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Emergent Verbal Behavior and Analogy: Skinnerian and Linguistic Approaches

Authors :
Matos, Maria Amelia
Passos, Maria de Lourdes
Source :
Behavior Analyst. Spr 2010 33(1):65-81.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The production of verbal operants not previously taught is an important aspect of language productivity. For Skinner, new mands, tacts, and autoclitics result from the recombination of verbal operants. The relation between these mands, tacts, and autoclitics is what linguists call "analogy," a grammatical pattern that serves as a foundation on which a speaker might emit new linguistic forms. Analogy appears in linguistics as a regularity principle that characterizes language and has been related to how languages change and also to creativity. The approaches of neogrammarians like Hermann Paul, as well as those of Jespersen and Bloomfield, appear to have influenced Skinner's understanding of verbal creativity. Generalization and stimulus equivalence are behavioral processes related to the generative grammatical behavior described in the analogy model. Linguistic forms and grammatical patterns described in analogy are part of the contingencies of reinforcement that produce generalization and stimulus equivalence. The analysis of verbal behavior needs linguistic analyses of the constituents of linguistic forms and their combination patterns. (Contains 1 table.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0738-6729
Volume :
33
Issue :
1
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Behavior Analyst
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ947318
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Descriptive