No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
A not-so proximate account of cleansing behavior
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
Abstract
In this commentary we outline perceptual control theory and suggest this as a fruitful way for Lee and Schwarz (L&S) to fully embody their account of cleansing behavior. Moreover, we take issue with the command control approach that L&S have taken seeing this as an unnecessary cognitive commitment within an embodied model of cleansing behavior.
- Type
- Open Peer Commentary
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
References
Day, W. (1983). On the difference between radical and methodological behaviorism. Behaviorism, 11(1), 89–102.Google Scholar
Mansell, W., & Carey, T. A. (2015) Perceptual control theory: Will it lead to a revolution in psychology?. The Psychologist, 28, 896–899.Google Scholar
Mansell, W., & Marken, R. S. (2015). The origins and future of control theory in psychology. Review of General Psychology, 19(4), 425–430. https://doi.org/10.1037/gpr0000057.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marken, R. S. (2009). You say you had a revolution: Methodological foundations of closed-loop psychology. Review of General Psychology, 13(2), 137–145. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marken, R. S., & Mansell, W. (2013). Perceptual control as a unifying concept in psychology. Review of General Psychology, 17, 190–195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powers, W. T. (1973b). Behaviourism and feedback control. Science (New York, N.Y.), 181, 1118–1120.Google Scholar
Powers, W. T. (1978) Quantitative analysis of purposive systems. Psychological Review, 85, 417–435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powers, W. T. (2008). Living control systems III: The fact of control. New Caan, CT: Benchmark Publications.Google Scholar
Target article
Grounded procedures: A proximate mechanism for the psychology of cleansing and other physical actions
Related commentaries (27)
A not-so proximate account of cleansing behavior
Bio-culturally grounded: why separation and connection may not be the same around the world
Body ownership as a proxy for individual and social separation and connection
Cleansing and separating: From modern agriculture and genocide to post-separation era
Cleansing and separation procedures reflect resource concerns
Considerations of the proximate mechanisms and ultimate functions of disgust will improve our understanding of cleansing effects
Cultural mindsets shape what grounded procedures mean: Cleansing can separate or connect and separating can feel good or not so good
Culture, ecology, and grounded procedures
Developmental antecedents of cleansing effects: Evidence against domain-generality
From washing hands to washing consciences and polishing reputations
Going beyond elementary mechanisms: the strategic interplay between grounded procedures
Grounded procedures of connection are not created equal
Grounded procedures of separation in clinical psychology: what's to be expected?
Grounded separation: can the sensorimotor be grounded in the symbolic?
Grounding together: Shared reality and cleansing practices
Incomplete grounding: the theory of symbolic separation is contradicted by pervasive stability in attitudes and behavior
It's a matter of (executive) load: Separation as a load-dependent resetting procedure
Leveraging individual differences to understand grounded procedures
Proper understanding of grounded procedures of separation needs a dual inheritance approach
Psychology of cleansing through the prism of intersecting object histories
Separation/connection procedures: From cleansing behavior to numerical cognition
Specifying separation: avoidance, abstraction, openness to new experiences
The impact of grounded procedures can vary as a function of perceived thought validity, meaning, and timing
The lack of robust evidence for cleansing effects
The role of goal-generalization processes in the effects of grounded procedures
The role of meta-analysis and preregistration in assessing the evidence for cleansing effects
The role of mortality concerns in separation and connection effects: comment on Lee and Schwarz
Author response
Grounded procedures in mind and society