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J. Ulman (2006)
Macrocontingencies and Institutions: A Behaviorological AnalysisBehavior and Social Issues, 15
William Vaughan (1981)
Giving up the ghostBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 7
Ramona Houmanfar, Nischal Rodrigues, Todd Ward (2010)
Emergence and Metacontingency: Points of Contact and DepartureBehavior and Social Issues, 19
S. Glenn, M. Malott (2004)
Complexity and Selection: Implications for Organizational ChangeBehavior and Social Issues, 13
J. Ulman (1998)
Toward a More Complete Science of Human Behavior: Behaviorology Plus Institutional EconomicsBehavior and Social Issues, 8
L. Hayes, Ramona Houmanfar (2004)
Units and Measures: A Response to Glenn and MalottBehavior and Social Issues, 13
M. Malott, S. Glenn (2006)
Targets of Intervention in Cultural and Behavioral ChangeBehavior and Social Issues, 15
H. Rachlin (1970)
Introduction to modern behaviorism
B F Skinner (1986)
Selection by consequencesScience, 213
(2006)
The present and future of cultural analysis. Behavior and Social Issues
B. Skinner (1984)
Some consequences of selectionBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 7
S. Hobbs (2006)
The Present and the Future of Cultural AnalysisBehavior and Social Issues, 15
S. Glenn (2004)
Individual behavior, culture, and social changeThe Behavior Analyst, 27
(1966)
Experimental analysis of cooperation and competition The experimental analysis of behavior: Selected readings (pp. 470-501)
Gregory Smith, Ramona Houmanfar, S. Louis (2011)
The Participatory Role of Verbal Behavior in an Elaborated Account of Metacontingency: From Conceptualization to InvestigationBehavior and Social Issues, 20
C. Vichi, Maria Andery, S. Glenn (2009)
A Metacontingency Experiment: The Effects of Contingent Consequences on Patterns of Interlocking Contingencies of ReinforcementBehavior and Social Issues, 18
AsaHG Gray, A. Dupree (1963)
I. THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION
(2004)
Rules and metacontingencies: Reply to Sandakar. Behavior and Social Issues
(1984)
Author’s response: Some consequences of selection
J. Todorov (2010)
Schedules of Cultural Selection: Comments on “Emergence and Metacontingency”Behavior and Social Issues, 19
B. Skinner (1989)
Recent issues in the analysis of behavior
J. Todorov (2013)
Conservation and Transformation of Cultural Practices through Contingencies and MetacontingenciesBehavior and Social Issues, 22
(1966)
Experimental analysis of cooperation and competition
(2006)
Behavior analysis and social dynamics: Some questions and concerns. Behavior and Social Issues
M. Marr (2006)
Behavior Analysis and Social Dynamics: Some Questions and ConcernsBehavior and Social Issues, 15
J. Marr (1996)
A Mingled YarnThe Behavior Analyst, 19
B. Skinner, Mary Woolley (1953)
Science and human behavior
Ramona Houmanfar, N. Rodrigues (2006)
The Metacontingency and the Behavioral Contingency: Points of Contact and DepartureBehavior and Social Issues, 15
Angelo Sampaio, Lorena Araújo, Mariana Gonçalo, J. Ferraz, Anisiano Filho, I. Brito, N. Barros, J. Calado (2013)
Exploring the Role of Verbal Behavior in a New Experimental Task for the Study of MetacontingenciesBehavior and Social Issues, 22
(2004)
Commentary on complexity and selection. Behavior and Social Issues
S. Glenn (2010)
Metacontingencies, Selection and OBM: Comments on “Emergence and Metacontingency”Behavior and Social Issues, 19
M. Mattaini (2004)
Systems, Metacontingencies, and Cultural Analysis: Are We There Yet?Behavior and Social Issues, 13
O R Lindsley (1966)
The experimental analysis of behavior: Selected readings
M. Mattaini (2006)
Will Cultural Analysis Become a Science?Behavior and Social Issues, 15
Ingunn Sandaker (2004)
Commentary on Complexity and SelectionBehavior and Social Issues, 13
Z. Morford, Traci Cihon (2013)
Developing an Experimental Analysis of Metacontingencies: Considerations Regarding Cooperation in a Four-Person Prisoner’s Dilemma GameBehavior and Social Issues, 22
S. Glenn, M. Malott (2004)
Rules and Metacontingencies: Reply to SandakerBehavior and Social Issues, 13
S. Glenn (1988)
Contingencies and Metacontingencies: Toward a Synthesis of Behavior Analysis and Cultural MaterialismThe Behavior Analyst, 11
C. Sherrick, C. Ferster, B. Skinner (1957)
Schedules of reinforcement
Skinner (1981) proposed that selection by consequences, such as is represented by natural selection on a biological level and operant selection on the level of individual behaviors, plays a significant role in the change dynamics and adaptation of systems in the physical world. He suggested that there might be a third level of selection by consequences—cultural-level selection—that might complement the other two selection processes he explicated. The metacontingency was proposed as a process that might describe such a cultural-level of selection. In the present article, two competing definitions (a three-term definition and a five-term definition) of the metacontingency are compared and contrasted, and several criticisms of the metacontingency are considered. Proponents of the metacontingency have argued that it is an emergent process, possessing characteristics that differ substantively from phenomena at lower-levels of analysis, while critics of the metacontingency have argued that there are more parsimonious theories that account for everything that the metacontingency is intended to address. Theorists have claimed four particular areas of emergence for the metacontingency, each of which is examined through comparison of metacontingent selection with a similar, albeit behavioral-level phenomenon—the production of a complex product via a chain of behaviors performed by a single individual—concluding that the claims of emergence do not appear to be substantiated.
Behavior and Social Issues – Springer Journals
Published: May 1, 2016
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