1930
1.
On
the conditions of elicitation of certain eating reflexes.
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, 1930, 16, pp. 433-38.
2.
On
the inheritance of maze behavior.
Journal of General Psychology,
1930, 4, pp. 342-46.
3.
The
progressive increase in the geotropic response of the ant Aphaenogaster.
Journal of General Psychology,
1930, 4,pp. 102-12 (con T.C. Barnes).
1931
4.
The
concept of the reflex in the description of behavior.
Journal of General Psychology,
1931, 5, pp. 427-58 RA
1932
5.
Drive
and reflex strength.
Journal of General Psychology,
1932, 6, pp. 22-37.
6.
Drive
and reflex strength: II.
Journal of General Psychology,
1932, 6, pp. 38-48.
7.
On
the rate of formation of a conditioned reflex.
Journal of General Psychology,
1932, 7,pp. 274-86.
8.
A
paradoxical color effect.
Journal of General Psychology,
1932, 7, pp. 481-82. RA
1933
9.
The
abolishment of a discrimination.
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, 1933, 19, pp. 825-28.
10.
The
measurement of "spontaneous activity".
Journal of General Psychology,
1933, 9, pp. 3-23.
11.
On
the rate of extinction of a conditioned reflex.
Journal of General Psychology,
1933, 8, pp. 114-29.
12.
The
rate of establishment of a discrimination.
Journal of General Psychology,
1933, 9, pp. 302-50.
13.
"Resistance
to extinction" in the process of conditioning.
Journal of General Psychology,
1933, 9, pp. 420-29.
14.
Some
conditions affecting intensity and duration thresholds in motor nerve,
with reference to chronaxie of subordination.
American Journal of Physiology,
1933, 106, pp. 721-37. (con E. F. Lambert & A. Forbes).
1934
15.
A
discrimination without previous conditioning.
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, 1934, 20, pp. 532-36.
16.
The
extinction of chained reflexes.
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, 1934, 20, pp. 234-37.
17.
Has
Gertrude Stein a secret?.
Atlantic Monthly, January
1934, 153, pp. 50-57 RA
1935
18.
A
discrimination based upon a change in the properties of a stimulus.
Journal of General Psychology,
1935, 12, pp. 313-36.
19.
The
generic nature of the concepts of stimulus and response.
Journal of General Psychology,
1935, 12, pp. 40-65. RA
20.
Two
types of conditioned reflex and pseudo type.
Journal of General Psychology,
1935, 12, pp. 66-77. RA
1936
21.
Conditioning
and extinction and their relation to drive.
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 14, pp. 296-317.
22.
The
effect on the amount of conditioning of an interval of time before
reinforcement.
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 14, pp. 279-95.
23.
A
failure to obtain "disinhibition".
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 14, pp. 127-35.
24.
The
reinforcing effect of a differentiating stimulus.
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 14, pp. 263-78.
25.
Thirst
as an arbitrary drive.
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 15, pp. 205-10.
26.
The
verbal summator and a method for the study of latent speech.
Journal of General Psychology,
1936, 2, pp. 71-107.
1937
27.
Changes
in hunger during starvation.
Psychological Record, 1937,
1, pp. 51-60 (con W. T. Heron).
28.
The
distribution of associated words.
Psychological Record, 1937,
1, pp. 71-76.
29.
Effects
of caffeine and benzedrine upon conditioning and extinction.
Psychological Record, 1937,
1, pp. 340-46. (con
W. T. Heron).
30.
Two
types of conditioned reflex: A reply to Konorski and Miller.
Journal of General Psychology,
1937, 16, pp. 272-79. RA
1938
31.
The
behavior of organisms: An experimental analysis.
New York: Appleton-Century- Crofts, 1938,1966. Edición
en castellano: La conducta
de los organismos. Barcelona:
Fontanella, 1975.
1939
32.
The
alliteration in Shakespeare's sonnets: A study in literary behavior.
Psychological Record, 1939,
3, pp. 186-92. RA
33.
An
apparatus for the study of animal behavior.
Psychological Record, 1939,
3, pp. 166-76 (con W. T. Heron ).
34.
Some
factors influencing the distribution of associated words.
Psychological Record, 1939,
3, pp. 178-84 (con S. W. Cook)
1940
35.
A
method of maintaining an arbitrary degree of hunger.
Journal of Comparative Psychology,
1940, 30, pp. 139-45.
36.
The
rate of extinction in maze-bright and maze-dull rats.
Psychological Record, 1940,
4, pp. 11-18 (con W. T. Heron).
1941
37.
The
psychology of design. In Art education today.
New York: Bureau Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University,
1941, pp. 1-6.
38.
A
quantitative estimate of certain types of sound-patterning in poetry.
American Journal of Psychology,
1941, 54, pp. 64-79. RA
39.
Some
quantitative properties of anxiety.
Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1941, 29, pp. 390-400 (con W. K. Estes).
1942
40.
The
processes involved in the repeated guessing of alternatives.
Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1942, 30, pp. 495-503.
RA
1943
41.
Reply
to Dr. Yacorzynski.
Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1943, 32, pp. 93-94.
1945
42.
Baby
in a box.
Ladies' Home Journal, October
1945, 62, pp. 30-31, 135-36, 138.
43.
The
operational analysis of psychological terms.
Psychological Review, 1945,
52, pp.270-77, 291-94.RA
1947
44.
An
automatic shocking-grid apparatus for continuous use. Journal
of Comparative and Physiological
Psychology, 1947, 40, pp.
305-307 (con S. L. Campbell).
45.
Experimental
psychology.
En W. Dennis et al.,
Current trends in psychology.
Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1947, pp. 16-49. RA
1948
46.
Card-guessing
experiments.
American Scientist, 1948,
36, pp. 456, 458.
47.
'Superstition'
in the pigeon.
Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1948, 38, pp. 168-72. RA
48.
Walden
two.
New York: Macmillan, 1948, 1976. Edición
en castellano: Walden dos.
Barcelona:
Fontanella, 1980.
1950
49.
Are
theories of learning necessary? Psychological
Review,
1950, 57, pp. 193-216. RA
1951
50.
How
to teach animals.
Scientific American, 1951,
185(12), pp. 26-29. RA
1953
51.
Science
and human behavior.
New York: Macmillan, 1953.
Edición
en castellano: Ciencia y conducta
humana. Barcelona: Martínez Roca, 1970.
52.
Some
contributions of an experimental analysis of behavior to psychology
as a whole.
American Psychologist,
1953, 8, pp. 69-78.
1954
53.
A
critique of psychoanalytic concepts and theories.
Scientific Monthly, 1954,
79, pp. 300-305. RA
54.
The
science of learning and the art of teaching.
Harvard Educational Review,
1954, 24, pp. 86-97.
1955
55.
The
control of human behavior.
Transactions of the New York
Academy of Sciences, 1955,17,pp.547-51.
RA
56.
Freedom
and the control of men.
American Scholar, Winter
1955-56, 25, pp. 47-65. RA
1956
57.
A
case history in scientific method.
American Psychologist,
1956, 11, pp. 221-33. RA
58.
Some
issues concerning the control of human behavior: A symposium.
Science, 1956, 124, pp.
1057-66 (con C. R. Rogers). RA
59.
What
is psychotic behavior?
In Theory and treatment of
the psychoses: Some newer aspects. St. Louis: Committee on Publications,
Washington University, 1956, pp. 77-99. RA
1957
60.
Concurrent
activity under fixed-interval reinforcement.
Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1957, 50, pp. 279-81 (con W. H. Morse).
61.
The
experimental analysis of behavior.
American Scientist, 1957,
45, pp. 343-71. RA
62.
The
psychological point of view.
En H. D. Kruse (Ed.), Integrating
the approaches to mental disease. New York: Hoeber-Harper, 1957,
pp. 130-33. RA
63.
Schedules
of reinforcement.
New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1957 (con C. B. Ferster).
64.
A
second type of superstition in the pigeon.
American Journal of Psychology,
1957, 70, pp. 308-11(con W. H. Morse). RA
65.
Verbal
behavior.
New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1957. Edición
en castellano:
Conducta
Verbal. México:
Trillas, 1981.
1958
66.
Diagramming
schedules of reinforcement.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1958, 1, pp. 67-68.
67.
Fixed-interval
reinforcement of running in a wheel.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1958, 1, pp. 371-79 (con W. H. Morse).
68.
Reinforcement
today. American
Psychologist,
1958, 13, pp. 94-99. RA
69.
Some
factors involved in the stimulus control of operant behavior.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1958, 1, pp. 103-107. (con
W. H. Morse).
70.
Sustained
performance during very long experimental sessions.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1958, 1, pp. 235-44 (con W. H. Morse). RA
71.
Teaching
machines.
Science, 1958, 128, pp.
969-77.
1959
72.
Animal
research in the pharmacotherapy of mental disease.
En J. Cole & R. Gerard (Eds.), Psychopharmacology:
Problems in evaluation. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences-National
Research Council, 1959, pp. 224-28.
73.
Cumulative
record.
New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1959; Enlarged edition, 1961. Third
edition, 1972. Edición
en castellano: Registro acumulativo.
Barcelona: Fontanella, 1975 (también llamado: Aprendizaje
y Comportamiento. Martínez
Roca, 1985).
74.
The
flight from the laboratory.
En B. F. Skinner, Cumulative
record. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1959, pp. 242-57. RA
75.
John
Broadus Watson, behaviorist.
Science,
1959, 129, pp. 197-98. RA
76.
The
programming of verbal knowledge.
In E. Galanter (Ed.), Automatic
teaching: The state of the art. New York: John Wiley, 1959, pp.
63-68.
1960
77.
Concept
formation in philosophy and psychology.
En S. Hook (Ed.), Dimensions
of mind: A symposium. Washington Square. New York: New York University
Press, 1960, pp. 226-30.
78.
Modem
learning theory and some new approaches to teaching.
En J. W. Gustad (Ed.),
Faculty utilization and retention.
Winchester, MA: New England Board of Higher Education, 1960, pp. 64-72.
79.
Pigeons
in a pelican.
American Psychologist,
1960, 15, pp. 28-37. RA
80.
Special
problems in programming language instruction for teaching machines.
En F. J. Oinas (Ed.),
Language teaching today.
Bloomington: Indiana University Research Center in Anthropology, Folklore,
and Linguistics, 1960, pp. 167-74.
81.
Teaching
machines.
The Review of Economics and
Statistics, August 1960 (Supplement), 42, pp. 189-91.
82.
The
use of teaching machines in college instruction (Parts II-IV).
En A. A. Lumsdaine &
R. Glaser (Eds.), Teaching
machines and programmed learning: A source book. Washington, DC:
Department of Audio-Visual Instruction, National Education Association,
1960, pp. 159-72 (con J. G. Holland).
1961
83.
The
analysis of behavior: A program for self-instruction.
New York: McGraw Hill, 1961 (con J. G. Holland).
Edición
en castellano: Análisis
de la conducta. México:
Trillas, 1970.
84.
The
design of cultures.
Daedalus, 1961, 90, pp.
534-46. RA
85.
Learning
theory and future research.
En J. Lysaught (Ed.),
Programmed learning: Evolving
principles and industrial applications. Ann Arbor: Foundation
for Research on Human Behaviors, 1961, pp. 59-66.
86.
Teaching
machines.
Scientific American, November
1961, 205(11), pp. 90-102.
87.
The
theory behind teaching machines.
Journal of the American Society
of Training Directors, July 1961, 15, pp. 27-29.
88.
Why
we need teaching machines.
Harvard Educational Review,
1961, 31, pp. 377-98. RA
1962
89.
Operandum.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1962, 5, p. 224.
90.
Squirrel
in the yard: Certain sciurine experiences of B. F. Skinner.
Harvard Alumni Bulletin,
1962, 64, pp. 642-45. RA
91.
Technique
for reinforcing either of two organisms with a single food magazine.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1962, 5, p. 58 (con G. S. Reynolds).
92.
Two
"synthetic social relations".
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1962, 5, pp. 531-33. RA
93.
Verbal
behavior.
Encounter, November 1962, pp. 42-44 (con
I. A. Richards).
1963
94.
Behaviorism
at fifty.
Science, 1963, 140, pp.
951-58. CR
95.
A
Christmas caramel, or, a plum from the hasty pudding.
The Worm Runner's Digest,
1963, 5(2), pp. 42-46.
96.
Conditioned
and unconditioned aggression in pigeons.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1963,
6, pp. 73-74 (con G. S. Reynolds & A. C. Catania).
97.
L'avenir
des machines à enseigner.
Psychologie Francaise,
1963, 8, pp. 170-80.
98.
Operant
behavior.
American Psychologist,
1963, 18, pp. 503-15. CR
99.
Reflections
on a decade of teaching machines.
Teachers College Record,
1963, 65, pp. 168-77. RA
100.
Reply
to Thouless. Australian
Journal of Psychology,
1963, 15, pp. 92-93.
1964
101.
"Man".
Proceedings of the American
Philosophical Society, 1964, 108, pp. 482-85. RA
102.
New
methods and new aims in teaching.
New Scientist, 1964, 122,
pp. 483-84.
103.
On
the relation between mathematical and statistical competence and significant
scientific productivity. The
Worm Runner's Digest, 1964, 6(l), pp. 15-17. (publicado
bajo el pseudónimo F. Galtron Pennywhistle).
1965
104.
Stimulus
generalization in an operant: A historical note. In
D. I. Mostofsky (Ed.), Stimulus
generalization. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1965, pp.
193-209.
105.
The
technology of teaching.
Proceedings of the Royal Society,
Serie B, 1965, 162, pp. 427-43. Edición
en castellano: Tecnología
de la enseñanza. Barcelona:
Labor, 1970.
106.
Why
teachers fail.
Saturday Review, October
16, 1965, 48, pp. 80-81, pp. 98-102.
1966
107.
Conditioning
responses by reward and punishment.
Proceedings of the Royal Institution
of Great Britain, 1966, 41, pp. 48-51.
108.
Contingencies
of reinforcement in the design of a culture.
Behavioral Science, 1966,
11, pp. 159-66. . CR
109.
An
operant analysis of problem solving.
In B. Kleinmuntz (Ed.), Problem
solving: Research, method, and theory. N. York: John Wiley, 1966,
pp.225-57. CR
110.
The
phylogeny and ontogeny of behavior.
Science, 1966, 153, pp.
1205-13. CR
111.
Some
responses to the stimulus "Pavlov".
Conditional Reflex, 1966,
1, pp. 74-78. RA
112.
What
is the experimental analysis of behavior?.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1966, 9, pp. 213-18. CR
1967
113.
B.
F. Skinner (An autobiography).
En E. G. Boring &
G. Lindzey (Eds.), A history
of psychology in autobiography (Vol. 5). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts,
1967, pp. 387-413.
114.
The
problem of consciousness--a debate.
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,
1967, 27, pp. 317-37 (con B. Blanshard).
115.
Utopia
through the control of human behavior.
The Listener, January 12,
1967, 77, pp. 55-56.
116.
Visions
of utopia.
The Listener, January 5,
1967, 77, pp. 22-23. CR
1968
117.
The
design of experimental communities.
In International encyclopedia
of the social sciences (Vol. 16). New York: Macmillan, 1968, pp.
271-75. RA
118.
Development
of methods of preparing materials for teaching machines.
Alexandria, VA: Human Resources
Research Office, George Washington University, 1968 (editado por
L. M. Zook).
119.
Handwriting
with write and see. Chicago:
Lyons & Carnahan, 1968
(con S. Krakower; a series of manuals for teachers and students, grades
1 to 6)
120.
The
science of human behavior. In Twenty-five years at RCA laboratories
1942-1967.
Princeton, NJ: RCA Laboratories, 1968, pp. 92-102.
121.
Teaching
science in high school--What is wrong?
Science, 1968, 159, pp.
704-10. RA
122.
The
technology of teaching.
New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1968. Edición
en castellano: Tecnología
de la enseñanza.
Madrid:
Lábor, 1970.
1969
123.
Contingencies
of reinforcement: A theoretical analysis.
New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1969. Edición
en castellano: Contingencias
de reforzamiento. México:
Trillas, 1979.
124.
Contingency
management in the classroom.
Education, 1969, 90, pp.
93-100. RA
125.
Edwin
Garrigues Boring.
In The American Philosophical Society: Yearbook 1968. Philadelphia:
The American Philosophical
Society, 1969, pp. 111-15.
126.
The
machine that is man.
Psychology Today, April
1969, 2, pp. 20-25, 60-63.
1970
127.
Creating
the creative artist.
En A. J. Toynbee et al.,
On the future of art. New
York: Viking Press, 1970, pp. 61-75. RA
1971
128.
Autoshaping.
Science, 1971, 173, p.
752.
129.
A
behavioral analysis of value judgments.
En E. Tobach, L. R. Aronson,
& E. Shaw (Eds.), The biopsychology
of development. New York: Academic Press, 1971, pp. 543-51.
130.
Beyond
freedom and dignity.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1971. Ediciones
en castellano: Más
allá de la libertad y la dignidad. Barcelona: Martínez Roca, 1972;
y Fontanella, 1977.
131.
B.
F. Skinner says what's wrong with the social sciences.
The Listener, September
30, 1971, 86, pp. 429-31. RA
132.
Humanistic
behaviorism.
The Humanist, May/June
1971, 31, p. 35.
133.
Operant
conditioning.
En The encyclopedia of
education, Vol. 7. New York: Macmillan
and Free Press, 1971, pp. 29-33.
1972
134.
Compassion
and ethics in the care of the retardate. En
B. F. Skinner, Cumulative
record (3rd ed). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1972, pp.
283-91. RA
135.
Freedom
and dignity revisited.
New York Times, August
11, 1972, p. 29. RCS
136.
Humanism
and behaviorism.
The Humanist, July/August
1972, 32, pp. 18-20. RCS
137.
A
lecture on "having a poem".
En B. F. Skinner, Cumulative
record (3rd ed.). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1972, pp.
345-55. RA
138.
Some
relations between behavior modification and basic research.
En B. F. Skinner, Cumulative
record (3rd ed.). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1972, pp.
276-82. RA
1973
139.
Answers
for my critics.
En H. Wheeler (Ed.), Beyond
the punitive society. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1973, pp.
256-66.
140.
Are
we free to have a future?
Impact, 1973, 3(l), pp.
5-12. RCS
141.
The
free and happy student.
New York University Education
Quarterly, 1973, 4(2), pp. 2-6. RCS
142.
Reflections
on meaning and structure.
En R. Brower, H. Vendler, & J. Hollander (Eds.), I.
A. Richards: Essays in his honor. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1973, pp. 199-209. RCS
143.
Some
implications of making education more efficient.
En C. E. Thoresen (Ed.),
Behavior modification in education.
Chicago: National Society for the Study of Education, 1973, pp. 446-56.
RCS
144.
Walden
(one) and Walden two.
The Thoreau Society Bulletin,
Winter 1973, 122, pp. 1-3. RCS
145.
The
freedom to have a future
(The 1972 Sol Feinstone Lecture). Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University,
1973.
1974
146.
About
behaviorism.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1974. Edición
en castellano: Sobre el conductismo.
Barcelona:
Fontanella, 1975.
147.
Designing
higher education. Daedalus,
1974, 103, pp. 196-202. RCS
1975
148.
Comments
on Watt's "B. F. Skinner and the technological control of social
behavior".
The American Political Science
Review, 1975, 69, pp. 228-29.
149.
The
ethics of helping people. Criminal
Law Bulletin,
1975, 11, pp. 623-36. RCS
150.
The
shaping of phylogenic behavior.
Acta
Neurobiologiae Experimentalis,
1975, 35, pp. 409-15. Publicado
también en Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behaviour, 1975,
24, pp. 117-20. RCS
151.
The
steep and thorny way to a science of behaviour.
En R. Harré (Ed.), Problems
of scientific revolution: Progress
and obstacles to progress in the sciences. Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1975, pp. 58-71. RCS
1976
152.
Farewell,
my LOVELY!.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1976, 25, p. 218.
153.
Particulars
of my life.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1976. Edición
en castellano: Detalles de
mi vida. Autobiografía 1. Barcelona: Fontanella, 1980.
1977
154.
Between
freedom and despotism.
Psychology Today, September
1977,11, pp. 80-82, 84,
86, 90-91. RCS
155.
The
experimental analysis of operant behavior.
En R. W. Rieber & K. Salzinger (Eds.), The
roots of American psychology: Historical influences and implications
for the future (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol.
291). New York: New York Academy of Sciences, 1977, pp. 374-85. RCS
156.
The
force of coincidence.
En
B. C. Etzel, J. M. LeBlanc, & D. M. Baer (Eds.), New
developments in behavioral psychology: Theory, method, and application.
Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1977, pp. 3-6. RCS
157.
Freedom,
at last, from the burden of taxation.
New York Times, July 26,
1977, p. 29. RCS
158.
Herrnstein
and the evolution of behaviorism.
American Psychologist,
1977, 32, pp. 1006-12.
159.
Why
I am not a cognitive psychologist.
Behaviorism, Fall 1977,
5, pp. 1-10. RCS
1978
160.
Reflections
on behaviorism and society.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1978. Edición
en castellano: Reflexiones
sobre conductismo y sociedad. México: Trillas, 1982.
161.
Why
don't we use the behavioral sciences?.
Human Nature, March 1978,
1, pp. 86-92. RCS
162.
A
happening at the annual dinner of the Association for Behavioral Analysis.
Chicago, May 15, 1978. The
Behavior Analyst, 1979, 2(l), pp. 30-33 (publicado anónimamente).
1979
163.
Le
renforcateur arrange.
Revue de modification du comportement,
1979, 9, pp. 59-69. (traducción al francés por Raymond Beausoleil).
164.
My
experience with the baby-tender.
Psychology Today, March
1979, 12(10), pp. 28-31, 34, 37-38, 40. (extenso extracto de The Shaping
of a Behaviorist [1979])
165.
The
shaping of a behaviorist: Part two of an autobiography.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf , 1979. Edición
en castellano: Cómo se forma
un conductista. Autobiografía 2 y 3. Barcelona: Fontanella, 1980.
1980
166.
Notebooks.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1980. (editado por R. Epstein).
167.
Resurgence
of responding after the cessation of response-independent reinforcement.
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, 1980, 77, pp. 6251-53 (con
R. Epstein).
168.
The
species-specific behavior of ethologists.
The Behavior Analyst, 1980,
3(l), 51.
169.
Symbolic
communication between two pigeons.
(Columba livia domestica). Science,
1980, 207, pp. 543-45. (con
R. Epstein & R. P. Lanza).
1981
170.
Charles
B. Ferster--A personal memoir.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1981, 35, pp. 259-61.
171.
How
to discover what you have to say--A talk to students.
The Behavior Analyst, 1981,
4(l), pp. 1-7.
172.
Pavlov's
influence on psychology in America.
Journal of the History of the
Behavioral Sciences, 1981, 17, pp. 242-45.
173.
Selection
by consequences.
Science, 1981, 213, pp.
501-504.
174.
"Self-awareness"
in the pigeon.
Science, 1981, 212, pp.
695-96 (con R. Epstein
& R. P. Lanza).
175.
The
spontaneous use of memoranda by pigeons.
Behaviour Analysis Letters,
1981, 1, pp. 241-46 (con R.
Epstein).
1982
176.
Contrived
reinforcement.
The Behavior Analyst, 1982,
5, pp. 3-8.
177.
"I
am most concerned. . . ".
Psychology Today, May 1982,
pp. 48-49. (parte de "Understanding Psychological Man: A State-of-the-Science
Report," pp. 40-59)
178.
"Lying"
in the pigeon.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1982, 38, pp. 201-203 (con R. P. Lanza & J. Starr).
179.
Skinner
for the classroom.
Champaign, IL: Research Press, 1982. (editado por R. Epstein).
1983
180.
A
better way to deal with selection.
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
1983,3, pp. 377-78.
181.
Can
the experimental analysis of behavior rescue psychology?.
The Behavior Analyst,
1983, 6(1), pp. 9-17.
182.
Enjoy
old age: A program of self management.
New York: W. W. Norton &
Company, 1983 (con M. E. Vaughan).
Edición en castellano: Disfrutar
de la vejez. Barcelona: Martínez Roca, 1986.
183.
Intellectual
self-management in old age.
The American Psychologist,
1983, 38(3), pp. 239-44.
184.
A
matter of consequences: Part three of an autobiography.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf
,
1983.
1984
185.
Canonical
papers of B. F. Skinner.
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
1984, 7(4), pp. 473-724. (editado por A. C. Catania & S. Harnad,
con numerosos comentaristas; reimpreso en forma de libro bajo el título,
The selection of consequences:
The operant behaviorism of B. F. Skinner: Comments and consequences
[New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1988])
186.
The
evolution of behavior.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1984, 41(2), pp. 217-21.
187.
The
shame of American education.
American Psychologist,
1984, 39(9), pp. 947-54.
1985
188.
Cognitive
science and behaviourism.
British Journal of Psychology,
1985, 76, pp. 291-301.
189.
News
from nowhere.
1984. The Behavior Analyst,
1985, 8(1), pp. 5-14.
190.
Reply
to Place: "Three senses of the word 'tact'".
Behaviorism, 1985, 13(1),
pp. 75-76.
191.
Toward
the cause of peace: What can psychology contribute?.
En S. Oskamp (Ed.), International
conflict and national public policy issues (Applied
Social Psychology Annual 6). Beverly Hills: Sage Publications,
1985, pp. 21-25.
1986
192.
B.
F. Skinner ["The books that have been most important. . ."].
En C. M. Devine, C. M.
Dissel, & K. D. Parrish (Eds.), The
Harvard guide to influential books: 113 distinguished Harvard professors
discuss the books that have helped to shape their thinking. New
York: Harper & Row, 1986, pp. 233-34.
193.
The
evolution of verbal behavior.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1986, 45, pp. 115-22.
194.
Programmed
instruction revisited.
Phi Delta Kappan, 1986,
68(2), pp. 103-10. AC
195.
Sleeping
in peace.
Free Inquiry, Summer 1986,
6(3), p. 57.
196.
Some
thoughts about the future.
Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1986, 45(2), pp. 229-35.
197.
What
is wrong with daily life in the western world?. American
Psychologist,
1986, 41(5), pp. 568-74.
1987
198.
A
humanist alternative to A. A.'s Twelve Steps.
The Humanist,
July/August 1987, 47, 5.
199.
Outlining
a science of feeling.
The Times Literary Supplement,
May 8, 1987, pp. 490-96, 501-502. AC
200.
A
thinking aid.
Journal of Applied Behavior
Analysis, 1987, 20, pp. 379-80.
201.
Upon
further reflection. Englewood
Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1987.
202.
What
religion means to me.
Free Inquiry, Spring 1987,
7, pp. 12-13.
203.
Whatever
happened to psychology as the science of behavior?.
American Psychologist,
1987, 42(8), pp. 780-86. AC
204.
Controversy?.
En S. Modgil y C. Modgil (Eds.), B.F.
Skinner. Consensus and controversy. Londres: Palmer, 1987, pp.
11-12.
205.
Lawrence
Smith´s Behaviorism and logical positivism.
Journal of the History of the
Behavioral Sciences, 1987, 23, pp. 206-209. AC
1988
206.
A
fable.
The Analysis of Verbal Behavior,
1988, 6, pp. 1-2.
207.
Genes
and behavior.
En G. Greenberg &
E. Tobach (Eds.), Evolution
of social behavior and integrative levels. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates, 1988, pp.77-83. AC
208.
The
operant side of behavior therapy.
Journal of Behavior Therapy
and Experimental Psychiatry, 1988, 19, pp. 171-79. AC
209.
Signs
and countersigns.
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
1988, 11, 466-67.
210.
A
statement on punishment.
APA Monitor, June 1988,
p.22.
211.
War,
peace, and behavior analysis: Some comments.
Behavior Analysis and Social Action,
1988, 6, pp. 57-58.
212.
The
initiating self. En
D. Cicchetti y W. Grove (Eds.), Thinking
clearly about psychology: Essays in honor of Paul E. Meehl. Mineapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1988. AC
213.
A
New Preface to Beyond Freedom and dignity.
Londres: Penguin. AC
1989
214.
The
listener.
En S.E. Hayes (Ed.), Rule-governed
behavior: Cognition, contingencies, and instruction. Nueva York:
Plenun, 1989. AC
215.
The
behavior of organisms at fifty.
En B. F. Skinner (Ed.),
Recent issues in the analysis
of behavior. Columbus, OH: Merrill, 1989, pp. 121-35. AC
216.
The
behavior of the listener.
En S. C. Hayes (Ed.),
Rule-govemed behavior: Cognition,
contingencies, and instructional control. New York: Plenum Press,
1989, pp. 85-96.
217.
The
initiating self. In
B. F. Skinner, Recent issues
in the analysis of behavior. Columbus, OH: Merrill, 1989, pp.
27-33.
218.
The
origins of cognitive thought. American
Psychologist, 1989, 44, pp. 13-18. AC
219.
Recent
issues in the analysis of behavior.
Columbus, OH: Merrill, 1989.
220.
The
school of the future.
En B. F. Skinner,
Recent issues in the analysis of behavior. Columbus, OH: Merrill,
1989, pp. 85-96. AC
1990
221.
Can
psychology be a science of mind?.
American Psychologist,
1990, 45, pp. 1206-10. Publicado
en castellano un extracto, en Psycothema,
vol. 2, pp. 222-223.
222.
The
non-punitive society.
Japanese Journal of Behavior
Analysis, 1990, 5, pp. 98-106.
223.
To
know the future.
The Behavior Analyst, 1990,
13, 103-106. (publicado simultáneamente en C. Fadiman [Ed.], Living
philosophies: The reflections of some eminent men and women of our
time. New York: Doubleday, 1990, pp. 193-99).
1993
224.
A
world of our own.
Behaviorology, 1993, 1,
pp. 3-5.