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JEAB Selected Articles Archive

Links to a few articles from each issue published since late 1994 are presented here.
*
To view PDF files, download the FREE Adobe Reader.
Also visit JABA’s Selected Articles Archive.

The almost 3,800 articles published between January 1958 (Vol. 1) and six months ago are now available at no charge through the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central.
Here are some samples that await the curious reader:
Jump to:   20072006200520042003200220012000199919981997199619951994

2008

Scroll down to most recent issue.

Vol. Issue Authors and TitleDownload
89 January      James E. Mazur. Half a century [Editorial]. 89, 1-4. *
(88K)
89 January      Takayuki Tanno and Takayuki Sakagami. On the primacy of molecular processes in determining response rates under variable-ratio and variable-interval schedules. 87, 5-24. *
(252K)
89 January     

JEAB’s Fiftieth Anniversary


Leonard Green and James E. Mazur. 50th anniversary essays. 89, 93.
*
(72K)
89 January      Victor G. Laties. The Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior at Fifty. 89, 95-109. *
(1.8MB)
89 January      A. Charles Catania. The Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior at Zero, Fifty, and One Hundred. 89, 111-118. *
(140K)
89 January      John A. Nevin. Control, prediction, order, and the joys of research. 89, 119-124. *
(172K)
89 January      Edmund Fantino. Behavior analysis: Thriving, but how about its future? 89, 125-128. *
(88K)
89 January      Kennon A. Lattal. JEAB at Fifty: Co-evolution of research and technology. 89, 129-136. *
(120K)
89 January      John T. Wixted. JEAB and the Skinnerian interpretation of behavior. 89, 137-140. *
(92K)
89 March      Alan Silberberg, Peter G. Roma, Mary E. Huntsberry, Frederick R. Warren-Boulton, Takayuki Sakagami, Angela M. Ruggiero and Stephen J. Suomi. On loss aversion in capuchin monkeys. 89, 145-155. *
(168K)
89 March      Monique A. R. Udell and C. D. L. Wynne. A review of domestic dogs’ (Canis familiaris) human-like behaviors: Or why behavior analysts should stop worrying and love their dogs. 89, 247-261. *
(168K)
89 May      Tim A. Shahan and Christopher A. Podlesnik. Conditioned reinforcement value and resistance to change. 89, 263-298. *
(620K)
89 May      Anthony DeFulio and Timothy D. Hackenberg. Combinations of response-dependent and response- independent schedule-correlated stimulus presentation in an observing procedure. 89, 299-309. *
(232K)
90 July      Michael A. Magoon and Thomas S. Critchfield. Concurrent schedules of positive and negative reinforcement: Differential-impact and differential-outcomes hypotheses. 90, 1-22. *
(672K)
90 July      Florian Kutzner, Peter Freytag, Tobias Vogel, and Klaus Fiedler. Base-rate neglect as a function of base rates in probabilistic contingency learning. 90, 23-32. *
(324K)
90 July      Iver H. Iversen. An inexpensive and automated method for presenting olfactory or tactile stimuli to rats in a two-choice discrimination task. 90, 113-124. *
(752K)
90 September      * Henry Marcucella. J. Michael Harrison (1915-2007): A research career well lived. 90, 131-134. *
(116K)
90 September      * Lanny Fields and Patricia Moss. Formation of partially- and fully-elaborated generalized equivalence classes. 90, 135-168. *
(4.5M)
90 September      * Douglas Elliffe, Michael Davison, and Jason Landon. Relative reinforcer rates and magnitudes do not control concurrent choice independently. 90, 169-183. *
(352K)
90 September      * Ben A. Williams, Joel Myerson, and Sandra Hale. Individual differences, intelligence, and behavior analysis. 90, 219-231. *
(380K)
90 September      * Francis Mechner. An invitation to behavior analysts: Review of In Search of Memory: The Emergence of a New Science of Mind by Eric R. Kandel. 90, 235-248. *
(164K)

2007

Vol. Issue Authors and TitleDownload
87 January      William Timberlake. James A. Dinsmoor (1921-2005): Questions of science and life. 87, 1-4. *
(276K)
87 January      Gustavo Bachá-Méndez, Alliston K. Reid, and Adela Mendoza-Soylovna. Resurgence of integrated behavioral units. 87, 5-24. *
(484 K)
87 January      Howard Rachlin. Cui bono? A review of Breaking the Spell: Religion as a natural phenomenon by Daniel C. Dennett. 87, 143-149. *
(116K)
87 March      C. R. Gallistel, Adam Philip King, Daniel Gottlieb, Fuat Balci, Efstathios B. Papachristos, Matthew Szalecki, and Kimberly S. Carbone. Is matching innate? 87, 161-199. *
(868K)
87 March      Elliot A. Ludvig, Kent Conover, and Peter Shizgal. The effects of reinforcer magnitude on timing in rats. 87, 201-218. *
(388K)
87 March      Murray Sidman. The analysis of behavior: What’s in it for us? 87, 309-316. *
(340K)
87 March      James J. Jakubow. Review of the book Sniffy the Virtual Rat Pro Version 2.0 . 87, 317-323. *
(204K)
87 May      Shannon S. Doughty, Cynthia M. Anderson, Adam H. Doughty, Dean C. Williams, and Kathryn J. Saunders. Discriminative control of punished stereotyped behavior in humans. 87, 325-336. *
(204K)
87 May      Edmund Fantino and Paul Romanowich. The effect of conditioned reinforcement rate on choice: A review. 87, 409-421. *
(340K)
87 May      Travis Thompson. Relations among functional systems in behavior analysis. 87, 423-440. *
(252K)
87 July      Allen Neuringer, Greg Jensen, and Paul Piff. Stochastic matching and the voluntary nature of choice. 88, 1-28. *
(456K)
87 July      Rogelio Escobar and Carlos A. Bruner. Response induction during the acquisition and maintenance of lever pressing with delayed reinforcement. 88, 29-49. *
(952K)
87 July      Thomas R. Zentall and Rebecca A. Singer. Within-trial contrast: Pigeons prefer conditioned reinforcers that follow a relatively more rather than a less aversive event. 88, 131-149. *
(332K)
87 September      Armando Machado and Paulo Rodrigues. The differentiation of response numerosities in the pigeon 88,153-178. *
(724K)
87 September      Michael J. Dougher, Derek Hamilton, Brandi Fink, and Jennifer Harrington. Transformation of the discriminative and eliciting functions of generalized relational stimuli. 88, 29-49. *
(508K)
87 September      John A. Nevin, Michael Davison, Amy L. Odum, and Timothy A. Shahan. A theory of attending, remembering, and reinforcement in delayed matching to sample. 88, 285-317. *
(1M)
87 November      Joel Myerson, Shannon Robertson, and Sandra Hale. Aging and intra-individual variability in performance: Analyses of response time distributions. 88,319-337. *
(380K)
87 November      Anthony A. Wright. An experimental analysis of memory processing. 88, 405-433. *
(744K)
87 November      Michael D. Zeiler. On the reality of tooth fairies: A review of The God Delusion. [by Richard Dawkins] 88, 435-443. *
(132K)

2006

Vol. Issue Authors and TitleDownload
85 January      Leonard Green. Stasis and change [Editorial] 85, 1-2. *
(44K)
85 January      Xochitl de la Piedad, Douglas Field, and Howard Rachlin. The influence of prior choices on current choice. 85, 3-21. *
(236K)
85 January      Richard L. Shull and Julie A. Grimes. Resistance to extinction following variable-interval reinforcement: Reinforcer rate and amount. 85, 23-39. *
(168K)
85 January      Helga Lejeune, Marc Richelle, and J. H. Wearden. About Skinner and time: Behavior-analytic contributions to research on animal timing. 85, 125-142. *
(140K)
85 March      Jorge M. Oliveira-Castro, Gordon R. Foxall, and Teresa C. Schrezenmaier. Consumer brand choice: individual and group analyses of demand elasticity. 85, 147-166. *
(180K)
85 March      Timothy A. Shahan, Christopher A. Podlesnik, and Corina Jimenez-Gomez. Matching and conditioned reinforcement rate. 85, 167-180. *
(332K)
85 March      James Mazur. Mathematical models and the experimental analysis of behavior. 85, 275-291. *
(172K)
85 May      Efstathios B. Papachristos and C. R. Gallistel. Autoshaped head poking in the mouse: A quantitative analysis of the learning curve. 85, 275-291. *
(260K)
85 May      Matthew O’Daly, Samuel Angulo, Cassandra Gipson, and Edmund Fantino. Influence of temporal context on value in the multiple-chains and succesive-encounters procedures.. 85, 309-328. *
(320K)
85 May      Marc N. Branch. How research in behavioral pharmacology informs behavioral science. 85, 407-423. *
(216K)
85 May      Howard Rachlin. Notes on discounting. 85, 425-435. *
(120K)
86 July      Federico Sanabria, Matthew T. Sitomer, and Peter R. Killeen. Negative automaintenance omission training is effective. 86, 1-10. *
(124K)
86 July      Christian U. Krägeloh, Douglas M. Elliffe, and Michael Davison. Contingency discriminability and peak shift in concurrent schedules. 86, 11-30. *
(452K)
86 July      François Tonneau, Américo Ríos, and Felipe Cabrera. Measuring resistance to change at the within-session level . 86, 109-121. *
(136K)
86 July      Julian C. Leslie Herbert Spencer’s contributions to behavior analysis: A retrospective review of Principles of Psychology. 86, 123-129. *
(68K)
86 September Terry W. Belke, W. David Pierce, and Ian D. Duncan. Reinforcement value and substitutability of sucrose and wheel running: Implications for activity anorexia. 86, 131-158. *
(460K)
86 September Amy L. Odum, Ryan D. Ward, Christopher A. Barnes, and K. Anne Burke. The effects of delayed reinforcement on variability and repetition of response sequences. 86, 159-179. *
(368K)
86 September Michael E. Young, Joshua S. Beckman, and Edward A. Wasserman. Pigeons’ discrimination of Michotte’s launching effect. 86, 223-237. *
(968K)
86 November Michael Davison and William M. Baum. Do conditional reinforcers count? 86, 269-283. *
(416K)
86 November

Behavior Analysis:
Tributes to P. B. Dews, R. T. Kelleher and W. H. Morse.

M. Jackson Marr. A major trio. 86, 355-357.
*
(84K)
86 November James E. Barrett. Behavioral determinants of drug action: The contributions of Peter B. Dews. 86, 359-370. *
(184K)
86 November Marc N. Branch. Roger Kelleher, behavior analyst. 86, 371-384. *
(332K)
86 November Michael D. Zeiler. An architect of the golden years. 86, 385-391. *
(116K)
86 November

Technical Note

Brian D. Kangas and Marc N. Branch. Stability of pigeon body wieght under free-feeding conditions. 86, 393-396.
*
(132K)
2005
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
83 January Anton D. Navarro and Edmund Fantino. The sunk cost effect in pigeons and humans. 83, 1-13. *
(116K)
83 January Moti Nissani, Donna Hoefler-Nissani, U Tin Lay, and U Wan Htun. Simultaneous visual discrimination in Asian elephants. 83, 15-29. *
(312K)
83 January      Michael Davison and John A. Nevin. On science and the discriminative law of effect. 83, 85-92. *
(100K)
83 March Gregory J. Madden, Jamie M. Dake, Ellie C. Mauel, and Ryan R. Rowe. Labor supply and consumption of food in a closed economy under a range of fixed- and random-ratio schedules: Tests of unit price. 83, 99-118. *
(204K)
83 March Glenn S. Brown and K. Geoffrey White. On the effects of signaling reinforcer probability and magnitude in delayed matching to sample. 83, 119-128. *
(128K)
83 March Matthew E. Andrzejewski, Claudia D. Cardinal, Douglas P. Field, Barbara A. Flannery, Michael Johnson, Kathleen Bailey, and Philip N. Hineline. Pigeons’ choices between fixed-interval and random-interval schedules: Utility of variability? 83, 129-145. *
(184K)
83 May A. C. Catania. Elliot Shimoff: 1943–2004. 83, 197-199. *
(60K)
83 May Timothy A. Shahan and Kennon A. Lattal. Unsignaled delays of reinforcement, relative time, and resistance to change. 83, 201-219. *
(200K)
83 May Florente López and Marina Menez. Effects of reinforcement history on response rate and response pattern in periodic reinforcement. 83, 221-241. *
(320K)
83 May G. E. Zuriff. Behaviorism makes its debut: A review of Lattal and Chase’s Behavior Theory and Philosophy. 83, 315-322. *
(68K)
84 July Timothy A. Shahan and Christopher A. Podlesnik. Rate of conditioned reinforcement affects observing rate but not resistance to change. 84, 1-17. *
(156K)
84 July Richard L. Shull. The sensitivity of response rate to the rate of variable-interval reinforcement for pigeons and rats: A review. 84, 99-110. *
(152K)
84 July J. J McDowell. On the classic and modern theories of matching. 84, 111-127. *
(160K)
84 September Jesse Dallery, Paul L. Soto, and J. J McDowell. A test of the formal and modern theories of matching. 84, 129-145. *
(212K)
84 September Andrea J. Frank and Edward A. Wasserman. Associative symmetry in the pigeon after successive matching-to-sample training. 84, 147-165. *
(212K)
84 September John A. Nevin, Michael Davison, and Timothy A. Shahan. A theory of attending and reinforcement in conditional discriminations 84, 281-303. *
(316K)
84 November

Special Issue on the Relation of Behavior and Neuroscience

Guest Editors:
William Timberlake, David W. Schaal and Joseph E. Steinmetz
[8 of the 21 articles]
 
84 November William Timberlake, David W. Schaal and Joseph E. Steinmetz. Relating behavior and neuroscience: Background, purpose, and organization. 84, 305-311. *
(72K)
84 November William Bechtel. The challenge of characterizing operations in the mechanisms underlying behavior. 84, 313-325. *
(120K)
84 November Tal Yarkoni, Todd S. Braver, Jeremy R. Gray, and Leonard Green. Prefrontal brain activity predicts temporally extended decision-making behavior. 84, 537-554. *
(268K)
84 November Brian Lau and Paul W. Glimcher. Dynamic response-by-response models of matching behavior in rhesus monkeys. 84, 555-579. *
(412K)
84 November Greg S. Corrado, Leo P. Sugrue, H. Sebastian Seung, and William T. Newsome. Linear–nonlinear–Poisson models of primate choice. 84, 581-617. *
(540K)
84 November Howard Eichenbaum and Norbert J. Fortin. Bridging the gap between brain and behavior: Cognitive and neural mechanisms of episodic memory. 84, 619-629. *
(300K)
84 November George V. Rebec and WenLin Sun. Neuronal substrates of relapse to cocaine-seeking behavior: Role of prefrontal cortex. 84, 653-666. *
(160K)
84 November Gail Winger, James H. Woods, Chad M. Galuska, and Tammy Wade-Galuska. Behavioral perspectives on the neuroscience of drug addiction. 84, 667-681. *
(208K)
2004
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
81 January Leonard Green. Editorial. 81, 1-3. *
(68K)
81 January Theresa A. Foster and Timothy D. Hackenberg. Unit price and choice in a token-reinforcement context. 81, 5-25. *
(200K)
81 January      Koichi Ono. Effects of experience on preference between forced and free choice. 81, 27-37. *
(128K)
81 March      D. T. Cerutti and J. E. R. Staddon. Time and rate measures in choice transitions. 81, 135-154. *
(360K)
81 March      David C. Palmer. Data in search of a principle: A review of relational frame theory: A post-Skinnerian account of human language and cognition. 81, 189-204. *
(132K)
81March      Leonard Green and M. J. Marr. Editors’ introduction. 81, 205. [“... a hitherto unpublished address by B. F. Skinner given on May 10, 1968 to the Department of Psychology in commemoration of the Centennial of Wayne State University.... printed in recognition of the B. F. Skinner Centennial this year.”] *
(60K)
81March      B. F. Skinner. Psychology in the year 2000. 81, 207-213. *
(92K)
81May      Randolph C. Grace.Temporal context in concurrent chains: I. Terminal-link duration. 81, 215-237. *
(224K)
81May      François Tonneau and Carmen González. Function transfer in human operant experiments: The role of stimulus pairings. 81, 239-255. *
(348K)
81May      J. J Mcdowell. A computational model of selection by consequences. 81, 297-317. *
(184K)
82July      Olga F. Lazareva, Anna A. Smirnova, Maria S. Bagozkaja, Zoya A. Zorina, Vladimir V. Rayevsky, and Edward A. Wasserman. Transitive responding in hooded crows requires linearly ordered stimuli. 82, 1-19. *
(280K)
82July      Brent Alsop. Signal-detection analyses of conditioned discrimination and delayed matching-to-sample performance. 82, 57-69. *
(148K)
82September    Natasha Ghosh, S. E. G. Lea, and Malia Noury.Trasfer to intermediate forms following concept discrimination by pigeons: Chimeras and morphs. 82, 125-141. *
(232K)
82September    Steven C. Hayes and Dermot Barnes-Holmes. Relational operants: Processes and implications: A response to Palmer’s review of Relational Frame Theory. 82, 213-224. *
(108K)
82September    David C. Palmer.Generic response classes and relational frame theory: Response to Hayes and Barnes-Holmes. 82, 225-234. *
(96K)
82November   

B. F. Skinner Centennial

James A. Dinsmoor. The etymology of basic concepts in the experimental analysis of behavior. 82, 311-316.
*
(80K)
82November    Gail B. Peterson. A day of great illumination: B. F. Skinner’s discovery of shaping. 82, 317-328. *
(620K)
82November    Kennon A. Lattal. Steps and pips in the history of the cumulative recorder. 82, 329-355. *
(1.8M)
82November    Edward K. Morris and Nathaniel G. Smith. On the origin and preservation of cumulative recorder in its struggle for life as a favored term. 82, 357-373. *
(148K)
2003 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
79 January William L. Palya and Robert W. Allan. Dynamic concurrent schedules. 79, 1-20.
(1.7MB)
79 January Susan M. Schneider. Evolution, behavior principles, and developmental systems: A review of Gottlieb's Synthesizing nature-nurture: Prenatal roots of instinctive behavior. 79, 137-157.
(168K)
79 March Phil Reed, Tom Hildebrandt, Julie DeJongh, and Mariane Soh. Rats’ performance on variable-interval schedules with a linear feedback loop between response rate and reinforcement rate. 79, 157-173.
(304K)
79 March Armando Machado and Francisco J. Silva. You can lead an ape to a tool but...: A review of Povinelli’s Folk physics for apes: The chimpanzee’s theory of how the world works. 79, 267-286.
(432K)
79 May Angela Bron, Catherine E. Sumpter, T. Mary Foster, and William Temple. Contingency discriminability, matching, and bias in the concurrent-schedule responding of possums (Trichosurus vulpercula). 79, 289-306.
(224K)
79 May John A. Nevin, Jessica Milo, Amy L. Odum, and Timothy A. Shahan. Accuracy of discrimination, rate of responding, and resistance to change. 79, 307-321.
(736K)
80 July Thomas S. Chritchfield, Elliot M. Paletz, Kenneth R. MacAleese, and M. Christopher Newland. Punishment in human choice: Direct or competitive suppression? 80, 1-27.
(236K)
80 July Jennifer O’Donnell and Kathryn J. Saunders. Equivalence relations in individuals with language limitations and mental retardation. 80, 131-157.
(180K)
80 September Richard L. Shull and Julie A. Grimes. Bouts of responding from variable-interval reinforcement of lever pressing by rats. 80, 159-171.
(144K)
80 September Hiroto Okouchi. Stimulus generalization of behavioral history. 80, 173-186.
(164K)
80 November Margaret A. McDevitt and Ben A. Williams. Arousal, changeover responses, and preference in concurrent schedules. 80, 261-272. *
(132K)
80 November

The Golden Anniversary of Skinner’s Science and Human Behavior

M. Jackson Marr. A still great voice: The golden sovereignty of Science and Human Behavior. Pp. 311-312. 
*
(64K)
80 November          A. Charles Catania. B. F. Skinner’s Science and Human Behavior: Its antecedents and its consequences. Pp. 313-320.  *
(96K)
80 November          Jack Michael. Science and Human Behavior: A tutorial in behavior analysis. Pp. 321-328.  *
(92K)
80 November          Carol Pilgrim. Science and Human Behavior at fifty. Pp. 329-340.  *
(120K)
80 November          João Claudio Todorov. Science and Human Behavior translated into Portuguese: Ciência e comportamento humano. Pp. 341-343.  *
(72K)
80 November          G. E. Zuriff. Science and Human Behavior, dualism, and conceptual modification. Pp. 345-352.  *
(88K)
2002 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
77 January William L. Palya, Donald Walter, Robert Kessel, and Robert Lucke. Linear modeling of steady-state behavioral dynamics. 77, 3-27.
(448K)
77 January J. E. R. Staddon, I. M. Chelaru, and J. J. Higa. A tuned-trace theory of interval-timing dynamics. 77, 105-124. *
(336K)
77 March Matthew W. Johnson and Warren K. Bickel. Within-subject comparison of real and hypothetical money rewards in delay discounting. 77, 129-146. *
(448K)
77 March James E. Mazur. Evidence against a constant difference effect in concurrent-chains schedules. 77, 147-155. *
(172K)
77 May Richard L. Shull, Scott T. Gaynor, and Julie A. Grimes. Response rate viewed as engagement bouts: Resistance to extinction. 77, 211-231. *
(268K)
77May

A Tribute to the Harvard Pigeon Lab (1948–1998)


K. A. Lattal. Editor’s Introduction. 77, 301. * (64K)

In the Beginning

C. B. Ferster. Schedules of reinforcement with Skinner (reprint). 77, 303-311. * (692K) W. H. Morse and P. B. Dews. Foreword to Schedules of Reinforcement. (reprint). 77, 313-317. * (84K)

The Lab Under Skinner and Herrnstein

Lewis R. Gollub. Between the waves: Harvard Pigeon Lab 1955–1960. 77, 319-326. * (552K) A. Charles Catania. The watershed years of 1958–1962 in the Harvard Pigeon Lab. 77, 327-345. * (916K) William M. Baum. The Harvard Pigeon Lab Under Herrnstein. 77, 347-355. * (124K)

Extensions

A. W. Logue. The living legacy of the Harvard Pigeon Lab: Quantitative analysis in the wide world. 77, 357-366. * (136K) G. E. Zuriff. Philosophy of behaviorism. 77, 367-371. * (92K)

Reflections and Comments

The dozen reminiscences listed below are only available as a single twenty-page file. N. H. Azrin. Pigeon Lab notable experience. 77, 373. Terry W. Belke. Context matters: My education at the Harvard Pigeon Lab. 77, 373-374. Robert A. Boakes. From programmed instruction to pigeons. 77, 374-376. Peter B. Dews. A view from an outsider. 77, 376-377. Edmund Fantino. The nurturing of a behavior analyst. 77, 377-379. Edward J. Green. From programmed instruction to pigeons. 77, 379-380. Gene M. Heyman. The Harvard Pigeon Lab, 1970-1998: Graduate students and matching law research. 77, 380-383. Philip N. Hineline. The Harvard Pigeon Lab in context. 77, 383-385. Ogden R. Lindsley. Our Harvard pigeon, rat, dog, and human lab. 77, 385-387. Frances K. McSweeney. The matching law illustrates the influence of the Harvard Pigeon Lab. 77, 388-390. Harold L. Miller, Jr. Qualitatively different reinforcers in the Harvard Pigeon Lab. 77, 390-391. John Staddon. Memories of Memorial Hall. 77, 392.

Addendum: Harvard Psychology Ph.D.’s During the Pigeon Lab Era (A. C. Catania, 52K)

Reflections
and
Comments

(pp. 373-392)
(680K)
78 July Gregory J. Madden, Blaine F. Peden, and Tetsuo Yamaguchi. Human group choice: Discrete-trial and free-operant tests of the ideal free distribution. 78, 1-15. *
(228K)
78 July Edmund Fantino and Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino. From patterns to prosperity: A review of Rachlin’s The Science of Self-Control. 78, 117-125. *
(116K)
78 September Peter R. Killeen, Scott S. Hall, and Mark P. Reilly. Molecular analyses of the principal components of response strength. 78, 127-160. *
(440K)
78 September Michael D. Zeiler. The function, mechanism, and evolution of learning and behavior: A review of Sara J. Shettleworth’s Cognition, Evolution, and Behavior. 78, 225-235. *
(120K)
78 November Thomas R. Zentall, Mark Galizio, and Thomas S. Critchfield. Categorization, concept learning, and behavior analysis: An introduction. 78, 237-248. *
(136K)
78 November David C. Palmer. Psychological essentialism: A review of E. Margolis and S. Laurence (Eds.), Concepts: Core readings. 78, 597-607. *
(128K)
2001 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
75 January Rebecca J. Sargisson and K. Geoffrey White. Generalization of delayed matching to sample following training at different delays. 75, 1-14. *
(236K)
75 January William V. Dube and William J. McIlvane. Behavioral momentum in computer-presented discriminations in individuals with severe mental retardation. 75, 15-23.
(188K)
75 March Peter R. Killeen and Scott S. Hall. The principal components of response strength. 75, 111-134.
(312K)
75 March Steven M. Kemp and David A. Eckerman. Situational descriptions of behavioral procedures: The In Situ testbed. 75, 135-164.
(408K)
75 May Richard L. Shull, Scott T. Gaynor, and Julie A. Grimes. Response rate viewed as engagement bouts: Effects of relative reinforcement and schedule type.75, 247-274.
(328K)
75May James A. Dinsmoor. Stimuli inevitably generated by behavior that avoids electric shock are inherently reinforcing.75, 311-333.


This article is accompanied by Eight Commentaries, which may be downloaded separately or, in two instances due to how they were formatted in print, in small batches. You may also acquire them as a 31-page unit by choosing that possibility from the right column. Murray Sidman. Safe periods both explain and need explaining. 75, 335-338.
William M. Baum. Molar versus molecular as a paradigm clash, 75, 338-341.
Both commentaries are in one file.

Philip N. Hineline. Beyond the molar-molecular distinction: We need multiscaled analyses. 75, 342-347. Philip J. Bersh. The molarity of molecular theory and the molecularity of molar theory. 75, 348-350.) Marc N. Branch. Are responses in avoidance procedures “safety” signals? 75, 351-354.
Jack Michael and John W. Clark. A few minor suggestions. 75, 354-357.
Alan Baron and Michael Perone. Explaining avoidance: Two factors are still better than one. 75, 357-361.
All three are in one file.

Ben A. Williams. Two-factor theory has strong empirical evidence of validity. 75, 362-365.
Author’s Reply: James A. Dinsmoor. Still no evidence for temporally extended shock-frequency reduction as a reinforcer. 75, 367-378.


Article
(pp. 311-333)
(436K)

All
Comment-
aries
Together
(pp. 335-365)
(412K)

Author’s
Reply
(pp. 367-378)
(136K)
76 July Cynthia J. Pietras and Timothy D. Hackenberg. Risk-sensitive choice in humans as a function of an earnings budget. 76, 1-19.
(252K)
76 July Hayne W. Reese. Review of The War Between Mentalism and Behaviorism: On the Accessibility of Mental Processes by William R. Uttal. 76, 115-130.
(156K)
76 September Colleen Reichmuth Kastak, Ronald J. Shusterman, and David Kastak. Equivalence classification by California sea lions using class-specific reinforcers. 76, 131-158.
(448K)
76 September Joel Myerson, Leonard Green, and Missaka Warusawitharana. Area under the curve as a measure of discounting. 76, 235-243.
(152K)
76 November John J. Widholm, Alan Silberberg, Steven R. Hursh, Abdulrazaq A. Imam, and Frederick R. Warren-Boulton. Stock optimizing in choice when a token deposit is the operant. 76, 245-263.
(216K)
76 November C. D. L. Wynne. Universal Plotkinism: A review of Henry Plotkin’s Darwin Machines and the Nature of Knowledge. 76, 351-361.
(124K)
2000 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
73 January Neil Dugdale and C. Fergus Lowe. Testing for symmetry in the conditional discriminations of language-trained chimpanzees. 73, 5-22.
(384K)
73 January Jesse Dallery, J. J McDowell, and Juliana S. Lancaster. Falsification of matching theory’s account of single-alternative responding: Herrnstein’s k varies with sucrose concentration. 73, 23-43.
(204K)
73 March David W. Schaal, Amy L. Odum, and Timothy A. Shahan. Pigeons may not remember the stimuli that reinforced their recent behavior. 73, 125-139.
(204K)
73 March Karen M. Lionello-DeNolf and Peter J. Urcuioli. Transfer of pigeons’ matching to sample to novel sample locations 73, 141-161.
(272K)
73 May Eric A. Jacobs and Timothy D. Hackenberg. Human performance on negative slope schedules of points exchangeable for money: A failure of molar maximization. 73, 241-260.
(284K)
73 May Jennifer O’Donnell, John Crosbie, Dean C. Williams, and Kathryn J. Saunders. Stimulus control and generalization of point-loss punishment with humans. 73, 261-274.
(204K)
74 July Michael Davison and William M. Baum. Choice in a variable environment: Every reinforcer counts. 74, 1-24. pdf
(428K)
74 July Murray Sidman. Equivalence relations and the reinforcement contingency. 74, 127-146.
(324K)
74 September James S. MacDonall. Synthesizing concurrent interval performances. 74, 189-206.
(248K)
74 September Olive Healy, Dermot Barnes-Holmes, and Paul M. Smeets. Derived relational responding as generalized operant behavior. 74, 207-227.
(216K)
74 November Christopher P. Raia, Stephen W. Shillingford, Harold L. Miller, Jr., and Phillip S. Baier. Interaction of procedural factors in human performance on yoked schedules. 74, 265-281.
(404K)
74 November Troy J. Zarcone and Nancy A. Ator. Drug discrimination: Stimulus control during repeated testing in extinction. 74, 283-294.
(184K)
1999 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
71 January     Mark Galizio. Extinction of responding maintained by timeout from avoidance. 71, 1-11.
(164K)
71 January K. Geoffrey White and John T. Wixted. Psychophysics of remembering. 71, 91-113.


Electronic versions of two related articles are available from a page that also contains the
Editor’s Introductory Note.
  • John A. Nevin. Signal detection theory and operant behavior: A review of David M. Green and John A. Swets’ Signal Detection Theory and Psychophysics. (JEAB, 1969, 12, 475-480)
  • Michael Davison and John A. Nevin. Stimuli, reinforcers, and behavior: An integration. (JEAB, 1999, 71, 439-482)

(264K)
71 January John C. Malone, Jr. Operants were never "emitted," feeling is doing, and learning takes only one trial: A review of B.F. Skinner's Recent Issues in the Analysis of Behavior. 71, 115-120.
(100K)
71 March Jerry B. Richards, Lan Zhang, Suzanne H. Mitchell, and Harriet De Wit. Delay or probability discounting in a model of impulsive behavior: Effect of alcohol. 71, 121-143.
(216K)
71 March J. E. R. Staddon and J. J. Higa. Time and memory: Towards a pacemaker-free theory of interval timing. 71, 215-251. This article is accompanied by Eight Commentaries, which may be downloaded for viewing (or printing) as a 39-page unit, or in the five smaller files offered below. The latter files vary in size between 101 and 173K. R. M. Church (Evaluation of quantitative theories of timing, 253-256) J. W. Donahoe & J. E. Burgos (Timing without a timer, 257-263) C. R. Gallistel (Can a decay process explain the timing of conditioned responses?, 264-271) J. Gibbon (Multiple time scales is well named, 272-275)
P. R. Killeen (Modeling modeling, 275-280)
Both commentaries are in one file.
J. Marr (The whirligig of time: Some thoughts on Staddon and Higa, 281-284)
C. P. Shimp (Tolerance in a rigorous science, 284-288)
M. D. Zeiler (Time without clocks, 288-291)
All three are in one file.

Authors' Reply: J. E. R. Staddon, J. J. Higa & I. M. Chelaru (Time, trace, memory, 293-301).

Article
(332K)

All
Comment-
aries
Together
(412K)

Authors'
Reply
(148K)
71 May Michael Davison and John A. Nevin. Stimuli, reinforcers, and behavior: An integration. 71, 439-482.

Electronic versions of two related articles are available from a page that also contains the
Editor’s Introductory Note.

  • John A. Nevin. Signal detection theory and operant behavior: A review of David M. Green and John A. Swets’ Signal Detection Theory and Psychophysics (JEAB, 1969, 12, 475-480)
  • K. Geoffrey White and John T. Wixted. Psychophysics of remembering. (JEAB, 1999, 71, 91-113)

(447K)
71 May Sam Leigland. Pragmatism, science, and society: A review of Richard Rorty's Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth: Philosophical Papers, Volume 1. 71, 483-500.
(176K)
72 July Richard R. Saunders and Gina Green. A discrimination analysis of training-structure effects on stimulus equivalence outcomes. 72, 117-137.
(188K)
72 July Valeri A. Farmer-Dougan and James D. Dougan. The man who listens to behavior: Folk wisdom and behavior analysis from a realhorse whisperer. 72, 139-149.
(124K)
72 September J. J McDowell and Jesse Dallery. Falsification of matching theory: Changes in the asymptote of Herrnstein’s hyperbola as a function of water deprivation. 72, 251-268.
(280K)
72 September Howard Rachlin. Philosophical behaviorism: A review of Things That Happen Because They Should: A Teleological Approach to Action by Rowland Stout. 72, 273-277.
(92K)
72 November For these two symposia, click on author names to return the individual papers. All the articles in a unit can be downloaded by clicking on "All articles" or "Both articles."
In Honor of Edward L. Thorndike
A. C. Catania. Thorndike’s legacy: Learning, selection, and the law of effect. 72, 425-428. (128K) William W. Cumming. A review of Geraldine Jonçich’s The sane positivist: A biography of Edward L. Thorndike. 72, 429-432. (87K) Paul Chance. Thorndike’s puzzle boxes and the origins of the experimental analysis of behavior. 72, 433-440. (158K) Eliot Hearst. After the puzzle boxes: Thorndike in the 20th century. 72, 441-446. (96K) John A. Nevin. Analyzing Thorndike’s law of effect: The question of stimulus–response bonds. 72, 447-450. (129K) John W. Donahoe. Edward L. Thorndike: The selectionist connectionist. 72, 451-454. (123K)

All articles
(708K)
72 November
In Honor of Ivan P. Pavlov
A. Charles Catania and Victor G. Laties. Pavlov and Skinner: Two lives in science (An introduction to B. F. Skinner’s “Some responses to the stimulus ‘Pavlov’ ”). 72, 455-461. (270K) B. F. Skinner. Some responses to the stimulus “Pavlov.” (Reprinted) 72, 463-465. (77K)

Both articles
(368K)
1998 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
69 January Claire L. Poulson. Ellen P. Reese (1926–1997): Teacher, mentor, and respectful student of human and nonhuman behavior. 69, 1-4.
(208K)
69 January Steven L. Cohen. Behavioral momentum: The effects of the temporal separation of rates of reinforcement. 69, 29-47.
(208K)
69 March David W. Schaal, Timothy A. Shahan, Craig A. Kovera, and Mark P. Reilly. Mechanisms underlying the effects of unsignaled, delayed reinforcement on key pecking of pigeons under variable-interval schedules. 69, 103-122.
(248K)
69 May William M. Baum and John R. Kraft. Group choice: Competition, travel, and the ideal free distribution. 69, 227-245.
(272K)
69 May Edmund Fantino. Behavior analysis and decision making 69, 355-364.
(144K)
70 July David R. Schmitt. Effects of consequences of advice on patterns of rule control and rule choice. 70, 1-21.
(244K)
70September Iver H. Iversen. Simple and conditional visual discrimination with wheel running as reinforcement in rats. 70, 103-121.
(220K)
70 September Armando Machado and Francisco J. Silva. Greatness and misery in the teaching of the psychology of learning. 70, 215-234. pdf
(180K)
70 November Karen M. Lionello and Peter J. Urcuioli. Control by sample location in pigeons' matching to sample. 70, 235-251.
(276K)
70 November Kennon A. Lattal. A century of effect: Legacies of E. L. Thorndike's Animal Intelligence monograph. 70, 325-336.
(124K)
1997 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
67 January Elliot Hearst. William Nathan Schoenfeld (1915–1996): Innovative scientist, inspiring teacher, relentless questioner, complex man. 67, 1-9. pdf
(84K)
67 March John W. Donahoe, David C. Palmer, and José E. Burgos. The S-R issue: Its status in behavior analysis and in Donahoe and Palmer's Learning and Complex Behavior. 67, 193-211. This article is accompanied by 14 commentaries (by J. Dinsmoor; S. I. Dworkin & M. N. Branch; D. P. Field; G. Galbicka; W. R. Hutchison; S. M. Kemp; M. J. Marr; W. J. McIlvane & W. V. Dube; J. Michael, M. D. Hixson & J. W. Clark; J. Moore; J. E. R. Staddon; L. Stein; W. Vaughan, Jr.; and B. A. Williams), followed by a reply from the authors. These appear on pages 213 through 273.
(720K)
67 May George Collier, Deanne F. Johnson, and Cynthia Morgan. Meal patterns of cats encountering variable food procurement cost. 67, 303-310.
(216K)
68 July Armando Machado. Increasing the variability of response sequences in pigeons by adjusting the frequency of switching between two keys. 68, 1-25.
(384K)
68 July Ben Williams. Varieties of contrast: A review of Incentive Relativity by Charles F. Flaherty. 68, 133-141. pdf
(160K)
68 September Bryan Roche, Dermot Barnes, and Paul M. Smeets. Incongruous stimulus pairing and conditional discrimination training: Effects on relational responding. 68, 143-160.
(204K)
68 November William V. Dube and William J. McIlvane. Reinforcer frequency and restricted stimulus control. 68, 303-316.
(168K)
1996 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
65 January M. L. H. Hunziker, R. Lisa Saldana, and Allen Neuringer. Behavioral variability in SHR and WKY rats as a function of rearing environment and reinforcement contingency. 65, 129-144.
(292K)
65 March Mark L. Sundberg. Toward granting linguistic competence to apes: A review of Savage-Rumbaugh et al.’s Language Comprehension in Ape and Child. 65, 477-492.
(212K)
65 May Leonard Green and Howard Rachlin. Commitment using punishment. 65, 593-601.
(188K)
66 July Kevin Jackson and Timothy D. Hackenberg. Token reinforcement, choice, and self-control in pigeons. 66, 29-49.
(308K)
66 September Michael Davison. Stimulus effects on behavior allocation in three-alternative choice. 66, 149-168.
(284K)
66November Kelly G. Wilson and Steven C. Hayes. Resurgence of derived stimulus relations. 66, 267-281.
(260K)
1995 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
63 January Alan Baron and Antoinette Leinenweber. Effects of a variable-ratio conditioning history on sensitivity to fixed-interval contingencies in rats. 63, 97-110.
(152K)
63 March James E. Mazur. Conditioned reinforcement and choice with delayed and uncertain primary reinforcers. 63, 139-150.
(252K)
63May Richard L. Shull. Interpreting cognitive phenomena: Review of Donahoe and Palmer's Learning and Complex Behavior. 63, 347-358.
(108K)
64 July David W. Schaal, Mark A. Miller, and Amy L. Odum. Cocaine's effects on food-reinforced pecking in pigeons depend food-deprivation level. 64, 61-73.
(212K)
64 September Lewis A. Bizo and K. Geoffrey White. Biasing the pacemaker in the behavioral theory of timing. 64, 225-235.
(148K)
64 November Peter R. Killeen. Economics, ecologics, and mechanics: The dynamics of responding under conditions of varying motivation. 64, 405-431.
(304K)
1994 Back to top
Vol. Issue Authors and Title Download
62 November Kay Dinsmoor. A farewell to Gerbrands. 62, 445.
(32K)

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Copyright 1994-2008, Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, Inc.
All rights reserved. Revised September 23 1995 (rap); September 23 2008 (vgl)