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A functional identification or classification among different types of rules and their correspondence to rule-governed behavior has been limited. The classification is made according to four dimensions: (a) explicitness, (b) accuracy, (c) complexity, and (d) source.
Law of Psychology. Some legal (e.g., Perlin, 1985) and psychological (e.g., Wulach, 1998) scholars study and write about the law affecting the practice and science of psychology (aka law of psychology).
Rule Governed Behavior. Definition: Behavior that is under the control of a verbally mediated rule; behavior insensitive to immediate contingencies. Example in everyday context: You have always looked both ways before crossing a street, even though you have never been hit by a car or seen anyone else being hit by a car.
Rule-governed behavior occurs in response to a verbal rule that specifies a relationship between a behavior (e.g., saying no to a friend) and a consequence (that friend will not like me).
1 cze 2008 · The term rule-governed behavior (RGB) was first coined by Skinner (1966) to refer to behavior essential to complex human abilities. The traditional behavioral account of rulegoverned...
11 mar 2021 · In brief, pliance refers to rule-governed behavior that is controlled predominantly by speaker mediated consequences for a correspondence between behavior and the rule (e.g., “you can only watch television after you finish your homework” where doing one's homework is under the control of the speaker mediated consequence of being able to ...
The concept of rule-governed behavior or instructional control has been widely acknowledged for many decades within the behavior-analytic literature. The concept was originally proposed by B. F. Skinner in 1966 in an attempt to explain problem-solving behaviors.