ABA Lesson 9/10&11&12 Flashcards
What are the Theories of Language?
Verbal Operants
A unit of verbal behavior that responds to motivating operations and/or discriminative stimuli and functions to obtain reinforcement from the environment.
Operant?
Involving the modification of behavior by the reinforcing or inhibiting effect of its own consequences.
What are the Language Measures?
The only difference is, in the behavior analytic report, the information will be provided in terms of the operants, which gives us what we need in order to design interventions, including discriminative stimuli and reinforcement, or sometimes to let us know that we have to develop things into reinforcers before we can expect the verbal skill to develop. Because that behavior analytic assessment report is going to give those bits of information about what is reinforcing to the child and what reinforcers are missing
Topography?
The response topography of Pavlov’s dogs was salivation in response to the food and the bell. Another example is your reaction when a friend startles you. The response topography could be a range of things including jumping, gasping or shrieking, grabbing your heart, or running away.
What are the Language Units?
What are the Early Verbal Operants? Elements of communication?
They are Echoic, Mand, Tact and Intraverbal
Point-to-Point Correspondence
The stimulus and response products match in entirety; that is, the response is an exact duplication of the stimulus.
SD meaning?
is formally defined as “a stimulus in the presence of which a particular response will be reinforced”.
- tells the person what behavior is going to get reinforced
- it signals the availability of a particular reinforcer for a particular behavior.
An SD, or discriminative stimulus, is the instruction or other antecedent evoking a response. When an instructor says “touch your nose”, that instruction is the SD for the child to touch his nose.
Augmentative and Alternative Communication (Les 11)
Forms of communication that do not require speaking. It includes all the ways a person communicates, except for speaking, such as sign language.
What’s Sign Language?
A mode of communication that employs signs made with the hands and other movements, including facial expressions and postures of the body, to communicate messages.
What are the Forms of Sign Language?
1) Formal Sign Language
Includes vocabulary, grammar, and syntax
Wholly different from their regional spoken languages.
Generally used by people who are culturally deaf (have never heard spoken words).
Examples: American Sign Language, British Sign Language, etc.
2) Pidgin Sign Languages
Blends signs from formal sign language with regional spoken language syntax.
Usually used by people who have lost their hearing (native spoken language users).
3) Idiosyncratic Signing
Usually not a fully formed language - no grammar/syntax
Signs may or may not come from formal signing lexicons
Most often used by people who have language disorders, may be unrelated to hearing impairment.
Prompt (Les 12)
1) A supplemental antecedent stimulus that is used when a stimulus does not reliably control a target response. In other words, if the learner does not initiate the action that they are expected to initiate when a stimulus occurs, you will intervene with a prompt.
2) auxiliary, extra or artificial stimuli that are presented immediately before or after the stimuli that will eventually cue a learner to display the behavior of interest at the appropriate time or in the relevant circumstances.
Prompt Contingency
The typical three-term contingency involves a stimulus followed by behavior, followed by reinforcement. Whenever we are teaching and we want to insert a prompt, we’re going to do that in between the stimulus and the behavior. So the contingency becomes stimulus, prompt, behavior, reinforcement
- the prompt contingency is stimulus with a prompt, followed by the behavior, followed by reinforcement.
What are the categories of prompts?
There are six categories of prompts: physical prompts, modeling, verbal prompts, gestural prompts, textual or graphic prompts and stimulus prompts.