Rosales-Ruiz, J., & Baer, D. M. (1997).
Behavioral cusps: A developmental and pragmatic concept for behavior analysis.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
30, 533-544.
Most concepts of development explain certain behavior changes as
products or markers of the invariable succession of emerging
periods, stages, refinements, or achievements that define and
order much of an individual's life. A different but comparable
concept can be derived from the most basic mechanisms of behavior
analysis, which are its environmental contingencies, and from its
most basic strategy, which is to study behavior as its subject
matter. From a behavior-analytic perspective, the most
fundamental developmental questions are (a) whether these
contingencies vary in any systematic way across the life span,
and thus make behavior change in a correspondingly systematic
way; and (b) whether some of these contingencies and their
changes have more far-reaching consequences than others, in terms
of the importance to the organism and others, of the behavior
classes they change. Certain behavior changes open the door to
especially broad or especially important further behavior change,
leading to the concept of the behavioral cusp. A behavioral cusp,
then, is any behavior change that brings the organism's behavior
into contact with new contingencies that have even more
far-reaching consequences. Of all the environmental contingencies
that cha nge or maintain behavior, those that accomplish cusps
are developmental. Behavior change remains the fundamental
phenomenon of development for a behavior-analytic view; a cusp is
a special instance of behavior change, a change crucial to what
can come next.
DESCRIPTORS: development, developmental stages, pivotal behaviors,
behavior traps, behavior analysis, behavior change