Decade of Behavior

The Decade of Behavior is the American Psychological Association's nickname for the 2000s. The name represents a public education campaign to bring attention to the importance of behavioral and social research.[1] The initiative has been endorsed by more than 70 professional associations across a variety of disciplines.[2] The campaign was first championed in 1998 by Richard C. McCarty, then-Executive Director of Science of the APA.

It is the successor to the 1990s' "Decade of the Brain".

Criticisms

Since the 1980s, the study of observed or actual behavior has gone down as research in personality and social psychology shifted focus to introspective self reports and to hypothetical behaviors in imagined situations. This is problematic as actual and hypothetical behaviors have been found to differ dramatically.[3]

gollark: ```(iter-prisond devil grudger 10)(30 0)```<:dodecahedron:724893894822854697>
gollark: This is immensely troubling.
gollark: Please fix it, for purposes.
gollark: Are you sure moves-x and moves-y are the right way round?
gollark: Hmm, this DOES contain bee.

References

  1. Azar, Beth (February 1998). "APA launches 'Decade of Behavior'". Monitor on Psychology. 29 (2). Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  2. Yairi, Keren (Winter 2003). "Decade of Behavior Moves Onward". Psychological Science Agenda. 16 (1). Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  3. Baumeister, Roy F.; Vohs, Kathleen D.; Funder, David C. (2007). "Psychology as the Science of Self-Reports and Finger Movements: Whatever Happened to Actual Behavior?". Perspectives on Psychological Science. 2 (4): 396–403. doi:10.1111/j.1745-6916.2007.00051.x. PMID 26151975. But if social and personality psychology has given up on behavior, how can the field expect society as a whole to embrace it?
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