Bandura's reciprocal determinism theory suggests that behavior, the environment, and personal factors all influence and interact with each other in a continuous cycle. It emphasizes that individuals are not just passive recipients of environmental influences but actively shape their own experiences.
Reciprocal Determinism Theory, rooted in social-cognitive theory and championed by Albert Bandura, posits that a person's behavior, personal factors (like cognition), and environment all influence each other.
Bandura's 1961 Bobo Doll experiment demonstrated reciprocal determinism, showing how children imitate aggressive behavior modeled by adults, influenced by individual traits and environmental cues.