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behavioral sciences
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Behavioural Science, Behavioral Science
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Comparative Laboratory Behaviorism
1898 - 1927
During 1898–1927, psychology coalesced around an experimental, stimulus–response program that prioritized observable behavior, strict laboratory control, and cross‑species generalization. Instinct was reframed as modifiable tendencies shaped by learning and context, while conditioning, habit formation, and interference models mapped acquisition, extinction, and competition among responses in standardized tasks with animals and humans. Emotion research coupled physiological indices with conditioned reactions and perceptual judgments, standardizing facial‑expression assessment and linking bodily activation with fear, hunger, and rage.
• Behaviorism consolidated as a methodological paradigm privileging observable behavior, laboratory control, and cross-species generalization, displacing introspective methods in both general and social psychology [4], [6], [9], [10], [12], [13].
• A sustained re-framing of instinct moved from fixed innate faculties to analyzable, learned, and context-shaped tendencies, challenging instinct talk in individual and social domains and proposing appetitive/aversive components or acquisition mechanisms [1], [2], [5], [15], [16].
• Learning and performance were modeled through conditioning, habit formation, and interference, using controlled tasks with animals and humans to reveal acquisition, extinction, and competition among response tendencies [4], [7], [17], [20].
• Emotion research integrated physiological indices, conditioned responses, and perceptual judgments, linking bodily states with fear, hunger, and rage while standardizing facial-expression assessment in experimental settings [3], [17], [18], [19].
• Comparative experimental psychology treated animal models as vehicles for discovering general behavioral principles—using invertebrates, rodents, and birds to study motivation, learning, and sexuality under standardized laboratory conditions [4], [12], [13], [16], [20].
Operational Comparative Behaviorism
1928 - 1934
Rate-Based Conditioning and Feedback
1935 - 1944
Mediational Approach–Avoidance Behaviorism
1945 - 1951
Operant–Cognitive Control Synthesis
1952 - 1974
Adaptive Heuristics and Control
1975 - 1981
Appraisal and Control Modeling
1982 - 1996
Mechanistic Dual-Process Behavioral Integration
1997 - 2003
Reinforcement-Governed Conditional Process
2004 - 2010
Taxonomy-Driven, Platform-Scale Behavioral Science
2011 - 2017
Mechanism-Linked Translational Behavioral Science
2018 - 2024