Examples of B. F. Skinner in the following topics:
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- B.
- F.
- Thorndike in the late 1800s, then brought to popularity by B.
- F.
- Skinner in the mid-1900s.
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- Behavioral theory also incorporates B.F.
- Skinner's theory of behavior modification, which takes into account the effect of reward and punishment on changing behavior.
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- In psychology, behavioral modification was made popular by B.
- F.
- Skinner, who analyzed the triggers and rewards for certain behaviors in a series of experiments with animals.
- B.F.
- Skinner introduced the study of behavior modification, focusing on how animals and humans react to reward and punishment.
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- Thorndike in the late 1800's, then brought to popularity by B.F.
- Skinner in the mid-1900's.
- Thorndike's initial research was highly influential on another psychologist, B.F.
- Skinner.
- Skinner used this basic principle to study the possible scope and scale of the influence of operant conditioning on animal behavior.
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- Watson, Edward Lee Thorndike, and B.
- F.
- Skinner.
- John B.
- F.
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- In his operant-conditioning experiments, Skinner often used an approach called shaping.
- To test this method, B.
- F.
- Skinner performed shaping experiments on rats, which he placed in an apparatus (known as a Skinner box) that monitored their behaviors.
- For example, once the rat had touched the lever, Skinner might stop rewarding it for simply taking a step toward the lever.
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- John B.
- Watson (1878-1958) and B.
- F.
- Skinner (1904-1990) are the two principal originators of behaviorist approaches to learning.
- Skinner remarked that "the things we call pleasant have an energizing or strengthening effect on our behavior" (Skinner, 1972, p. 74).
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- Reinforcement theory has been put into operation in a process called "operant conditioning," a term coined by B.
- F.
- Skinner to mean "the changing of behavior by the use of reinforcement given after the desired response. " Skinner identified three types of responses or operant that can follow behavior.
- Skinner studied operant conditioning by conducting experiments using rats, which he placed in a "Skinner Box".
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- A major proponent of such conditioning was psychologist B.F.
- Skinner, the inventor of the Skinner box.
- Skinner put rats in his boxes that contained a lever that would dispense food to the rat when depressed.
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- Parkay, F.W. & Hass, G. (2000).
- Skinner, B. (1972).