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A process that influences the direction, persistance, and vigour of goal directed behaviour
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Motivation
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An inherited predisposition to behave in a specific and predictable manner when exposed to a particular stimulus
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Instinct
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A theory that emhasizes the fact that instincts motivate much of our behaviour
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Instinct theory
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A theory that propose that many psychological motives have evolutionary underpinnings that are expressed throught the action of genes. From this perspective, the adaptive significance of behaviour is the key to understanding motivation
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Evolutionary Theory
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A state of internal physiological equlibrium that the body strives to maintain
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Homeostasis
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What 3 mechanisms is homeostasis regulated by
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Sensory mechanisms,response system and control centre
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According to this theory physiological disruptions to homeostasis produce drives, states of internal tension that motivate an organism to behave in ways that reduce this tension
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Drive theory
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Environmental stimuli that "pull" an organism toward a goal
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Incentives
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This theory focus attention on external stimuli that motivate behaviour
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Incentive theory
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This theory proposes that goal directed behaviour is jointly determined by two factors; the strength of the persons expectation that particular behaviours lead to a goal and the value the individual places on that goal
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Expectancy X Value Theory
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Performing an activity to obtain an external reward or avoid punishment
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Extrinsic motivation
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Performing an activity for its own sake because you find it exciting or stimulating
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Intrinsic motivation
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According to this theory ,much of our behaviour results from an ever ending battle between conscious and unconscious impulses struggling for release adn psychological defenses used to keep them under control
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Pyschodynamic thory
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An example of a humanistic theory of motivation is
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Maslows hierarchy of needs
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A progression of needs containing deficiency needs at the bottom and growth needs at the top
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Need hierarchy
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