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Albert Bandura
Albert Bandura (4 December 1925 – 26 July 2021) was a Canadian-American psychologist and professor of social science in psychology at
Stanford University, who contributed to the fields of education and to the fields of psychology, e.g.
social cognitive theory,
therapy, and
personality psychology, and influenced the transition between
behaviorism and
cognitive psychology. Bandura also is known as the originator of the
social learning theory, the
social cognitive theory, and the theoretical construct of
self-efficacy, and was responsible for the theoretically influential
Bobo doll experiment (1961), which demonstrated the conceptual validity of
observational learning, wherein children would watch and observe an adult beat a doll, and, having learned through observation, the children then beat a Bobo doll.
A 2002 survey ranked Bandura as the fourth most frequently cited psychologist of all time, behind
B. F. Skinner,
Sigmund Freud, and
Jean Piaget. During his lifetime, Bandura was widely described as the greatest living psychologist, and as one of the most influential psychologists of all time.
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