Unconscious behavior is a broad subject.
It can mean the person is unaware of their actions, their actions are unintended, involuntary, or they lack thought. Unconscious behaviors can arise from elements in your psychological make-up that result from memories, repressed desires, experiences and tendencies learned in childhood that form the underlying influences to behavior. It can also be simply something done without thinking.
An unconscious behavior may range from automatically removing your shoes before entering your own home because it was a rule of your mother's or feeling extremely anxious around certain sounds that you unconsciously connect to unpleasant experiences in the past. An unconscious behavior could be feeling uncomfortable around people of other races for no apparent reason.
See the related link for more information and a broader understanding.
Conscious behavior largely includes cognitive processes of the ego, such as thinking, perception, and planning, as well as some aspects of the superego, such as moral conscience.
somert,,,that opposite by concious
Automatic behavior
Unconscious
the unconscious
Sigmund Freud
# overt / covert behavior # verbal / non-verbal behavior # normal / abnormal behavior # conscious / unconscious behavior # regulatory behavior # instinctive behavior # habitual behavior
Greatest effect
Unconscious
unconscious.
the unconscious
Sigmund Freud
# overt / covert behavior # verbal / non-verbal behavior # normal / abnormal behavior # conscious / unconscious behavior # regulatory behavior # instinctive behavior # habitual behavior
Greatest effect
Rene Descartes
Psychodynamic
Sigmund Freud believed that human behavior is governed by the unconscious mind.Human sexual behavior is a complex mix of subconscious urges, human instinct, cultural expectations and individual upbringing. Which of these dominates behavior in any given situation depends on the variables linked to the situation.
He believed dreams were insights into unconscious desires.
The unconscious, psychological forces that influence the direction of a team's behavior and performance.
Psychoanalytic Theory