Psychology in Russia: State of Art (Mar 2021)

Fixed Forms of Behavior as Excessively Rigid Behavior in Normal and Pathological Individual and Group Systems

  • Genrikh V. Zalevskii

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11621/pir.2021.0101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 3 – 11

Abstract

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Background. !is article is devoted to the problem of excessively rigid behavior, which the author has named “"xed forms of behavior” (FFB). !is term was suggested to me by the concepts of P. Janet (idée !xe), S. Freud (Fixierung), and D. Uznadze (!ksirovanaya ustanovka — "xed set/attitude). By FFB, the author understands a broad spectrum of behaviors of a person or a group of people, which, according to the cultural norms of a given society for persons of a certain age, gender, and status, have become inappropriate, yet are repeated in situations objectively requiring that they change; the degree of realization and acceptance of the need for this change can vary. Results. !rough literature analysis and the collection of experimental data over many years of research, in which over 1,150 persons took part — 550 healthy subjects and 600 mental patients from a broad spectrum — and on the basis of a biopsychosocionoetic model of the nature of man and his health, and a system-network approach, it has become possible to distinguish the following models to explain the nature of "xed forms of behavior: neurodynamic, energy-economic, phylogenetic, personenvironment relationship, dispositional, stressogenic, pathogenic, psychodynamic, learning (behavioral-cognitive), system (an excessively rigid system and structural relations between levels of action).

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