospital, jail, prison, or morgue over?
The Stanford Marshmallow experiment is a well known psychology experiment made in the late 60s on Delayed Gratification. The experiment involved giving a child a choice between having a marshmallow now or wait a bit longer for a timer to ding for two marshmallows. In later studies the results found that the children that waited overall had more successful lives.
yes they do and you can see them on the stanford website, their head coach right now is Jeremy Gunn.
Is who in prison? I can't answer until I know who you mean! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- they probably mean lil Wayne and yes he is in prison now
It was about a year but he is out of prison now.
http:fightmusic.com
prison
Condoleezza Rice now lives in Palo Alto, California and teaches at Stanford University as a political science teacher.
Condi is a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in Palo Alto California. she is also a political science teacher at Stanford also.
He is man who is now in prison. He is now a free man.
She is in prison, parole in 2011,
no it is a jail
i dont now