ry

face discussions, a person will end up having less esteem
for a stranger if the stranger had shown signs of liking
the person from the start than if he had shown signs of disliking him at first and then signs of liking him. Subsequent
experiments indicated that under the latter conditions the
stranger was more effective in persuading the subject to
change his beliefs or judgments. Some studies to be re-

ported attempt to determine the extent to which the anomalous phenomena can be explained by drive reduction, increased self-esteem and other mediating processes.
Individual differences in responsiveness to persuasive
communications will be examined in the third talk from
the standpoint of three psychological processes: (i) atten-

tion to the communication, (ii) comprehension of the
message, and (iii) yielding tendencies that make for ac-

ceptance of the message.
The final talk will attempt to call attention to new approaches in experimental social psychology that may help
to solve some basic problemsin the field of attitude change.
In this context, the implications of the three preceding
talks will be highlighted and several other new lines of
research cited.

Irving L. Janis, Barry Collins, Elliot Aronson, and William
McGuire.

Quantitative Approaches to Classification in the Social

Sciences (30 Dec.)

Arranged by Bert F. Green, Jr. (Carnegie-Mellon Uni-

versity, Pittsburgh).

The problem of discerning meaningful classes within
populations is common to all the behavioral and social
sciences. Standard quantitative methods of classification
will be examined critically, and new computer-based techniques will be examined and discussed.
Bert F. Green, Jr., James M. Beshers, Neil W. Henry,
Stephen C. Johnson, A. Kimball Romney, and Warren S.
Torgerson,

Psychoanalytic Studies in Child Development:
Biological and Social Deprivation in Early Childhood

(27 Dec.)

Arranged by Albert J. Solnit (Child Study Center, Yale
University).
Through the study of deviations evoked by social and
biological deprivation, psychoanalysts refine their theoretical propositions and formulate new hypotheses. The investigation of “accidents” of nature and of society are compelling because of the human needs involved and because
certain early psychological functions may be most clearly

illuminated under such conditions. In this panel, four in-

vestigations reveal the range and continuum of such psychoanalytic studies in child development.
Albert J. Solnit, Saily Provence, Justin D. Call, Selma
Fraiberg, Charles A. Malone and Reginald S. Lourie.

Speech Pathology: Some Principles Underlying
Therapeutic Practices (30 Dec.)
Arranged by Arthur S. House (Purdue University).

Areas of study in which processes fundamental to human speech and language behavior are delineated. The
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processes—iinguistic theory, language acquisition, respiratory physiology—are critical components in descriptions
of speech language behavior, and as such should support
the activities of speech pathologists that are aimed at the
amelioration of disorders of speech and language. The

areas will be presented in some detail and they will be discussed with an emphasis on determining the degree to which
therapeutic practices are dependent upon underlying prin-

ciples.
D. C. Spriestersbach, Paula Menyuk, Ronald S. Tikofsky, Harris Winitz, Edgar R. Garrett, James C. Hardy,
and J. Douglas Noll.

SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SCIENCES (K)
Science and Technology as Instruments of Policy

(27 Dec.)

Arranged by Sanford A. Lakoff (State University of

New York, Stony Brook).

Systems analysis is a tool to assist in making large scale

decisions within a complex social setting. It has recently
been embedded in a decision process called the Planning,
Programming and Budgeting System (PPBS) for the nonmilitary agencies of the federal government and for some

state and local governments. The principal antecedents of

both systems analysis and PPBS are in the design and
operation of our military forces. The need for systems

analysis in military applications arose from the displacement of directly relevant experience by the revolutionary

post-Worid War II developments in military technology,
by the accompanying increase in the importance, complexity, and cost of military equipment, and especially by

the need to extend the planning horizon farther into the
future.
Systems analysis was incorporated into

an integrated

planning, programming and budgeting process for the Defense Department under Secretary MacNamara in 1961.
That process laid heavy emphasis on the explicit statement
of alternatives and systematic comparisons among the costs
and effectiveness of the alternatives as a basis for making

choices among them. This basis has not replaced judgment
in the process, but has strengthened and informed it. It
has not replaced debate and bargaining in the process, but

has focussed it and enabled it to converge on useful, rather
than arbitrary, compromises.
There are important differences, as well as some similarities, in the reasons for applying systems analysis and
the PPBS to the non-military agencies. Our society is

undergoing important changes in both its goals and technology. Their effect has been largely to increase the impor-

tance and scale of collective decisions. This increase has
created vitally important problems for government. First,
our society still prefers individual choice wherever it leads
to viable results. Second, unlike the competitive sectors

of the private enterprise economy, government activities
are not automatically subject to a selective process or discipline ensuring their efficiency. Third, public activities
powerfully affect, for good or evil, the private sectors of
our economy. It is the aim of PPBS to devise yardsticks
to aid judgment about the goals and efficiency of government programs.
SCIENCE, VOL. 158

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