Shaping & Chaining Flashcards
1
Q
Shaping & Chaining
A
- Here’s a problem:
- What if you want to reinforce a behavior but it
never appears to occur? - Example: reinforce a monkey for “playing” a guitar
- Children learning language
- If you can’t reinforce a behavior until it occurs, how
can you teach a complex behavior using operant
conditioning?
2
Q
Shaping
A
- Reinforcing
responses that
come successively
closer to desired
response
3
Q
Shaping
A
- “Establishing a behavior that never occurs”
- According to your book:
- Five aspects of behavior that can be shaped
- Topography – specific movements involved
- Intensity – force of a response; physical effect the response has on the environment
- Frequency – number of instances that occur in a given period of time
- Duration – length of time a response lasts
- Latency – time between occurrence of a stimulus and the
response evoked by that stimulus - Are these all shaping?
- Probably not – adjusting, chaining, etc.
4
Q
How to shape behavior
A
- Specifying the terminal desired behavior
- Choosing a starting behavior
- Should be a behavior that occurs often enough to reinforce
within session time - Should be a behavior that approximates the final desired
behavior - Outline the approximations that will be reinforced
- Moving along at the correct pace
- Reinforce an approximation at least several times before
proceeding to the next step - Avoid reinforcing too many times at any shaping step
- If behavior is lost because the program was moving too fast,
or the steps were too big, return to an earlier approximation
5
Q
Chaining
A
- A sequence of 2 or more simple schedules each of
which has its own SD and the last of which results in
the terminal reinforcer - The keys act as discriminative stimuli for the
response pattern that follows - The red and green keys act as both SDs secondary
reinforcers
6
Q
Chained
A
- Goal gradient
- Increase in response efficiency closer to the goal
- Responses in the early part of the chain are weaker
than those in latter parts of the chain - Easy to observe if each link consists of the same
reinforcement schedule - Slower rate of response and longer pauses on white key
than green; strongest response on red key - Terminal reinforcer is more immediate, influential
7
Q
- Total Task Presentation
–Attempt all steps of the chain
–Continue until every step is mastered
–Prompting provided as needed
–Reinforcement provided upon completing last
step - Forward Chaining
–Initial step first
–Then, first and second… etc.
–On each trial, last step that was developed is
reinforced
A
- Total Task Presentation
–Attempt all steps of the chain
–Continue until every step is mastered
–Prompting provided as needed
–Reinforcement provided upon completing last
step - Forward Chaining
–Initial step first
–Then, first and second… etc.
–On each trial, last step that was developed is
reinforced
8
Q
Backward chaining
A
- To establish a chained schedule train the final link in the
chain first - Can also have a chained schedule where each link in the chain consists of a different response
- Example
- To train a child to dress himself.
- Day 1 - shoes on →reward
- Day 2 - socks on, shoes on → reward
- Day 3 - pants on, socks on, shoes on → reward
9
Q
Introducing Behavioral Chaining
A
- Do a task analysis: Identify the components of
the final sequence - Components should be selected so that there is a
clear stimulus signaling the completion of each
component - Review each of the controlling stimuli for each of
the responses in the sequence - If similar stimuli control different responses, there is more chance for error and confusion
10
Q
Teaching Tasks
A
- Consider strategies for independent use of
prompts by learners - Written task analysis
- Picture prompts
- Reciting self-instructions
- Consider conducting a preliminary modeling
trial - Model entire sequence while verbally describing
the performance of each step - Begin training the behavior chain
- Give instructions to begin work
- Start with appropriate step for the type of chaining
method used - If learner makes a mistake, use error correction
- Provide necessary instruction or physical guidance
- After error corrected, move to next step
11
Q
Teaching Tasks
A
- Consider using ample social and other
reinforcers - Decrease extra assistance at individual steps
as quickly as possible