<Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This article reads like a review rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject . Please help improve this article to make it neutral in tone and meet Wikipedia's quality standards . (July 2015) </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This article reads like a review rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject . Please help improve this article to make it neutral in tone and meet Wikipedia's quality standards . (July 2015) </Td> </Tr> <P> The Bobo doll experiment was the collective name of experiments conducted by Albert Bandura in 1961 and 1963 when he studied children's behavior after watching an adult model act aggressively towards a Bobo doll, a toy that gets up by itself to a standing position when it is knocked down . There are different variations of the experiment . The most notable experiment measured the children's behavior after seeing the model get rewarded, get punished, or experience no consequence for beating up the bobo doll . The experiments are empirical approaches to test Bandura's social learning theory . The social learning theory claims that people learn through observing, imitating, and modeling . It shows that people not only learn by being rewarded or punished (behaviorism), but they can also learn from watching somebody else being rewarded or punished (observational learning). These experiments are important because they sparked many more studies on the effects of observational learning . The studies not only give us new data, but this data has practical implications, e.g. how children can be influenced from watching violent media . </P> <Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This section relies too much on references to primary sources . Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources . (July 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) </Td> </Tr> </Table>

The video shown about the bobo doll experiment was an example of