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Morris, Edward K. – 1987
Behavior analysts are having their professional identities challenged by the roles that cognition and biology are said to play in the conduct and outcome of applied behavior analysis and behavior therapy. For cogniphiliacs, cognition and biology are central to their interventions because cognition and biology are said to reflect various processes,…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories, Biology, Cognitive Processes
Morris, Edward K.; And Others – 1984
Interbehavioral psychology represents an important innovation for clinical psychology in general, and for behavior modification in particular. Most theories of deviance acknowledge the role of a person's past history in the determination of behavior. Unfortunately, this history is often transformed into the supposed effects of current and…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Behavior Theories, Crime, Delinquency

Morris, Edward K. – Criminal Justice and Behavior, 1980
Assumptions of applied behavior analysis are presented: (1) good practice should be good research; (2) behavioral goals, procedures, and effects should be socially validated; and (3) a systems perspective should be adopted when focusing on behavior analysis and intervention. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Crime
Morris, Edward K.; Lazo, Junelyn F.; Smith, Nathaniel G. – Behavior Analyst, 2004
This paper brings some data to bear on the criticisms, claims, and arguments that Skinner (a) denied or dismissed biological participation in behavior, (b) addressed it only late in his career or more often later than earlier, or (c) addressed it only because of the overwhelming evidence for it or the criticisms that he had overlooked it. For…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Physiology, Genetics, Evolution
Morris, Edward K.; Smith, Nathaniel G.; Altus, Deborah E. – Behavior Analyst, 2005
Our paper reviews and analyzes B. F. Skinner's contributions to applied behavior analysis in order to assess his role as the field's originator and founder. We found, first, that his contributions fall into five categorizes: the style and content of his science, his interpretations of typical and atypical human behavior, the implications he drew…
Descriptors: Review (Reexamination), Intellectual History, Profiles, Behavior Theories
Morris, Edward K.; Hursh, Daniel E. – 1979
This paper indicates underlying philosophic assumptions which are compatible with the behavior analysis approach to child development. Four issues taken into consideration are (a) biology and environment, (b) structure and function, (c) traits and situations, and (d) mechanistic and organismic approaches to development. The following ideas…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Child Development, Environmental Influences