Dynamic-psychology
noun
1.
any approach to psychology that emphasizes drives and motives as determinants of behavior.
noun
1.
(psychol) any system of psychology that emphasizes the interaction between different motives, emotions, and drives
dynamic psychology n.
The branch of psychology that concerns itself with the causes and motivations of behavior.
Read Also:
- Dynamic routing
networking (Or “adaptive routing”) Routing that adjusts automatically to network topology or traffic changes. (1997-05-08)
- Dynamics
[dahy-nam-iks] /daɪˈnæm ɪks/ noun 1. (used with a singular verb) Physics. the branch of mechanics that deals with the motion and equilibrium of systems under the action of forces, usually from outside the system. 2. (used with a plural verb) the motivating or driving forces, physical or moral, in any field. 3. (used with a […]
- Dynamic-strength
noun 1. resistance of a structure to loads applied suddenly, as during an earthquake.
- Dynamic stretching
noun a type of sports fitness routine in which momentum and active muscular effort are used to stretch and the end position is not held Examples Walking lunges is an example of dynamic stretch.
- Dynamic typing
programming Enforcement of type rules at run time as opposed to compile time. Dynamic typing catches more errors as run-time exceptions than static typing. Tcl, Perl, PHP, Python and Visual Basic are examples of dynamically typed languages. A dynamically typed language may have strong typing or weak typing. (2004-07-20)