"Behavior Streams" Versus "Behavior Extended in Time"

Behavior analysis ironically appears to be increasingly at risk for abandoning its historic focus of moment-to-moment behaving, to other disciplines ranging from robotics and the "man-machine interface" to cognitive science where behaving is called "action." The misleadingly labe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavior and philosophy 2009-01, Vol.37, p.157-163
1. Verfasser: Shimp, Charles P.
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creator Shimp, Charles P.
description Behavior analysis ironically appears to be increasingly at risk for abandoning its historic focus of moment-to-moment behaving, to other disciplines ranging from robotics and the "man-machine interface" to cognitive science where behaving is called "action." The misleadingly labeled "molar" analysis and the concept of "behavior extended in time" both signal this abandonment of behaving. I suggest that it would be premature to assume that moment-to-moment analyses and analyses of "behavior extended in time" are on different and independent levels. I also suggest that behavior analysts might regain their focus on actual behaving by occasionally reading Pigeons in a Pelican (Skinner, 1960) and Farewell, My LOVELY (Skinner, 1976) and by developing and evaluating behaving theories.
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subjects Arm
Behavior modeling
Causation
Commentaries on Field & Hineline : "Dispositioning and the Obscured Roles of Time"
Dance
Motivation research
Musical performance
Philosophical analysis
Psychological research
Psychology
title "Behavior Streams" Versus "Behavior Extended in Time"
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