Talk:Mutual operant conditioning

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It's not always human/animal relationships. This may include parent/child (etc) relationships as well. Rklawton 17:14, 25 June 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Parent - Child relationships

The "Terrible Twos" are those years when toddlers gain the upper hand and can manipulate their parents. What questions do we need to ask? How do such young children gain and use the knowledge that they do?

When we can identify and classify these functions, we may shed light on the behavior of animals that develops as a result of a human presence in their environment.

We may next try to eliminate the behavioral differences between animals that do not know humans with animals that interact with humans on a regular basis.

Several subcategories of relationships can be developed between animals that interact at a watering hole, for example.

[edit] Remember

We think in terms of being awake or asleep, but there are assumptions and conclusions that we reach by simple generalizations. These generalizations are sometimes called "fog" or "wool." Start thinking more uniformly critical.