Saying and Doing: A Contingency-Space Analysis
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1987
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Matthews, Byron A., Eliot Shimoff, and A. Charles Catania. “Saying and Doing: A Contingency-Space Analysis.” Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis 20, no. 1 (1987): 69–74. https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1987.20-69.
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Abstract
Correspondences between verbal responding (saying) and nonverbal responding (doing) may be organized in terms of the classes of verbal/nonverbal relations into which particular instances of verbal/nonverbal response sequences can enter. Contingency spaces, which display relations among events in terms of the probability of one event given or not given another, have been useful in analyses of nonverbal behavior. We derive a taxonomy of verbal/nonverbal behavior relations from a contingency space that takes into account two conditional probabilities: the probability of a nonverbal response given a verbal response and that probability given the absence of the verbal response. For example, positive correspondence may be said to exist as a response class when the probability of doing is high given saying but is otherwise low. Criteria for other generalized classes, including negative correspondence, follow from this analysis.