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This edited book addresses four themes of contemporary importance
in the experimental and applied analysis of behaviour:
chronobiology (relationships between time and behaviour), the
emergence of rational thinking, language, and behavioural medicine.
The current empirical and theoretical status of each theme is
considered in individual chapters, the authors of which are
distinguished research scientists drawn from a wide range of
scholarship and with a distinctive European dimension. This
cultural and theoretical diversity emerges from the fact that each
chapter is developed from a paper originally presented by
invitation at the Second European Meeting on the Experimental
Analysis of Behaviour, which was held in Liege, Belgium in 1988.
Within the four themes, individual topics address issues such as
circadian rhythms in behaviour, temporal regulation in children and
in animals, the emergence of equivalence relations in children and
animals, the development of thinking in mentally retarded children,
reasoning and associative learning in animals, rule?governed
behaviour, theoretical issues relating language to the theory of
mind, the relationship between behavioural and visceral functions,
the relevance of behavioural approaches to the prevention of AIDS,
and the development of self?detection skills for breast cancer. The
book makes an important contribution to the literature of
contemporary behaviour analysis by reviewing issues of current
interest and importance from a broad theoretical base.
The approach to psychology advocated by the radical behaviourists
was often misunderstood and frequently gave rise to controversy.
Originally published in 1974, this book introduced current research
in operant conditioning and explains the attempt to understand
behaviour inherent in such experiments at the time. After
considering the philosophical context in which behaviouristic
psychology developed, the author outlines the basic characteristics
of operant research by reviewing single experiments on the effects
of reinforcement on behaviour. Chapters on schedules of
intermittent reinforcement extend this approach to more complex
situations and emphasize that behaviour can be maintained and
controlled in many different ways by environmental events. The
author then discusses recent work on conditional reinforcement and
on the discriminative control of behaviour and shows how operant
research has changed our understanding of these important concepts
in psychology. Subsequent chapters review research within the
operant paradigm on the effects on behaviour of punishment,
anxiety, aversive stimuli and drugs, again by emphasising the
special contribution to these topics made by operant conditioning
techniques and methodology. The final chapters consider the general
implications of operant research for educational practice and for
clinical psychology, and place this approach within the context of
psychology as a whole. Dr Blackman argues that it should be
recognized as one important attempt to further the scientific
analysis of behaviour. This book, filled a long recognized need for
an undergraduate text in this area at the time, and helped students
form their own evaluation. Now it should be read in its historical
context.
The study of drug effects on behaviour and psychological processes
has a long history. Developments in the decade prior to first
publication had been based on a more adequate synthesis than
hitherto of psychology and pharmacology, and as a result great
progress was made in establishing psychopharmacology as an
interdisciplinary subject in its own right. Undergraduate courses
in departments of psychology and pharmacology were increasingly
including some coverage of this material, but there was a paucity
of texts suitable at this level at the time. Originally published
in 1984, this book was designed to provide broad coverage of
psychopharmacology, with the minimum necessary focus on basic
pharmacology and with carefully chosen subjects which are still
likely to be of interest to psychology undergraduates and in which
good empirical work is available for discussion at that level. The
emphasis throughout the book is on the needs of psychology
students, but the contents will also interest pharmacology
students.
The approach to psychology advocated by the radical behaviourists
was often misunderstood and frequently gave rise to controversy.
Originally published in 1974, this book introduced current research
in operant conditioning and explains the attempt to understand
behaviour inherent in such experiments at the time. After
considering the philosophical context in which behaviouristic
psychology developed, the author outlines the basic characteristics
of operant research by reviewing single experiments on the effects
of reinforcement on behaviour. Chapters on schedules of
intermittent reinforcement extend this approach to more complex
situations and emphasize that behaviour can be maintained and
controlled in many different ways by environmental events. The
author then discusses recent work on conditional reinforcement and
on the discriminative control of behaviour and shows how operant
research has changed our understanding of these important concepts
in psychology. Subsequent chapters review research within the
operant paradigm on the effects on behaviour of punishment,
anxiety, aversive stimuli and drugs, again by emphasising the
special contribution to these topics made by operant conditioning
techniques and methodology. The final chapters consider the general
implications of operant research for educational practice and for
clinical psychology, and place this approach within the context of
psychology as a whole. Dr Blackman argues that it should be
recognized as one important attempt to further the scientific
analysis of behaviour. This book, filled a long recognized need for
an undergraduate text in this area at the time, and helped students
form their own evaluation. Now it should be read in its historical
context.
The study of drug effects on behaviour and psychological processes
has a long history. Developments in the decade prior to first
publication had been based on a more adequate synthesis than
hitherto of psychology and pharmacology, and as a result great
progress was made in establishing psychopharmacology as an
interdisciplinary subject in its own right. Undergraduate courses
in departments of psychology and pharmacology were increasingly
including some coverage of this material, but there was a paucity
of texts suitable at this level at the time. Originally published
in 1984, this book was designed to provide broad coverage of
psychopharmacology, with the minimum necessary focus on basic
pharmacology and with carefully chosen subjects which are still
likely to be of interest to psychology undergraduates and in which
good empirical work is available for discussion at that level. The
emphasis throughout the book is on the needs of psychology
students, but the contents will also interest pharmacology
students.
This collection of nearly 100 photographs from renowned
photographer Jeffrey E. Blackman offers a lighthearted look at the
relics of Americana, hearkening back to a time when gas was cheap,
and cars were designed for the open roads. Blackman's charming
photographs of old pickup trucks and abandoned gas pumps remind us
of an era where the road trip reigned supreme.
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