Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1535412> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 20 of
20
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1535412 subject Q7028952.
- Q1535412 subject Q7034983.
- Q1535412 abstract "Social facilitation is the tendency for people to perform differently when in the presence of others than when alone. Compared to their performance when alone, when in the presence of others, they tend to perform better on simple or well-rehearsed tasks and worse on complex or new ones. The Yerkes-Dodson law, when applied to social facilitation, states that "the mere presence of other people will enhance the performance in speed and accuracy of well-practiced tasks, but will degrade the performance of less familiar tasks."Social facilitation has occasionally been attributed to the fact that certain people are more susceptible to social influence, with the argument that personality factors can make these people more aware of evaluation.".
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q1107019.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q2736597.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q3030775.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q4533264.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q5283084.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q5415288.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q673899.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028952.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q7034983.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q7052882.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q7551193.
- Q1535412 wikiPageWikiLink Q914495.
- Q1535412 type Thing.
- Q1535412 comment "Social facilitation is the tendency for people to perform differently when in the presence of others than when alone. Compared to their performance when alone, when in the presence of others, they tend to perform better on simple or well-rehearsed tasks and worse on complex or new ones.".
- Q1535412 label "Social facilitation".
- Q1535412 seeAlso Q1535412.
- Q1535412 seeAlso Q729.