J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry
March 1999
Investigators of animal models of psychopathology have typically introduced experimental conditions so that an animal's behavior progressively deviates from a baseline of routine laboratory behavior toward a pattern which resembles human psychopathological behavior in some form of S, then R relation. The present experiments report consequential contingency procedures for bringing head-to-wall head-banging by an animal under experimental control and analysis. The first two experiments examined the establishment and maintenance by reinforcement of head-banging by pigeons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTHIS STUDY ADDRESSED THE QUESTION: Can novel social behavior arise even though the organism has had no explicit training in that particular social pattern? Seven pigeons were trained individually to peck keys for brief access to food. Four of these birds were also trained to peck two "switching keys" which, at first, raised or lowered the requirements on their own food keys. Later, these switching keys no longer affected an animal's own requirements, but raised or lowered the requirements imposed on a second pigeon working concurrently for food in an adjacent chamber.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA moderately obese 49-year-old woman who was enrolled in a nutrition and weight control clinic quickly attained her target weight through an individualized program of balanced deficit diet, routine exercise, and weekly counseling. Weight loss continued until she was 15% below Metropolitan Relative Weight, when family members grew concerned that she had developed an eating disorder. Despite nutritional and behavioral counseling, she has rigorously maintained her exaggerated weight loss.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bioelectrical-impedance-analysis (BIA) method accurately measures body composition in weight-stable subjects. This study validates the use of BIA to measure change in body composition. Twelve obese females underwent weight loss at a mean rate of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn approach to a functional analysis of delusional speech and hallucinatory behavior is described and discussed using concepts found in Goldiamond's (1975a and 1984) nonlinear contingency analysis and Skinner's Verbal Behavior (1957). This synthesis draws upon and concords with research from the animal laboratory, with the extensive experimental literatures on stimulus control and signal detection theory, and with our own clinical experiences.In this formulation, delusional speech and hallucinatory behavior are viewed as successful operants.
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