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Behavioral approaches have often been criticized for ignoring mental processes and focusing solely on observable behavior. However, these approaches provide an optimistic perspective for individuals seeking to change their behaviors. Rather than concentrating on intrinsic personality traits, behavioral approaches suggest that even longstanding habits can be modified by changing the reward contingencies that maintain them.
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The field of behaviorism was pioneered by figures such as Ivan Pavlov, John B. Watson, and B.F. Skinner fundamentally shifted the focus of psychology to the observable and controllable aspects of human and animal behavior. This shift marked a critical evolution in the discipline, emphasizing scientific rigor and experimental methodology.
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In operant conditioning, the timing of reinforcement is crucial. For animals like rats and cats, immediate reinforcement (within a few seconds) is much more effective than delayed reinforcement. For example, a food reward for a rat needs to follow within 30 seconds of pressing a bar to be effective. 
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A manifesto for applying behavioural science.

Nature human behaviour·2023
See all related articles
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 17, 2025

Author Spotlight: Exploring Autism Spectrum Disorder Symptoms in Fruit Flies — Genetic Models and Behavioral Tests
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Behavioral public policy in practice: Misconceptions and opportunities.

Michael Hallsworth1

  • 1The Behavioural Insights Team, Brooklyn, NY, USA. michael.hallsworth@bi.team; www.michaelhallsworth.com.

The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|August 30, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Behavioral public policy practitioners develop systemic solutions, contrary to the target article's claims. The article's framework is flawed, hindering the field's progress and potentially leading to its dismissal.

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Area of Science:

  • Public Policy
  • Behavioral Science
  • Policy Implementation

Background:

  • The target article questions the scope of behavioral public policy.
  • A key debate revolves around whether practitioners focus on individual behavior or systemic change.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critique the "i-frame"/"s-frame" distinction presented in the target article.
  • To assert that behavioral public policy actively engages in developing systemic solutions.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of the "i-frame"/"s-frame" distinction.
  • Argumentation based on the practices of behavioral public policy.

Main Results:

  • The "i-frame"/"s-frame" distinction is deemed incoherent and unhelpful.
  • Practitioners of behavioral public policy are actively involved in creating and advancing systemic solutions.
  • The article's framework obscures promising avenues for the field.

Conclusions:

  • The "i-frame"/"s-frame" dichotomy is a flawed construct that misrepresents behavioral public policy.
  • Behavioral public policy is effectively contributing to systemic change.
  • The target article's approach risks undermining the field and discouraging its adoption.