about
The evolution of superstitious and superstition-like behaviourOn the origin and preservation of cumulative record in its struggle for life as a favored termFixed-interval schedules of electric shock presentation: extinction and recovery of performance under different shock intensities and fixed-interval durations.The S-R issue: its status in behavior analysis and in Donahoe and Palmer's learning and complex behavior.Research on the difference between generalization and maintenance in extra-therapy responding.Fixed and variable schedules of response-independent reinforcement.A selectionist approach to reinforcement.Sensory superstition on multiple interval schedules.Stimulus properties of fixed-interval responsesAttention in the pigeon: a reevaluation.Superstitious key pecking after three peck-produced reinforcements.Eliminating behavior with reinforcement.Auto-shaping of the pigeon's key-peck.The effects of graduated stimulus change on the acquisition of a simple discrimination in severely retarded boys.Stimulus bias in the absence of food reinforcement.Schedules using noxious stimuli. III. Responding maintained with response-produced electric shocks.Some variables affecting the superstitious chaining of responsesSuperstitious behavior in humans.Delayed matching in the pigeon.Generalization and preference on a stimulus-intensity continuumSome observations on the adventitious reinforcement of drinking under food reinforcementAcquisition of delayed matching in the pigeon.PERSISTENT BEHAVIOR MAINTAINED BY UNAVOIDABLE SHOCKSA Quantitative Analysis and Natural History of B. F. Skinner's Coauthoring Practices.Some determinants of remote behavioral history effects in humans.Measuring preschoolers' superstitious tendenciesBibliographic processes and products, and a bibliography of the published primary-source works of B. F. Skinner.Toward an explicit analysis of generalization: A stimulus control interpretation.B. F. Skinner's contributions to applied behavior analysisAn architect of the golden yearsPositive conditioned suppression: Transfer of performance between contingent and noncontingent reinforcement situationsEffects of chlordiazepoxide and d-amphetamine on responding suppressed by conditioned punishmentSome factors that influence the acquisition of complex, stereotyped, response sequences in pigeons.Differential reinforcement and signal detection.Concurrent performances: rate constancies without changeover delays.Inhibition and the stimulus control of operant behaviorControls for and constraints on auto-shaping.The creation of a superstitious belief regarding putters in a laboratory-based golfing task.A response-spacing effect: an absence of responding during response-feedback stimuli.Concurrent behavior: are the interpretations mutually exclusive?
P2860
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P2860
description
1957 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1957年の論文
@ja
1957年学术文章
@wuu
1957年学术文章
@zh
1957年学术文章
@zh-cn
1957年学术文章
@zh-hans
1957年学术文章
@zh-my
1957年学术文章
@zh-sg
1957年學術文章
@yue
1957年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@en
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@nl
type
label
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@en
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@nl
prefLabel
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@en
A second type of superstition in the pigeon.
@nl
P356
P1476
A second type of superstition in the pigeon
@en
P2093
B F SKINNER
P304
P356
10.2307/1419345
P577
1957-06-01T00:00:00Z