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Maag Merki, Katharina; Wullschleger, Andrea; Rechsteiner, Beat – Journal of Educational Change, 2023
Routines play a major role in educational change in schools. But what happens if the routines performed by school staff fail to deal successfully with current challenges? What strategies aid adaptation of the routines in a specific situation? Up to now, there exists no comprehensive concept for understanding why and at what points the adapting of…
Descriptors: Schools, Behavior Patterns, Repetition, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Blair, Clancy; Raver, C. Cybele – Developmental Psychology, 2012
In this article, we contrast evolutionary and psychobiological models of individual development to address the idea that individual development occurring in prototypically risky and unsupportive environments can be understood as adaptation. We question traditional evolutionary explanations of individual development, calling on the principle of…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Physiology, Caregivers, Evolution
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Stecklov, Guy; Goldstein, Joshua R. – Social Forces, 2010
In this article, using data on traffic volume and fatal accident rates in Israel from 2001 to 2004--a period spanning much of the Second Intifada--we examine the population-level responses to endemic terror to uncover whether societies become habituated so that the response weakens following repeated attacks or whether they become increasingly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Terrorism, Natural Disasters, Anxiety
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Munoz, Luna C.; Frick, Paul J.; Kimonis, Eva R.; Aucoin, Katherine J. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2008
The present study investigated differences in the behavioral and psychophysiological responses to provocation and in the level of callous-unemotional traits in boys exhibiting different patterns of aggression. Eighty-five boys (ages 13-18) in a juvenile detention center played a competitive computer task against a hypothetical peer who provided…
Descriptors: Aggression, Juvenile Justice, Males, Behavior Patterns
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Stephanie A. Contrucci Kuhn; Dorothea C. Lerman; Christina M. Vorndran; Laura Addison – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2006
A sequence of behaviors consisting of appropriate responses, inappropriate responses, or a combination of both can be linked together in a behavior chain. Several operant processes may disrupt behavior chains. For example, one or more members of the behavior chain may be affected when reinforcement is withheld for the last response in the chain…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Factor Analysis, Responses, Behavior Patterns
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Davis, Michael – American Psychologist, 2006
A good deal is now known about the neural circuitry involved in how conditioned fear can augment a simple reflex (fear-potentiated startle). This involves visual or auditory as well as shock pathways that project via the thalamus and perirhinal or insular cortex to the basolateral amygdala (BLA). The BLA projects to the central (CeA) and medial…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Fear, Anxiety, Cognitive Processes
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Goodwin, Jean; Harris, Derryl – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1979
A review of 47 suicides in women of child-bearing age revealed that two women were pregnant, two were within the first year post-partum and two falsely believed themselves pregnant. Previous studies asserting that pregnancy protects against suicide would seem to be challenged by these data; pregnancy-related suicides are similar to each other.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Females, Infant Mortality, Pregnancy
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Killeen, Peter R.; Fetterman, J. Gregor – Psychological Review, 1988
A theory of timing is proposed, based on the observation that signals of reinforcement elicit adjunctive behaviors. Transitions between these behaviors are described as a Poisson process. These behaviors may come to serve as the basis for conditional discriminations of the passage of time. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes, Models
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English, Justin; Allison, James – Psychological Review, 1993
A model is presented that demonstrates that a random response to external constraint can produce results similar to those predicted by more complex models. Behavior that appears rational, optimal, or adaptive may truly be a random response to external constraint. Predictions based on this model may provide appropriate null hypotheses. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Graphs, Hypothesis Testing, Mathematical Models
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Kubina, Jr., Richard M.; Wolfe, Pamela – Exceptionality, 2005
Curricula for students with autism do not take into account levels of learning such as behavioral fluency. Behavioral fluency addresses accuracy as well as speed of response. We posit that fluency increases the functionality of skills for students with autism and should be systematically programmed into a curriculum. To discuss the application of…
Descriptors: Autism, Language Fluency, Curriculum, Behavior Patterns
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Tiffany, Stephen T. – Psychological Review, 1990
A cognitive model of drug urges and drug use is proposed, hypothesizing that drug use in the addict is controlled by automatized-action schemata. Urges are conceptualized as responses supported by nonautomatic cognitive processes activated with drug-use action schemata. Implications for behavior assessment are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes, Drug Rehabilitation, Drug Use
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Machado, Armando – Psychological Review, 1997
A dynamic model of how animals learn to regulate their behavior under time-based reinforcement schedules is presented. It assumes serial activation of behavioral states during the inter-reinforcement interval, an associative process linking the states and operant response, and a rule mapping the states onto response rate. (SLD)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Animals, Association (Psychology), Behavior Patterns
Meany-Daboul, Maeve G.; Roscoe, Eileen M.; Bourret, Jason C.; Ahearn, William H. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2007
In the current study, momentary time sampling (MTS) and partial-interval recording (PIR) were compared to continuous-duration recording of stereotypy and to the frequency of self-injury during a treatment analysis to determine whether the recording method affected data interpretation. Five previously conducted treatment analysis data sets were…
Descriptors: Sampling, Intervals, Research Methodology, Data Interpretation
Huberty, Carl J.; And Others – 1996
This article illustrates how a cluster analysis can be conducted, validated, and interpreted. Data normed for a behavioral assessment instrument with 14 scales on a nationally representative sample of U.S. school children were utilized. The discussion explores the similarity index, cluster method, cluster typology, cluster validity, cluster…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Rating Scales, Classification, Cluster Analysis
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Wilson, Christine S.; And Others – Australia and New Zealand Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 1995
Examination of staff responses to problem behaviors in three community-based group homes found that staff tended to rely heavily on verbal approaches to address problem behavior of people with intellectual disability, using other strategies only when the initial response failed. Findings suggest that staff behavior is negatively reinforced by the…
Descriptors: Adults, Attendants, Behavior Change, Behavior Modification