Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second English Edition
- Contributors
- 1 Motivation and Action: Introduction and Overview
- 2 Historical Trends in Motivation Research
- 3 Trait Theories of Motivation
- 4 Situational Determinants of Behavior
- 5 Motivation as a Function of Expectancy and Incentive
- 6 Achievement Motivation
- 7 Social Bonding: Affiliation Motivation and Intimacy Motivation
- 8 Power Motivation
- 9 Implicit and Explicit Motives
- 10 Biopsychological Aspects of Motivation
- 11 Motivation and Volition in the Course of Action
- 12 Individual Differences in Self-Regulation
- 13 Intrinsic Motivation and Flow
- 14 Causal Attribution of Behavior and Achievement
- 15 Motivation and Development
- References
- Index
1 - Motivation and Action: Introduction and Overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second English Edition
- Contributors
- 1 Motivation and Action: Introduction and Overview
- 2 Historical Trends in Motivation Research
- 3 Trait Theories of Motivation
- 4 Situational Determinants of Behavior
- 5 Motivation as a Function of Expectancy and Incentive
- 6 Achievement Motivation
- 7 Social Bonding: Affiliation Motivation and Intimacy Motivation
- 8 Power Motivation
- 9 Implicit and Explicit Motives
- 10 Biopsychological Aspects of Motivation
- 11 Motivation and Volition in the Course of Action
- 12 Individual Differences in Self-Regulation
- 13 Intrinsic Motivation and Flow
- 14 Causal Attribution of Behavior and Achievement
- 15 Motivation and Development
- References
- Index
Summary
Human life is composed of a continuous flow of activity. Besides the infinite variety of overt actions and expressions that impact the social and physical environment, it also has a more covert side in the mental activities of experiencing, perceiving, thinking, feeling, and imagining. These mental activities are part of the flow, although they cannot be observed directly by others and have no direct impact on the environment. The scope of human activity thus ranges from dreaming (Klinger, 1971) to preplanned, intentional acts. The psychology of motivation is specifically concerned with activities that reflect the pursuit of a particular goal and, in this function, form a meaningful unit of behavior. Motivational research seeks to explain these units of behavior in terms of their whys and hows.
Questions pertaining to the whys of human activity address its purposes from a variety of perspectives; for example:
Can different units of behavior be assigned to one and the same class of goals and differentiated from other classes of goals?
How do these classes of goals evolve in the course of an individual's development, and which individual differences exist in this regard?
Why is it that specific situational conditions prompt people to choose certain goal-oriented activities over others, and to pursue them with a certain amount of time and energy?
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- Motivation and Action , pp. 1 - 9Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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