Philosophical Underpinnings
Concepts and Principles
Measurement
Experimental Design
Ethics
100

What are the goals of behavior analysis as a science?

Hint: 3 concepts

Description, Prediction, Control

100

What is the difference between a response and a response class?

Response: single instance of behavior 

Response Class: group or set of responses that serve same function/impact on environment 

100
Describe direct and indirect measurement

Direct: Observe behavior as it is happening 

Indirect: Interview, checklist, rating scales, or any subjective information

100

Describe Independent, Dependent, Confounding Variables 

Independent Variable: Variable that is manipulated, changed, added, removed 

Dependent Variable: Variable that is effected by the IV or other factors in the environment 

Confounding Variable: type of variable that impacts the DV

100

Describe Responsibility as a Professional

Avoid fradulent or illegal situations

Accountable for all actions and to practice within scope of competence

Ensure correct documentation 

Take appropriate steps to avoid multiple or exploitative relationships 

200

Describe Description, Prediction, Control

Description: Facts about the event or behavior that are observable and measurable

Prediction: Repeated observations show two events correlate with each other 

Control: Functional relation between IV and DV

200

Describe Respondent and Operant Conditioning

Respondent Conditioning: pairing of neutral stimulus with conditioned or unconditioned stimulus that results in the neutral stimulus acquiring the properties of the conditioned or unconditioned stimulus that elicits responses

Operant Conditioning: use of consequences to effect future occurrences of behavior 

200

Describe Temporal Extent and Temporal locus

Extent: how long a response occurs for 

Locus: where in time the behavior occurs

200

Describe Internal and External Validity 

Internal Validity: changes to DV are result of IV and no other factors

External Validity: results of intervention/experiment are generalized to conditions outside of the intervention

200

Describe Responsibility in Practice

Ensure consent is given and received before sharing client information

Always consider medical necessity and social significance 

Remove environmental conditions that impact treatment and progress

Determine appropriateness for treatment 


300

Name at least 2 philosophical assumptions of Behavior Analysis

Selectionism 

Determinism

Empiricism

Parsimony

Pragmatism 

Philosophical Doubt 

300

Describe Stimulus and Response Generalization

Stimulus Generalization: various stimuli evoke the same response

Response Generalization: one stimuli evokes various responses 

300

Label and Describe at least 3 discontinuous measurement procedures

Partial Interval Recording 

Whole Interval Recording 

Momentary Time Sampling 

PLACHECK

300

What are prediction, verification, replication and how do they relate to experimental design

Prediction: the hypothesis is related to what the outcome will be when measured 

Verification: future data collected matches pattern of data collected in same condition

Replication: intervention is repeated and acquires the same results

300

Describe Responsibility to Clients and Stakeholders

Act in best interest of client 

Only accept cases that are within scope of practice and that would be able to complete all treatment elements consistently 

Document all services 

Identify appropriate time to discontinue treatment 

400

Describe the dimensions of ABA 

Applied 

Analytic 

Behavioral

Conceptually Systematic 

Effective

Generality 

Technological 

400

Describe MOs

Value Altering Effects

- Establishing Operation

- Abolishing Operation

Behavior Altering Effects

- Evocative 

- Abative 

400

What are level, trend, variability 

Level: where data points are in relation to the y axis. Can be low, moderate, high 

Variability: no identifiable trend. Represents the difference between data points 

Trend: Direction of data path. Increasing or decreasing 

400

Name at least 3 different experimental designs

Reversal

Multiple Baseline 

Multiple Probe

Alternating Treatment 

Changing Criterion 


400

Describe responsibility to Supervisees and Trainees

Comply with all supervision requirements ( competence, volume, documentation, accountability)

Address diversity 

Continuously monitor performance

Individualize supervision to each supervisee/trainee

Identify when to continue and when to terminate supervision

500

Define each dimension of ABA

Applied: changes are positive and socially significant 

Analytic: Functional relation is demonstrated between what is changed in the environment and the behavior that is targeted for change 

Behavioral: Observable and Measurable 

Conceptually Systematic: Interventions should be consistent with behavior principles 

Effective: significant and socially important level of change to the behavior 

Generality: target behavior should change not only in learning environment but in other settings and contexts as well

Technological: Intervention should be replicable by anyone who reads the intervention

500

Describe each Conditioned MO

Reflexive: stimulus that gains the properties of an MO because it signals the change in environmental context (good or bad)

Transitive: stimulus that establishes or abolishes need for another stimulus 

Surrogate: stimulus that is paired with another MO and acquires its properties

500

Describe when you would use continuous measurement, discontinuous measurement, and Event Recording 

Continuous Measurement: collects every occurrence of a response. Best used when environmental conditions allow for accurate occurrences of all responses 

Discontinuous Measurement: captures only some occurrences of responses. Best used in group settings or when environmental conditions do not allow for accurate recording of all responses

Event Recording: How many times a behavior occurs. Best used when a clear beginning or end of behavior can be determined

500

Describe component, comparative, parametric analysis

Component Analysis: Analyzing part of treatment package to determine which element is effective 

Comparative Analysis: comparing two different treatments 

Parametric Analysis: comparing different levels of IV

500

Describe the process for identifying and reporting ethical violations

1.) When appropriate alert the individual of the violation so they have chance to address and resolve ethical issue 

2.) If violation is not resolved, report violation to the BACB

3.) If commiting violation yourself, report yourself to BACB and/or provide documentation of removal or resolution of violation

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