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Windows Live® Search Results B. F. Skinner (1904-1990), American psychologist. Born in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, and educated at Harvard University. Skinner became the foremost exponent in the United States of the behaviourist school of psychology, in which human behaviour is explained in terms of physiological responses to external stimuli. He also originated programmed instruction, a teaching technique in which the student is presented a series of ordered, discrete bits of information, each of which he or she must understand before proceeding to the next stage in the series. A variety of teaching machines have been designed that incorporate the ideas of Skinner. Among his important works are Behavior of Organisms (1938), Walden Two (1961), and The Technology of Teaching (1968). In Beyond Freedom and Dignity (1971), Skinner advocated mass conditioning as a means of social control. Later works include Particulars of My Life (1976) and Reflections on Behaviorism and Society (1978).
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