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This Concept Map, created with IHMC CmapTools, has information related to: ABA-TPC-2012-Abstract, Words, Phrases, and Framing Responses Robert J. Dlouhy Western Michigan University Abstract This poster will propose that in human verbal behavior, response patterns commonly called phrases and complex words are products of autoclitic/intraverbal framing responses of two distinct types. Although there are differences between autoclitic and intraverbal control, these responses order the sequence in which constituent responses are emitted. Any particular utterance sequence may be subject to both autoclitic and intraverbal control, so these responses may be called framing or sequencing responses. Phrases are easily interpreted as products of framing responses, but complex words – words that have affixes – must also be seen as framing response products. Examination of phrase and complex word topographies leads to the observation that the framing response classes accounting for each must be distinct. It is possible, in some verbal communities, to distinguish between morphological framing responses and syntactic framing responses. Syntactic framing responses may have some of their response positions realized by other framing responses. Morphological framing responses, on the other hand, have certain response positions where limited types of responses (the affixes) are realized. The affix responses are only emitted in certain positions relative to other responses.