Bliss in that dawn: The beginnings of operant psychology in the UK

D. Dickins
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Abstract

Although the first research in the UK to achieve what amounted to operant conditioning (Grindley, 1932) was published in the same year as Skinner’s pioneer publication no similar procedure seems to have been carried out in Britain until Hurwitz founded an operant laboratory at Birkbeck, (then Birkbeck College), University of London, in the early 1950s, presumably inspired by his meeting with Skinner in 1951, and their subsequent friendship. It certainly was an import from America, fortified by local solutions for providing suitable control equipment. The author was a student of Hurwitz at Birkbeck (1957–1961) and was researching (1961–1964) close by at University College (UCL). There follows a largely biographical account of how operant conditioning, initially mostly in rats, spread around universities in the UK. Many of the people concerned, and others not mentioned, shared their ideas at meetings of the Experimental Analysis of Behaviour Group (EABG) that informally sprang up in the early 1960s, initially without funding or its own journal. In coordination with the later emergence of the European Association for Behaviour Analysis (EABA) and its associated journal (European Journal of Behaviour Analysis) the organisation of the EABG has become established in Bangor, and holds regular biennial meetings at University College, London, alternating with those of the EABA in other parts of Europe. The EABG continues to attract many foreign attendees, including from the US, but some of its earlier enthusiasts no longer attend, whilst those attending mostly see themselves as Behaviour Analysts, reflecting changes both in the theory and practice of operant psychology. While operant technology remains a useful tool for those seeking a broad biological and authentic evolutionary understanding of behaviour, the philosophy of operant psychology as an all-encompassing approach to behavioural science has proved divisive.
黎明时分的幸福:英国经营心理学的开端
尽管英国第一个实现操作性条件反射的研究(Grindley, 1932)与斯金纳的先驱出版物同一年发表,但直到20世纪50年代初,赫尔维茨在伦敦大学伯克贝克(当时的伯克贝克学院)建立了一个操作性实验室,似乎没有在英国进行过类似的研究,大概是受到他1951年与斯金纳的会面以及他们后来的友谊的启发。当然,这是从美国进口的,通过提供合适的控制设备的本地解决方案来加强。作者是伯克贝克大学赫尔维茨的学生(1957-1961),并在附近的大学学院(UCL)从事研究(1961-1964)。接下来是对操作性条件反射(最初主要是在老鼠身上)如何在英国的大学里传播的大量传记性描述。许多相关人士和其他未被提及的人,在行为实验分析小组(EABG)的会议上分享了他们的想法。该小组在20世纪60年代初非正式地兴起,最初没有资金支持,也没有自己的期刊。为了配合后来出现的欧洲行为分析协会(EABA)及其相关期刊(欧洲行为分析杂志),EABG的组织已经在班戈成立,并在伦敦大学学院定期举行两年一次的会议,与欧洲其他地区的EABA轮流举行。EABG继续吸引着包括美国在内的许多外国参与者,但一些早期的狂热者不再参加,而参与者大多将自己视为行为分析师,这反映了操作心理学理论和实践的变化。虽然操作技术对于那些寻求对行为的广泛的生物学和真实的进化理解的人来说仍然是一个有用的工具,但作为行为科学的一种包罗万象的方法,操作心理学的哲学已经被证明是分裂的。
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