THE CORRELATION‐BASED LAW OF EFFECT<sup>1</sup>

1973 Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior 666 citations

Abstract

It is commonly understood that the interactions between an organism and its environment constitute a feedback system. This implies that instrumental behavior should be viewed as a continuous exchange between the organism and the environment. It follows that orderly relations between behavior and environment should emerge at the level of aggregate flow in time, rather than momentary events. These notions require a simple, but fundamental, change in the law of effect: from a law based on contiguity of events to a law based on correlation between events. Much recent research and argument favors such a change. If the correlation‐based law of effect is accepted, it favors measures and units of analysis that transcend momentary events, extending through time. One can measure all consequences on a common scale, called value . One can define a unit of analysis called the behavioral situation , which circumscribes a set of values. These concepts allow redefinition of reinforcement and punishment, and clarification of their relation to discriminative stimuli.

Keywords

Discriminative modelSet (abstract data type)Value (mathematics)Relation (database)CorrelationOrganismPunishment (psychology)Simple (philosophy)Argument (complex analysis)Computer scienceAggregate (composite)PsychologyCognitive psychologySocial psychologyMathematicsArtificial intelligenceEpistemologyData mining

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Publication Info

Year
1973
Type
article
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
137-153
Citations
666
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William M. Baum (1973). THE CORRELATION‐BASED LAW OF EFFECT<sup>1</sup>. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior , 20 (1) , 137-153. https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.1973.20-137

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DOI
10.1901/jeab.1973.20-137