Chapter 2: Basic Concepts Flashcards
an environmental condition or stimulus change existing or occurring prior to a of interest
Antecedent
refers to the fact that behavior is modified by its consequences irrespective of the person’s awareness; a person does not have to recognize or verbalize the relation between her behavior and a reinforcing consequence, or even know that a consequence has occurred, for reinforce to “work” NOT THE SAME AS “AUTOMATIC REINFORCEMENT”
Automaticity of reinforcement
in general, an unpleasant or noxious stimulus; more technically, a stimulus change or condition that functions (a) to invoke a behavior that has terminated it in the past; (b) as a punisher when presented following a behavior, and/or (c) as a reinforcer when withdrawn following behavior
Aversive Stimulus
the activity of living organisms “that portion of an organism interacts with its environment that is characterized by det3ectable displacement in space through a time of some part of the organism and that results in a measurable change in at least one aspect of the environment.
Behavior
a technologically consistent method for changing behavior derived from one or more principles of behavior (ex differential reinforcement of other behavior, response cost) possesses sufficient generality across subjects, settings, and/ or behaviors to warrant its codification and dissemination
Behavior Change Tactic
A previously neutral stimulus change that functions as a punisher because of prior pairing with one or more other punishers; sometimes called secondary or learned punishers
Conditioned punisher
A learned stimulus-response functional relation consisting of an antecedent stimulus (sound of a refrigerator door opening) and the response it elicits (salivation); each person repertoire of conditioned reflexes is the product of his or her history of interactions with the environment/ ontogeny
Conditioned reflex
A previously neutral stimulus that functions as a reinforcer because of prior paining with one or more other reinforcers’ sometimes called secondary or learned reinforcers.
Conditioned reinforcer
CS; ordinarily a neutral stimulus paired with an unconditioned stimulus to achieve a desired result and eventually produces the desired response in an organism when presented alone’ in Pavlov’s experiment- the bell
Conditioned stimulus
a stimulus change that follows a behavior of interest
Consequence -
refers to dependent and/or temporal relations between operant behavior and its controlling variables
Contingency
describes reinforcement (or punishment) that is delivered only after the target behavior has occurred
Contingent
the state of an organism with respect to how much time has elapsed since it has consumed or contacted a particular type of reinforcer: also refers to a procedure for increasing the effectiveness of a reinforcer
Deprivation
an apparent that occurs more frequently under some antecedent conditions than under others
Discriminated operant
a stimulus in the presence of which responses of some type have been reinforced and in the absence of which the same type of responses have occurred and not been reinforced
Discriminative stimulus
The conglomerate of real circumstances in which the organism or referenced part of the organism exists; behavior cannot occur in the absence of the environment
Environment
The discontinuing of reinforcement of a previously reinforced behavior’ the primary effect is a decrease in the frequency of the behavior until it reaches pre-reinforcement levels or ultimately ceases to occur
Extinction
decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation. As infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure to a visual stimulus, their interest wanes and they look away sooner
Habituation