Yerkes-Dodson: A Law for all Seasons
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Theory & Psychology
- Vol. 4 (4) , 525-547
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354394044004
Abstract
The paper traces the vicissitudes of the Yerkes-Dodson law from 1908 to the present. In its original form, the law was intended to describe the relation between stimulus strength and habit-formation for tasks varying in discrimination difficultness. But later generations of investigations and textbook authors have rendered it variously as the effects of punishment, reward, motivation, drive, arousal, anxiety, tension or stress upon learning, performance, problem-solving, coping or memory; while the task variable has been commonly referred to as difficulty, complexity or novelty, when it is not omitted altogether. These changes are seldom explicitly discussed, and are often misattributed to Yerkes and Dodson themselves. The various reformulations are seen as reflecting conceptual changes and current developments in the areas of learning, motivation and emotion, and it is argued that the plasticity of the law also reflects the vagueness of basic psychological concepts in these areas.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Caffeine, impulsivity, and memory scanning: A comparison of two explanations for the Yerkes-Dodson EffectMotivation and Emotion, 1989
- The origins of the psychological experiment as a social institution.American Psychologist, 1985
- The interactive effects of caffeine, impulsivity and task demands on a visual search taskPersonality and Individual Differences, 1983
- In one word: Not from experienceActa Psychologica, 1980
- The Yerkes-Dodson Law RepealedPsychological Reports, 1965
- The motivation of behavior.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1961
- The interaction of task difficulty and motivation: The Yerkes-Dodson law revivedActa Psychologica, 1959
- Emotionality and the Yerkes-Dodson Law.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1957
- The relation of strength of stimulus to rapidity of habit-formation in the kitten.Journal of Animal Behavior, 1915
- The relation of strength of stimulus to rate of learning in the chick.Journal of Animal Behavior, 1911