Reflections on Adaptive Behavior : Essays in Honor of J.E.R. Staddon / edited by Nancy K. Innis.
2008
BF335 .R35 2008eb
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Title
Reflections on Adaptive Behavior : Essays in Honor of J.E.R. Staddon / edited by Nancy K. Innis.
ISBN
9780262276023 (electronic bk.)
026227602X (electronic bk.)
9781435649026 (electronic bk.)
1435649028 (electronic bk.)
9780262090445 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
0262090449 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
9780262590266 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
0262590263 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
026227602X (electronic bk.)
9781435649026 (electronic bk.)
1435649028 (electronic bk.)
9780262090445 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
0262090449 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
9780262590266 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
0262590263 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2008.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (vi, 394 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
BF335 .R35 2008eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
155.19/434
Summary
J. E. R. Staddon's colleagues and former students discuss Staddon's work as a "theoretical behaviorist" and his influence on their own research.John Staddon has devoted his long and distinguished career to the study of the adaptive function and mechanisms of learning. He did his graduate work at the famous Skinner Lab at Harvard in the early 1960s (supervised by Richard Herrnstein, who did his doctoral work with B. F. Skinner), but his work can be characterized as theoretical behaviorism. Staddon, now at Duke University, believes that experimental analysis is never enough to make sense of behavior and that "theoretical imagination" is also required. Staddon's theoretical imagination has distinguished his work over the years and has influenced the field. Staddon is not afraid to deviate from the norm: when psychologists were maintaining their distance from behavioral psychology, Staddon was promoting optimality theories. Optimality theories in psychology are now commonplace. In this volume, Staddon's colleagues and former students discuss topics that have been important in his work: behavioral ability and choice, memory, time and models (the subject of his work at Harvard), and behaviorism. They also reflect on Staddon's influence on their own work and the evolution of their thinking on these topics. ContributorsGiulio Bolacchi, Daniel T. Cerutti, Mircea Ioan Chelaru, J. Mark Cleaveland, Robert H. I. Dale, Rebecca A. Dixon, Valentin Dragoi, Stephen Gray, Jennifer J. Higa, John M. Horner, Nancy K. Innis, Mandar S. Jog, Richard Keen, John E. Kello, Eric Macaux, Armando Machado, John C. Malone, Jr., Kazuchika Manabe, Susan R. Perry, Alliston K. Reid
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