Interventions Based on Operant Conditioning Flashcards
Increasing Behavior with Reinforcement
Positive reinforcement is relied on with most behavioral interventions.
Factors for positive reinforcement:
- Contingency: must be a contingent relationship between the target behavior and the positive reinforcer. reinforcer shoujld be available only when the target behavior has been performed.
- _Immediacy: _Maximize the benefits of positive reinforcement, the reinforcer should be delivered immediately after the target bx.
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_Schedule of Reinforcement: _New behavior is most rapid when reinforcement is applied on a continuous schedule, while maintenance of the behavior (resistance to extinction) is maximized when the behavior is reinforced on an intermittent schedule.
- Best to start on continuous and change to intermittent once bx is well established.
- THINNING: process of reducing the proportion of reinforcements.
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_Magnitude: _up to a point, the greater amount of positive reinforcement the greater effectiveness.
- SATIATION: past a certain point, the reinforcer has lost it value.
- primary reinforcers are more vulnerable to this than secondary (full of food). Continuous schedule more susceptible than intermittent to satiation.
- _Verbal Clarification: _effectiveness of reinforcement is enhanced when contingent relationship between bx and reinforcement is verbally clarified (explicit).
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_Prompts: _Verbal and Physical promps facilitate the acquisition of a new bx.
- dad ‘clean room’, boy cleans, ‘good job’
- reminder is discriminative stimulus that signals that praise will follow the behavior.
- FADING: gradual removal of a prompt
SHAPING
CHAINING
SHAPING:
- target bx rarely or never occurs naturally
- reinforcing successive approximations to the desired behavior
- providing reinforcement only for behaviors that come closer and closer to the desired one.
- Lovaas…ASD talking process.
- focus on the final (terminal) behavior over time
CHAINING:
- three-term contingency: discriminative stimulus-behavior-consequence, Skinner said behavior chains to acquisition of most complex behaviors.
- establishment of a behavior chain (steps-distinct responses).
- Forward Chains: first compent in the chain and works through entire chain (make cake).
- Backwards Chains: components in the chain are established in the reverse order (simple model plane).
- entire sequence of responses is important in chaining.
- may need combo of shaping and chaining, shape used to establish each response in the behavior chain.
Premack Principal
**Differential Reinforcement **
Premack Principal
- a high probability behavior is used to reinforce a low probability behavior.
- watch TV after HW; TV high probability bx is used to reinforce the low probability bx of HW.
- asks, what do they already do and like?
**Differential Reinforcement: **
- Combines positive reinforcement with extinction and involves reinforcing alternative behaviors while ignoring the target behavior.
- Self-Stim hand flapping, give reinforcement for each two minutes she plays with toys w/no self-stim.
- toys is reinforced, self-stim is being extinguished.
- DRI: incompatible behaviors, DRA: alternative bx, DRO: other behaviors.
Decreasing Behaviors with **Punishment **
Effectiveness of Punishment (apply or withhold a stimulus to decrease bx) influenced by:
- Immediacy: sooner the better
- Consistency: apply on a continuous schedule, follow each performance of the behavior
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Intensity: initially applied in moderation.
- too strong likely to get avoidance, aggression or other undesirable behaviors.
- HABITUATION: initially punishing weakly and then gradually increasing its intensity leads to habituation (punishment loses effectiveness).
- Verbal Clarification
- Removal of All Positive Reinforcement: all stimuli that previously reinforced the behavior are identified and consistently withheld at the same time the behavior is being punished.
- Reinforcement for Alternative Behaviors: punishment teaches what NOT to do, its effectiveness increases substantially when it’s combined with reinforcement for alternatives.
- must determine if undesired behaviors are due to skill deficit….must train before punishing.
Limitations to Punishments Effectiveness
- punishment does not actually eliminate a behavior but merely suppresses it.
- effects of punishment are often short-term, inconsistent, and limited to the specific situation in which the punishment is applied!
- if i know i won’t be punished, then i can do the behavior again!
- negative side effects: fear, aggressiveness, negative emotions, escape/avoidance behaviors (lying, running away).
Verbal Reprimands
Overcorrections
**Verbal Reprimands: **
- NO/STOP: effects are inconsistent and can be positive reinforcers (attention) and increase the bx.
- must be followed up consequences.
Overcorrections:
- Positive Punishment: applying a penalty following an undersirable behavior in order to eliminate it.
- Restitution: having the person correct any negative effects of behavior
- Positive Practice: person to practice more appropirate behaviors, usually in an exaggerated fashion.
- includes providing verbal instructions, constant supervision and guidance to correct bx.
- MR threw things and turn over beds: straighten entire room (restitution), practice more desireable bx such as making up all the beds on the floor (positive practice).
Negative Practice
Response Cost
**Negative Practice **
- requiring the deliberate repeating of the undesirable bx to the point it becomes aversive/fatigued
- smoking, nail biting, hair pulling, pica, tics, stuttering.
- practice it: when you tic, tic again for next minute.
**Response Cost: **
- application of negative punishment and involves removing a specific reinforcer each time the target bx is done (take away time or token/money)
- late fees and fines are response costs.
time-out from reinforcement
Time-Out (negative punishment):
- remove all sources of positive reinforcement for a brief, prespecified time following a behavior to decrease the behavior (negative punishment).
- not extinction as extinction entails continuous removal of a reinforcer from a perviously reinforced response, BUT time out does that for a specific time from all things, not just the ones that may be reinforcing the bx.
Evaluation:
- duration not critical as short time-outs are as effectvie as longer ones…5-10 minutes best.
- best if combined with reinforcement for alternative bx
- Time-out should also begin with a short explanation of why it’s being applied.