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1

Lundin, Robert W. Personality: A behavioral analysis. 2nd ed. Malabar, Fla: R.E. Krieger Pub. Co., 1986.

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2

Behavioral analysis and measurement methods. New York: Wiley, 1985.

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3

Brady, Joseph V. Continuously programmed environments and the experimental analysis of human behavior. [Cambridge, MA: Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies, 1992.

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4

National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Behavioral and Social Science Research to Improve Intelligence Analysis for National Security, ed. Intelligence analysis: Behavioral and social scientific foundations. Washington, D.C: National Academies Press, 2011.

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5

Coy, Andre. Emulating human speech recognition: A scene analysis approach to improving robustness in automatic speech recognition. Hauppauge, N.Y: Nova Science Publishers, 2011.

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6

Rusch, Frank R. Introduction to behavior analysis in special education. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall, 1988.

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7

J, Bush Andrew, and Kennedy John J. 1940-, eds. An introduction to the design and analysis of experiments in behavioral research. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1985.

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8

Behavioral archaeology: First principles. Salt Lake City, UT: University of Utah Press, 1995.

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9

Head, Elizabeth. The canine as an animal model of human aging and dementia: A behavioral and neurobiological analysis. Ottawa: National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997.

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10

IFAC/IFIP/IFORS/IEA Symposium on Analysis, Design, and Evaluation of Man-Machine Systems (5th 1992 Hague, Netherlands). Analysis, design, and evaluation of man-machine systems 1992: Selected papers from the Fifth IFAC/IFIP/IFORS/IEA Symposium, The Hague, The Netherlands, 9-11 June 1992. Oxford: Published for the International Federation of Automatic Control by Pergamon Press, 1993.

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11

L, Hollenback Kacy, Skibo James M, and Walker William H. 1964-, eds. Behavioral archaeology: Principles and practice. London: Equinox Pub., 2010.

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12

Tzafestas, S. G. Human and nature minding automation: An overview of concepts, methods, tools and applications. Dordrecht: Springer, 2010.

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13

Leuthold, Hartmut. Analysis of spatial stimulus response compatibility and the Simon effect by means of overt behavioral and electrophysiological measures: Covert response activation as a common basis? Konstanz: Hartung-Gorre, 1994.

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14

Geographic profiling. Boca Raton, Fla: CRC Press, 2000.

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15

A, Lamal Peter, ed. Behavioral analysis of societies and cultural practices. New York: Hemisphere Pub. Corp., 1991.

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16

Ludwig, Timothy D. Sources of Behavioral Variance in Process Safety: Analysis and Intervention. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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17

1948-, Hall John Raymond, ed. Behavioral mitigation of smoking fires through strategies based on statistical analysis. Emmitsburg, Md: Dept. of Homeland Security, 2006.

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18

Yu, Philip S., and Longbing Cao. Behavior Computing: Modeling, Analysis, Mining and Decision. Springer, 2012.

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19

Yu, Philip S., and Longbing Cao. Behavior Computing: Modeling, Analysis, Mining and Decision. Springer, 2014.

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20

Turner, Jonathan H. Discovering Human Nature Through Cross-Species Analysis. Edited by Rosemary L. Hopcroft. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190299323.013.7.

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Cladistic analysis is employed on behavioral and organizational patterns among present-day great apes that, because of their genetic closeness to humans, can be used as a surrogate for making inferences about the behavior and organizational propensities of the last common ancestor to great apes, hominins, and humans. A series of preadaptations among great apes for language, emotionality, mother–infant bonding, life history characteristics, propensities for play, and nonharem/promiscuous mating represents one source of information on the nature of the last common ancestor. Moreover, a set of behavioral propensities among all great apes adds to the body of information that can be used to make inferences about the nature of the last common ancestors, hominins, and humans. Thus, it is now possible to make inferences about the biological nature of human behavior and organizational tendencies that are less speculative than earlier analyses of human nature.
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21

Brown, Geraldine. ASSESSING ATTITUDES OF PHYSICIANS AND REGISTERED NURSES TOWARD THE HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) AND ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME (AIDS): A CULTURAL COMMUNICATION ANALYSIS. 1994.

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22

Marks, Amber, Ben Bowling, and Colman Keenan. Automatic Justice? Edited by Roger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, and Karen Yeung. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199680832.013.32.

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This chapter examines how forensic science and technology are reshaping crime investigation, prosecution, and the administration of criminal justice. It highlights the profound effect of new scientific techniques, data collection devices, and mathematical analysis on the traditional criminal justice system. These blur procedural boundaries that have hitherto been central, while automating and procedurally compressing the entire criminal justice process. Technological innovation has also resulted in mass surveillance and eroded ‘double jeopardy’ protections due to scientific advances that enable the revisiting of conclusions reached long ago. These innovations point towards a system of ‘automatic justice’ that minimizes human agency and undercut traditional due process safeguards that have hitherto been central to the criminal justice model. To rebalance the relationship between state and citizen in a system of automatic criminal justice, we may need to accept the limitations of the existing criminal procedure framework and deploy privacy and data protection law.
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23

Karpyn, Allison. Behavioral Design as an Emerging Theory for Dietary Behavior Change. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190626686.003.0003.

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In the past two decades, public health interventions have moved from education strategies aimed at individuals to broad, multilevel interventions incorporating environmental and policy strategies to promote healthy food behaviors. These intervention programs continue to employ classic behavior change models that consider individuals as deliberate, intentional, and rational actors. Contrary to the ideas posited by rational choice theory, diet-related literature draws little correlation between an individual’s intentions and his/her resultant behavior. This chapter adds to the dual-system model of cognition—reflective or slow thinking, and automatic or fast thinking—and introduces an emerging theory for dietary behavior change called behavioral design. Behavioral design recognizes that human decisions and actions lie on a continuum between spheres and are continually shaped by the interactions between an agent (individual, group) and his/her/their exposure (environment). More specifically, behavioral design considers the importance of the “experience” left as time passes, such as conditioning, resilience, expectation, repeated behaviors, and normality, as the central and iterative influence on future decisions. Behavioral interventions must consider the individual’s “experience” resulting from his or her interaction with the environment, while acknowledging the fast and slow mechanisms by which choices are made. This chapter introduces aspects to consider when using behavioral design to increase healthier food behaviors and physical activity, and briefly discusses ethics questions related to intentional modification of environment for health behavior change.
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24

Rossmo, D. Kim. Geographic Profiling. CRC, 1999.

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25

Zamir, Eyal, and Doron Teichman, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Behavioral Economics and the Law. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199945474.001.0001.

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The past twenty years have witnessed a surge in behavioral studies of law and law-related issues. These studies have challenged the application of the rational-choice model to legal analysis and introduced a more accurate and empirically grounded model of human behavior. This integration of economics, psychology, and law is breaking exciting ground in legal theory and the social sciences, shedding a new light on age-old legal questions as well as cutting-edge policy issues. The Oxford Handbook of Behavioral Economics and Law brings together leading scholars of law, psychology, and economics to provide an up-to-date and comprehensive analysis of this field of research, including its strengths and limitations as well as a forecast of its future development. Its twenty-nine chapters are organized into four parts. The first part provides a general overview of behavioral economics. The second part comprises four chapters introducing and criticizing the contribution of behavioral economics to legal theory. The third part discusses specific behavioral phenomena, their ramifications for legal policymaking, and their reflection in extant law. Finally, the fourth part analyzes the contribution of behavioral economics to fifteen legal spheres ranging from core doctrinal areas such as contracts, torts, and property to areas such as taxation and antitrust policy.
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26

Ritchie, Elspeth Cameron, Perry R. Chumley, Meg Daley Olmert, Rick A. Yount, Matthew St Laurent, and Christina Rumayor. Canines as Assistive Therapy for Treatment of PTSD. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190205959.003.0008.

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Canine-assisted therapies are being used increasingly both by veterans and the civilian community for mental and emotional support. During the past decade, a growing body of scientific research has provided evidence that human–animal interactions can improve social competence and reduce physiological, psychological, and behavioral effects of stress and social isolation. One meta-analysis that evaluated 49 published studies of animal-assisted therapy (AAT), used mainly to target mental health concerns, concluded that AAT is effective for medical well-being, for behavioral outcomes in adults, and for improving the therapy participation of children with autism and related disorders. The study also found that AAT was as effective as other interventions examined in comparison.
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27

Robbins, Trevor. Impulsivity and Drug Addiction: A Neurobiological Perspective. Edited by Jon E. Grant and Marc N. Potenza. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195389715.013.0078.

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A conceptual analysis of the impulsivity construct in behavioral and neurobiological terms is followed by an analysis of its causal role in certain forms of drug addiction in both human and animal studies. The main focus of this chapter is on a rat model of impulsivity based on premature responding in the five-choice serial reaction time task and a more detailed characterization of this phenotype in neurobehavioral, neurochemical, and genetic terms. Evidence is surveyed that high impulsivity on this task is associated with the escalation subsequently of cocaine self-administration behavior and also with a tendency toward compulsive cocaine seeking. Novelty reactivity, by contrast, is associated with the enhanced acquisition of self-administration, but not with the escalation of intravenous self-administration of cocaine or the development of compulsive behavior associated with cocaine seeking. These results indicate that the vulnerability to stimulant addiction may depend on different factors, as expressed through distinct presumed endophenotypes. These observations help us further to dissociate various aspects of the impulsivity construct in neural as well as behavioral terms.
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28

Maryanski, Alexandra, and Jonathan H. Turner. The Neurology of Religion. Edited by Rosemary L. Hopcroft. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190299323.013.33.

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The human propensity for religious behavior and, eventually, religious organization is the by-product of natural selection working on the neuroanatomy of low-sociality and non-group-forming hominins to become more social and group oriented as a necessary strategy for survival on the African savanna. Using cladistic analysis to determine the behavioral and organizational propensities of the last common ancestor to present-day great apes and humans’ hominin ancestors, while at the same time engaging in comparative neuroanatomy of extant great-ape and human brains, the neurological basis of religion is isolated. Religion emerged under early selection pressures to make hominins more social and able to form stable groups. From the combination of dramatically increased emotionality and cognitive functioning, the transition from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens approximately 300,000 year ago created the neurological platform for religious behaviors among early humans.
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29

Ehrlich, Isaac. Economics of Criminal Law. Edited by Francesco Parisi. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684250.013.022.

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This chapter discusses the economic approach to crime. By applying the tools of economic analysis and econometric methodology, it serves as a unified approach for understanding illegal behaviour as part of human behaviour in general. It offers new insights about the relative efficiency and desirability of means of crime control and components of the law enforcement system. The economic approach, and the “market model” linking it to the general methodology used by economists to study and interpret the general economy, remains a work in progress, because the data are not available to the degree they are collected and reported in other areas of economic inquiry. It is still too early to assess the degree to which the various econometric studies have produced accurate estimates of critical behavioral relationships underlying variations and conflicting trends of crime. Progress depends on better data and more complete implementations of the comprehensive model of crime.
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30

Troisi, Alfonso. Madness. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199393404.003.0011.

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Medicalization of human behavioral diversity is a recurring theme in the history of psychiatry, and the problem of defining what is a genuine mental disorder remains an unresolved question since the origins of clinical psychopathology. This chapter presents an evolutionary view of mental health, placing functional capacities and biological adaptation at the core of attempts to define mental disorder instead of other criteria of morbidity that are commonly used . This theoretical shift depends on the fact that the evolutionary concept of mental disorder is consequence oriented: what makes a condition pathological are its consequences, not its causes or correlates. The chapter then provides, an evolutionary analysis, which reveals that the degree of efficiency of functional capacities is dependent on features of the environment. Optimal functional capacities are sets of coevolved traits that are best suited to increasing adaptation in specific environments. The same trait can be highly adaptive in one environment and minimally adaptive in another.
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31

Troisi, Alfonso. Nature. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199393404.003.0001.

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Referring to “natural behaviors” or “behaviors against nature” is common not only in the media but also in different professional fields dealing with human conduct. However, many assumptions about human nature that are taken for granted in social and human sciences are wrong when evaluated in light of recent discoveries in evolutionary behavioral biology. The aim of this chapter is to set the framework for an evolutionary analysis of the human mind and behavior and to summarize current knowledge on the evolution of Homo sapiens. Basic concepts of evolutionary biology (e.g., adaptation, ultimate versus proximate causation, genetic mismatch) are briefly explained, and their implications for a correct discussion of human nature are illustrated. The take-home message of the chapter is that a full understanding of the human mind and human behavior requires the integration of social and biological sciences, abandoning false dichotomies such as nature versus culture or instinct versus learning. This is a necessary step toward the practical implementation of ethical and legal systems more respectful of individual proclivities.
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32

M, Hardy Leslie, and Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Committee on Prenatal and Newborn Screening for HIV Infection., eds. HIV screening of pregnant women and newborns. Washington, D.C: National Academy Press, 1991.

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33

HIV Screening of Pregnant Women And Newborns. Natl Academy Pr, 1990.

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