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Advances in Behaviorism: It's Not What It Used to Be
Authors:John C. Malone
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, 37996-0900
Abstract:Behaviorism has changed over the past half century and its modern form is not familiar to many educators and other applied professionals. Put briefly, behaviorism has changed from the molecular and absolutist form of years past, when basic researchers, therapists and educators sought to modify isolated ldquotarget behaviors.rdquo Modern behaviorism is relativistic and molar and the articles included in this issue are meant to illustrate this changed emphasis. The first article shows how the matching law has redefined the old ldquolaw of effectrdquo and how that affects application. The second shows how relational frames provide a behavioral treatment of cognitive variables that dispels the stereotyped view of ldquobehavior modification.rdquo The third treats molar classes of behaviors as ldquotraits,rdquo and individual behaviors as ldquostates,rdquo applying that distinction to aspects of the relative frequencies of behaviors of children at home and at school. Finally, the last article shows specifically how behavioral methods have been (and are) applied to the behavior of autistic children, in a program that has been extremely successful over the past few years.
Keywords:modern behaviorism  matching law  relational frame theory  traits and states  autism
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