Publication | Closed Access
Searching for the variables that control human rule‐governed “insensitivity”
21
Citations
32
References
2017
Year
Verbal RulesBehavioral SciencesBehavioral Decision MakingSocial BehaviorInitial RuleSocial CognitionSocial SciencesBehavioral PrinciplePublic HealthAdaptive BehaviorExperimental PsychologyVoluntary ControlRegulationPsychologyExperimental Analysis Of Behavior“ Insensitivity ”
Verbal rules or instructions often exert obvious and meaningful control over human behavior. Sometimes instructions benefit the individual by enabling faster acquisition of a skill or by obviating an aversive consequence. However, research has also suggested a clear disadvantage: "insensitivity" to changing underlying contingencies. The two experiments described here investigated the variables that control initial rule-following behavior and rule-following insensitivity. When the initial rule was inaccurate, behavior was consistent with the rule for approximately half of participants and all participants' behavior was mostly insensitive to changing contingencies. When the initial rule was accurate, behavior of all participants was consistent with it and behavior for nearly all participants was insensitive to changes in underlying contingencies. These findings have implications for how best to establish and maintain rule-following behavior in applied settings when deviant behavior would be more reinforcing to the individual.
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