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Bambara, Linda M. – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities (RPSD), 2004
Seminal articles are not only timely in their ability to push the field in new directions but are often timeless in their message. As relevant today as it was 20 years ago, Mayer Shevin's and Nancy Klein's 1984 article on the importance of choice making raises thought-provoking implications about what choice making is, why it is essential in the…
Descriptors: Decision Making Skills, Severe Disabilities, Special Education, Behavioral Science Research
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Navarro, Anton D.; Fantino, Edmund – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2005
The sunk cost effect is the increased tendency to persist in an endeavor once an investment of money, effort, or time has been made. To date, humans are the only animal in which this effect has been observed unambiguously. We developed a behavior-analytic model of the sunk cost effect to explore the potential for this behavior in pigeons as well…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Hypothesis Testing, Animals, Animal Behavior
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Pitts, Raymond C.; McKinney, A. Patrick – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2005
Four rats responded under a "self-control" procedure designed to obtain delay- discount functions within sessions. Each session consisted of seven blocks, with seven trials within each block. Each block consisted of two initial forced- choice trials followed by five free-choice trials. On choice trials, the rats could press either of two…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Drug Use, Animals, Animal Behavior
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Ham, Ok Kyung; Lee, Young Ja – Journal of School Health, 2007
Background: Smoking is popular among Korean male high school adolescents, with the prevalence of 20.7% differing markedly with the type of school, being 16.3% and 27.6% in academic and vocational technical high schools, respectively. The purpose of this study was to identify significant variables that predict stages of smoking cessation among…
Descriptors: Vocational High Schools, Smoking, Metropolitan Areas, Predictor Variables
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Cannata, Marisa – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2007
The organizational context of charter schools may facilitate the formation of a strong teacher community. In particular, a focused school mission and increased control over teacher hiring may lead to stronger teacher professional communities. This paper uses the 1999-2000 Schools and Staffing Survey to compare the level of teacher community in…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Public School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Collegiality
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Shores, Michael; Weseley, Allyson J. – Action in Teacher Education, 2007
Research has established that a variety of factors predict educators' perceptions of students' performance; however, no studies have looked at the impact of educators' political views. The present experiment investigated the effect of educators' political biases on their grading of student essays. Participants included 122 volunteers who were…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Grading, Essays, Teacher Attitudes
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Hagan, Lisa Kindleberger; Kuebli, Janet – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2007
This study examined how parents influence sex differences in young children's physical risk taking behaviors. Eighty three- and four-year old, mostly middle class and Caucasian children climbed across a five-foot high catwalk and walked across a three-foot high beam under their mother or father's supervision. Based on average preschooler gross…
Descriptors: Parent Influence, Middle Class, Preschool Children, Mothers
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Shahan, Timothy A.; Podlesnik, Christopher A.; Jimenez-Gomez, Corina – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
Attempts to examine the effects of variations in relative conditioned reinforcement rate on choice have been confounded by changes in rates of primary reinforcement or changes in the value of the conditioned reinforcer. To avoid these problems, this experiment used concurrent observing responses to examine sensitivity of choice to relative…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Predictor Variables, Intervals, Conditioning
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Overskied, Geir – Psychological Record, 2006
Behavior analysts assume that private events like thinking and feeling have the same kinds of physical dimensions as other events in the world. They still claim, however, that private events can never be initiating causes of behavior. I point out that this position seems theoretically inconsistent, though exactly what qualifies as an initiating…
Descriptors: Prediction, Self Control, Goal Orientation, Cognitive Processes
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Brooks, Lee R.; Hannah, Samuel D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2006
Classification "rules" in expert and everyday discourse are usually deficient by formal standards, lacking explicit decision procedures and precise terms. The authors argue that a central function of such weak rules is to focus on perceptual learning rather than to provide definitions. In 5 experiments, transfer following learning of family…
Descriptors: Classification, Perceptual Motor Learning, Generalization, Evaluation Criteria
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Hayes, Steven C.; Bunting, Kara; Herbst, Scott; Bond, Frank W.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot – Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 2006
Behavior analysis in general and applied behavior analysis in particular requires a well developed, empirically supported, and useful approach to human language and cognition in order to fulfill its mission of providing a relatively adequate comprehensive account of complex human behavior. This article introduces a series of articles in which the…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Organizational Development
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Cheng, Jingjun; Feenstra, Matthijs G. P. – Learning & Memory, 2006
Combined activation of dopamine D1- and NMDA-glutamate receptors in the nucleus accumbens has been strongly implicated in instrumental learning, the process in which an individual learns that a specific action has a wanted outcome. To assess dopaminergic activity, we presented rats with two sessions (30 trials each) of a one-lever appetitive…
Descriptors: Rewards, Biochemistry, Nonverbal Learning, Animals
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Lin, Hui-Ching; Mao, Sheng-Chun; Gean, Po-Wu – Learning & Memory, 2006
The cannabinoid CB1 receptor has been shown to be critically involved in the extinction of fear memory. Systemic injection of a CB1 receptor antagonist prior to extinction training blocked extinction. Conversely, administration of the cannabinoid uptake inhibitor AM404 facilitated extinction in a dose-dependent manner. Here we show that bilateral…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Behavioral Science Research, Animals, Fear
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Andersson, Gerhard; Ghaderi, Ata – Clinical Psychologist, 2006
While a majority of cognitive behavioural researchers and clinicians adhere to the classification system provided in the "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)," strong objections have been voiced among behaviourists who find the dichotomous allocation of patients into psychiatric diagnoses incompatible with the philosophy…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Clinical Diagnosis, Patients, Classification
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Harring, Jeffrey R.; Cudeck, Robert; du Toit, Stephen H. C. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2006
The nonlinear random coefficient model has become increasingly popular as a method for describing individual differences in longitudinal research. Although promising, the nonlinear model it is not utilized as often as it might be because software options are still somewhat limited. In this article we show that a specialized version of the model…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Structural Equation Models, Individual Differences, Longitudinal Studies
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