title: THE LAW OF SELF-REFLEXION: A Possible Unified Explanation for the Three Different Psychological Phenomena creator: Lefebvre, Vladimir A. subject: Psychophysics subject: Cognitive Psychology subject: Behavioral Analysis description: The centuries-old philosophical idea that man has an image of the self containing an image of the self (of the second order) obtains a new life in the mathematical model of the subject possessing reflexion. One assumption underlying the model is that the subject tends to generate patterns of behavior such that some kind of similarity is established between the subject himself and his second order image of the self. We demonstrate that this model allows a single explanation for three diverse, experimentally observed phenomena: (a) the nonlinear relation between magnitude estimation and categorization of identical stimuli (Parducci, Stevens, Galanter), (b) the avoidance of the value of 0.5 in estimating stimuli equidistant from two samples on a psychological scale (Poulton, Simmonds), and (c) the formal correspondence between, on the one hand, frequency of choice for particular alternatives and, on the other, reinforcement rate, found in some experiments with animals and people (Herrnstein, Baum). The results obtained allow us to hypothesize that the reflexive metaphor represents a general principle for regulation of both human and animal behavior. publisher: RAS Institute of Psychology contributor: Lepsky, V.E. date: 2002-10 type: Journal (Paginated) type: PeerReviewed format: application/pdf identifier: http://cogprints.org/2927/1/The_Law_of_Self-Reflexion.pdf identifier: Lefebvre, Vladimir A. (2002) THE LAW OF SELF-REFLEXION: A Possible Unified Explanation for the Three Different Psychological Phenomena. [Journal (Paginated)] relation: http://cogprints.org/2927/