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McDowell, J. J. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Rachlin's teleological behaviorism eliminates the first-person ontology of conscious experience by identifying mental states with extended patterns of behavior, and thereby maintains the materialist ontology of science. An alternate view, informed by brain-based and externalist philosophies of mind, is shown also to maintain the materialist…
Descriptors: Organizational Communication, Phenomenology, Brain, Behaviorism
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Bayles, Makenzie W.; Boutain, Ariana R.; Brandt, Julie A. Ackerlund; Call, Nikki; Dracobly, Joseph D.; Greer, Brian D.; Gureghian, Danielle L.; Harper, Amy M.; Merritt, Todd A.; Miller, Jonathan R.; Payne, Steven W.; Morris, Edward K. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
An issue of "The Behavior Analyst" contained an article by Critchfield (2011), entitled "Interesting Times: Practice, Science, and Professional Associations in Behavior Analysis," about a rift between the field's scientists and practitioners. Critchfield observed that the science and practice of behavior analysis are subject to different…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Professional Associations, Scientists, Behavioral Science Research
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Barba, Lourenco de Souza – Behavior Analyst, 2012
In his article, the author claimed that studies of operant variability that use a lag-"n" or threshold procedure and measure the obtained variability through the change in U value fail to provide direct evidence that variability is an operant dimension of behavior. To do so, he adopted Catania's (1973) concept of the operant, which takes the…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Operant Conditioning, Experiments, Feedback (Response)
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Rachlin, Howard – Behavior Analyst, 2012
The four commentaries all make excellent points; they are all fair and serve to complement the target article. Because they are also quite diverse, it makes more sense to respond to them individually rather than topically. This article presents the author's response to the comments by McDowell (2012), Schlinger (2012), Hutchison (2012), and Wojcik…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Behaviorism, Stimuli, Computers
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Schneider, Susan M. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
In his scholarly and thoughtful article, "Interesting Times: Practice, Science, and Professional Associations in Behavior Analysis," Critchfield (2011) discussed the science-practice frictions to be expected in any professional organization that attempts to combine these interests. He suggested that the Association for Behavior Analysis…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Ecology, Professional Associations, Behavioral Science Research
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Marr, M. Jackson – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Barba's (2012) paper is a serious and thoughtful analysis of a vexing problem in behavior analysis: Just what should count as an operant class and how do people know? The slippery issue of a "generalized operant" or functional response class illustrates one aspect of this problem, and "variation" or "novelty" as an operant appears to fall into…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Operant Conditioning, Behavioral Science Research, Behavior
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Hutchison, William R. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Serving as Rachlin's teaching assistant for his graduate course on animal learning in 1973 determined the direction of the author's career, which has been to build computer models and robots based mostly on the equations from that course and related ones. These artificial beings behave and learn very much like animals, and creating them forces a…
Descriptors: Robotics, Teaching Assistants, Behavioral Science Research, Stimuli
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Ortu, Daniele – Behavior Analyst, 2012
In radical behaviorism, the difference between overt and covert responses does not depend on properties of the behavior but on the sensitivity of the measurement tools employed by the experimenter. Current neuroscientific research utilizes technologies that allow measurement of variables that are undetected by the tools typically used by behavior…
Descriptors: Priming, Reaction Time, Measurement Techniques, Behavioral Science Research
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Thompson, Travis – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Joseph V. Brady (1922-2011) created behavior-analytic neuroscience and the analytic framework for understanding how the external and internal neurobiological environments and mechanisms interact. Brady's approach offered synthesis as well as analysis. He embraced Findley's approach to constructing multioperant behavioral repertoires that found…
Descriptors: Social Behavior, Ethics, Scientific Research, Behavioral Science Research
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da F. Passos, Maria de Lourdes R. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Skinner's definition of verbal behavior, with its brief and refined versions, has recently become a point of controversy among behavior analysts. Some of the arguments presented in this controversy might be based on a misreading of Skinner's (1957a) writings. An examination of Skinner's correspondence with editors of scientific journals shows his…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Functional Behavioral Assessment, Behavioral Science Research, Definitions
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Poling, Alan; Edwards, Timothy L. – Behavior Analyst, 2011
The authors find Critchfield's article ("Translational Contributions of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior," "The Behavior Analyst," v34, p3-17, 2011) scholarly, clear, and insightful. In it, Critchfield provides an excellent overview of translational research in behavior analysis and suggests several general strategies for increasing the…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Scholarship, Behavioral Science Research, Research
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Branch, Marc N. – Behavior Analyst, 2011
The crux of Critchfield's (2011) article is that there have not been enough translational contributions, and as a result societal support for basic research in behavior analysis is waning. Critchfield suggests, therefore, that to remain viable as a research enterprise, more attention needs to be paid to the translational (read "immediate…
Descriptors: Research, Behavioral Science Research, Predictor Variables, Psychology
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Vollmer, Timothy R. – Behavior Analyst, 2011
The author agrees with Critchfield's ("Translational Contributions of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior," "The Behavior Analyst," v34, p3-17, 2011) thesis (to paraphrase): Behavior analysis must adapt; we cannot simply will ourselves into greater social relevance. Critchfield focused on the survival of the basic research arm of behavior…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Research, Reinforcement, Researchers
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Pilgrim, Carol – Behavior Analyst, 2011
In his article, Critchfield ("Translational Contributions of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior," "The Behavior Analyst," v34, p3-17, 2011) summarizes a previous call (Mace & Critchfield, 2010) for basic scientists to reexamine the inspiration for their research and turn increasingly to translational approaches. Interestingly, rather than…
Descriptors: Public Relations, Public Support, Social Environment, Scientists
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Critchfield, Thomas S. – Behavior Analyst, 2011
It has been argued that to increase societal impact behavioral researchers must do more to address problems of obvious practical importance. The basic science wing of behavior analysis has been described as especially detached from this goal, but is it really necessary that basic science demonstrate social relevance? If so, why hasn't this…
Descriptors: Identification, Behavioral Science Research, Problem Solving, Discourse Analysis
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