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Pavlov's contributions to behavior therapy: The obvious and the not so obvious.
45
Citations
13
References
1997
Year
BehaviorismEducationSocial SciencesBehavioral PrinciplesPsychologyBehavior ManagementBehavioral PsychologyClinical PsychologyBehavior ModificationApplied Behavior AnalysisBehavioral PrincipleConditioningBehavioral SciencesIvan P. PavlovBehavior TherapyOperant BehaviorExperimental PsychologyBehavior ChangePsychotherapyPsychopathology
The foundation, accomplishments, and proliferation of behavior therapy have been fueled largely by the movement's grounding in behavioral principles and theories. Ivan P. Pavlov's discovery of conditioning principles was essential to the founding of behavior therapy in the 1950s and continues to be central to modern behavior therapy. Pavlov's major legacy to behavior therapy was his discovery of "experimental neuroses", shown by his students M.N. Eroféeva and N.R. Shenger-Krestovnikova to be produced and eliminated through the principles of conditioning and counterconditioning. In this article, the Pavlovian origins of behavior therapy are assessed, and the relevance of conditioning principles to modern behavior therapy are analyzed. It is shown that Pavlovian conditioning represents far more than a systematic basic learning paradigm. It is also an essential theoretical foundation for the theory and practice of behavior therapy.
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