Selection by consequences

Abstract Human behavior is the joint product of (i) contingencies of survival responsible for natural selection, and (ii) contingencies of reinforcement responsible for the repertoires of individuals, including (iii) the special contingencies maintained by an evolved social environment. Selection by consequences is a causal mode found only in living things, or in machines made by living things. It was first recognized in natural selection: Reproduction, a first consequence, led to the evolution of cells, organs, and organisms reproducing themselves under increasingly diverse conditions. The behavior functioned well, however, only under conditions similar to those under which it was selected. Reproduction under a wider range of consequences became possible with the evolution of processes through which organisms acquired behavior appropriate to novel environments. One of these, operant conditioning, is a second kind of selection by consequences: New responses could be strengthened by events which followed them. When the selecting consequences are the same, operant conditioning and natural selection work together redundantly. But because a species which quickly acquires behavior appropriate to an environment has less need for an innate repertoire, operant conditioning could replace as well as supplement the natural selection of behavior. Social behavior is within easy range of natural selection, because other members are one of the most stable features of the environment of a species. The human species presumably became more social when its vocal musculature came under operant control. Verbal behavior greatly increased the importance of a third kind of selection by consequences, the evolution of social environments or cultures. The effect on the group, and not the reinforcing consequences for individual members, is responsible for the evolution of culture.

[1]  H. Caswell Phenotypic Plasticity in Life-History Traits: Demographic Effects and Evolutionary Consequences , 1983 .

[2]  B. Skinner Can the Experimental Analysis of Behavior Rescue Psychology? , 1983, The Behavior analyst.

[3]  Noam Chomsky Review of B.F. Skinner, Verbal Behavior , 1959 .

[4]  B. Skinner Contingencies of reinforcement : a theoretical analysis , 1969 .

[5]  E. Fischer Conditioned Reflexes , 1942, American journal of physical medicine.

[6]  Larry W. Swanson,et al.  Hippocampal long-term potentiation: mechanisms and implications for memory. Based on an NRP Work Session. , 1982, Neurosciences Research Program bulletin.

[7]  Ernst Mayr,et al.  Typological versus population thinking , 1984 .

[8]  Gregory Bateson,et al.  THE ROLE OF SOMATIC CHANGE IN EVOLUTION , 1963 .

[9]  Michael J. Katz,et al.  Ontophyletics: Studying Evolution beyond the Genome , 2015 .

[10]  Robert K. Colwell,et al.  Group selection is implicated in the evolution of female-biased sex ratios , 1981, Nature.

[11]  W. Smith The Integrative Action of the Nervous System , 1907, Nature.

[12]  B. Skinner On the Rate of Formation of a Conditioned Reflex , 1932 .

[13]  U. Grenander,et al.  Developmental matching and the numerical matching hypothesis for neuronal cell death. , 1982, Journal of theoretical biology.

[14]  J. M. Smith Evolution of sex , 1975, Nature.

[15]  W. Hamilton Extraordinary Sex Ratios , 1967 .

[16]  B F Skinner,et al.  The shaping of phylogenic behavior. , 1975, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior.

[17]  H. C. Plotkin,et al.  Indeterminacy is inherent in an inadequate model of evolution, not in nature , 1981, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[18]  Alan C. Kamil,et al.  Foraging behavior: ecological, ethological, and psychological approaches , 1980 .

[19]  W. James,et al.  The Principles of Psychology. , 1983 .

[20]  Steven M. Green,et al.  The Analysis of Animal Communication , 1979 .

[21]  Mind and Cosmos , 1983 .

[22]  B. Skinner Two Types of Conditioned Reflex: A Reply to Konorski and Miller , 1937 .

[23]  R. Rescorla,et al.  A theory of Pavlovian conditioning : Variations in the effectiveness of reinforcement and nonreinforcement , 1972 .

[24]  The comparative reception of Darwinism , 1976 .

[25]  Judson S. Brown,et al.  Principles of psychology: A systematic text in the science of behavior. , 1952 .

[26]  E. Mayr The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance , 1983 .

[27]  M. Ghiselin Categories, life, and thinking , 1981, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[28]  Stephen José Hanson,et al.  Regulation during challenge: A general model of learned performance under schedule constraint. , 1983 .

[29]  V. H. Hutchison,et al.  The Role of Behavior in Temperature Acclimation and Tolerance in Ectotherms , 1979 .

[30]  W. F. Prokasy,et al.  Classical conditioning II: Current research and theory. , 1972 .

[31]  G. E. G. Westermann,et al.  Ontogeny and Phytogeny , 1978 .

[32]  B. Skinner The concept of the reflex in the description of behavior. , 1931 .

[33]  R. Lewontin ‘The Selfish Gene’ , 1977, Nature.

[34]  R. Yerkes Mental Development in the Child and the Race , 1907, The American Naturalist.

[35]  R. Dawkins,et al.  Replicator selection and the extended phenotype. , 2010, Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie.

[36]  R. F. Thompson,et al.  The search for the engram. , 1976, The American psychologist.

[37]  The Growth of Biological Thought. Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance by Ernst Mayr , 1983 .

[38]  G. Ferro-Luzzi On Evolutionary Epistemology , 1982, Current Anthropology.

[39]  H. Plotkin Learning, development, and culture: Essays in evolutionary epistemology , 1982 .

[40]  W. Wyrwicka The sensory nature of reward in instrumental behavior , 1975, The Pavlovian journal of biological science.

[41]  M. Ghiselin,et al.  Darwin and Evolutionary Psychology: Darwin initiated a radically new way of studying behavior. , 1973, Science.

[42]  M. Ghiselin On mechanisms of cultural evolution, and the evolution of language and the common law , 1982, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[43]  W. Wyrwicka Mechanisms of motivation in avoidance behavior. , 1980, Acta neurobiologiae experimentalis.

[44]  D. Hull Individuality and Selection , 1980 .

[45]  S. Gould,et al.  Punctuated equilibria: an alternative to phyletic gradualism , 1972 .

[46]  J. M. Smith Group Selection and Kin Selection , 1964, Nature.

[47]  George C. Williams,et al.  Adaptation and Natural Selection , 2018 .

[48]  Neil Peterson Control of Behavior by Presentation of an Imprinted Stimulus , 1960, Science.

[49]  F. Ayala,et al.  Studies in the Philosophy of Biology , 1974 .

[50]  H. L. Jacobs,et al.  TASTE VERSUS CALORIES: SENSORY AND METABOLIC SIGNALS IN THE CONTROL OF FOOD INTAKE * , 1969, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[51]  Kenneth L. Artis Design for a Brain , 1961 .

[52]  J. Baldwin A New Factor in Evolution , 1896, The American Naturalist.

[53]  B. Skinner Beyond Freedom and Dignity , 1972 .

[54]  T. Schopf Models in Paleobiology , 1972 .

[55]  Ralph R. Miller,et al.  Information processing in animals : memory mechanisms , 1983 .

[56]  E. Mayr Cause and Effect in Biology: Kinds of causes, predictability, and teleology are viewed by a practicing biologist , 1961 .

[57]  H. C. LONGUET-HIGGINS Thinking Computers , 1973, Nature.

[58]  E S Valenstein,et al.  Selection of nutritive and nonnutritive solutions under different conditions of need. , 1967, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[59]  W. Hamilton Sex versus non-sex versus parasite , 1980 .

[60]  R. Dawkins The Extended Phenotype , 1982 .

[61]  B. Campbell,et al.  Punishment and aversive behavior , 1969 .

[62]  G. Peterson,et al.  Enhancement of pigeons’ conditional discrimination performance by expectancies of reinforcement and nonreinforcement , 1980 .

[63]  W. Ashby,et al.  An Introduction to Cybernetics , 1957 .

[64]  H. M. Jenkins,et al.  The form of the auto-shaped response with food or water reinforcers. , 1973, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior.

[65]  C. Darwin The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin , 1959, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[66]  t wann,et al.  Behaviorism and Phenomenology , 1965 .

[67]  W. Barker Ontogeny and phylogeny. , 1980, Archives of surgery.

[68]  J. West The Organism and the Environment , 1938, The Indian medical gazette.

[69]  S. Gould,et al.  The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme , 1979, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[70]  J. Brobeck The Integrative Action of the Nervous System , 1948, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[71]  B. F. Skinner,et al.  A case history in scientific method. , 1956 .

[72]  C. B. Ferster,et al.  Schedules of reinforcement , 1957 .

[73]  L. L. Thurstone,et al.  The nature of intelligence , 1926 .

[74]  David Sloan Wilson,et al.  The Natural Selection Of Populations And Communities , 1981 .

[75]  B. Skinner,et al.  Science and human behavior , 1953 .

[76]  Noam Chomsky,et al.  Rules and Representations , 1982 .

[77]  R. Swinburne,et al.  The Philosophy of Karl Popper , 1975 .

[78]  R. Trivers The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism , 1971, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[79]  G. Holton Sociobiology: the new synthesis? , 1977, Newsletter on science, technology & human values.

[80]  D. Dennett Intentional systems in cognitive ethology: The “Panglossian paradigm” defended , 1983, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[81]  D. Campbell On the conflicts between biological and social evolution and between psychology and moral tradition. , 1976, Zygon.

[82]  W. Hamilton,et al.  Altruism and Related Phenomena, Mainly in Social Insects , 1972 .

[83]  B. Magubane,et al.  In Search of an Ideological Alternative to Marxism@@@Cultural Materialism: The Struggle for a Science of Culture. , 1981 .

[84]  W. Rice Parent-Offspring Pathogen Transmission: A Selective Agent Promoting Sexual Reproduction , 1983, The American Naturalist.

[85]  V. Wynne-Edwards,et al.  Intergroup Selection in the Evolution of Social Systems , 1963, Nature.

[86]  D. J. Mcfarland On the causal and functional significance of displacement activities. , 2010, Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie.

[87]  M. Harris The nature of cultural things , 1964 .

[88]  P. Richerson,et al.  Sociobiology, culture and economic theory☆ , 1980 .

[89]  K. Breland,et al.  The misbehavior of organisms. , 1961 .

[90]  G. P. Baerends Fortpflanzungsverhalten und Orientierung der Grabwespe Ammophila campestris Jur , 1941 .

[91]  W. Hamilton The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I. , 1964, Journal of theoretical biology.

[92]  Michael J. Wade,et al.  A Critical Review of the Models of Group Selection , 1978, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[93]  J. Gray,et al.  Acquisition and extinction of continuously and partially reinforced running in rats with lesions of the dorsal noradrenergic bundle , 1982, Behavioural Brain Research.

[94]  J. Felsenstein The evolutionary advantage of recombination. , 1974, Genetics.

[95]  L. Kamin Predictability, surprise, attention, and conditioning , 1967 .

[96]  B. Cohen Cellular Basis of Behavior , 1977, Neurology.

[97]  G. Price,et al.  Extension of covariance selection mathematics , 1972, Annals of human genetics.

[98]  E. Kandel,et al.  Molecular biology of learning: modulation of transmitter release. , 1982, Science.

[99]  Darwinism and the Study of Society , 1958, Nature.

[100]  Mayr,et al.  Evolution and the diversity of life , 1942 .

[101]  B. Skinner,et al.  Are theories of learning necessary? , 2013, Psychological review.

[102]  C. H. WADDINGTON,et al.  Towards a Theoretical Biology , 1968, Nature.

[103]  P. Sherman Nepotism and the evolution of alarm calls. , 1977, Science.

[104]  D T CAMPBELL,et al.  Perception as substitute trial and error. , 1956, Psychological review.

[105]  A. Routtenberg,et al.  Effects of the availability of rewarding septal and hypothalamic stimulation on bar pressing for food under conditions of deprivation. , 1965, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[106]  H. C. Plotkin,et al.  Learning, Change, and Evolution: An Enquiry into the Teleonomy of Learning , 1979 .

[107]  E. Tolman A behavioristic theory of ideas. , 1926 .

[108]  D. Terence Langendoen,et al.  An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability , 1977 .

[109]  J. Pringle,et al.  On the Parallel Between Learning and Evolution , 1951 .

[110]  H. B. Kettlewell The Phenomenon of Industrial Melanism in Lepidoptera , 1961 .

[111]  W. H. Kane On Cause and Effect in Biology. , 1962, Science.

[112]  Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini,et al.  Language and Learning: The Debate Between Jean Piaget and Noam Chomsky , 1980 .

[113]  G. Simpson,et al.  Genetics, paleontology, and evolution. , 1949 .

[114]  Two Evolutionary Theories , 1958 .

[115]  M W Feldman,et al.  Models for cultural inheritance. I. Group mean and within group variation. , 1973, Theoretical population biology.

[116]  Walter B. Weimer Psycholinguistics and Plato's paradoxes of the Meno. , 1973 .

[117]  Handbook of Behavioral Neurobiology, Vol. 3: Social Behavior and Communication , 1982 .

[118]  D. Campbell Blind variation and selective retention in creative thought as in other knowledge processes. , 1960, Psychological review.

[119]  F. Cloak Is a cultural ethology possible? , 1975 .

[120]  W. Brown Animal Intelligence: Experimental Studies , 1912, Nature.

[121]  M. Feldman,et al.  Cultural transmission and evolution: a quantitative approach. , 1981, Monographs in population biology.

[122]  J. Huxley Evolution: The Modern Synthesis , 1943 .

[123]  R. Borowsky Social Inhibition of Maturation in Natural Populations of Xiphophorus variatus (Pisces: Poeciliidae) , 1978, Science.

[124]  D. Wilson A theory of group selection. , 1975, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.