Categories of arbitrary stimuli that control the same function; if the function of 1 member of the class is altered, the function will change for all members of the class.
What is functional equivalence classes?
100
Burrhus refers to
What is Skinner's first name?
100
The capacity for the presence or absence of antecedents to cause behaviors.
What is stimulus control?
100
A recording procedure that produces a slight underestimate of the target behavior.
What is whole interval recording?
100
Any variable that alters the current reinforcing effectiveness of some stimulus, object or event and also alters the current frequency of all behavior that has obtained that stimulus, object or event in the past.
What is an establishing operation?
200
If A=B, and B=C, then C=A
What is transitivity?
200
An operant that occurs when a verbal discriminative stimulus evokes a verbal response that does not have point-to-point correspondence with the verbal stimulus.
What is an intraverbal?
200
Reinforcement is delivered at specific moments in time if the problem behavior is not occurring at those times.
What is a momentary DRO schedule?
200
A recording procedure that produces an overestimate of the target behavior.
What is partial interval recording?
200
A decrease in the current frequency of behavior that has been reinforced by some stimulus, object or event.
What is an abative effect.
300
In the absence of direct training, the operant matches a stimulus to itself.
What is reflexivity?
300
A stimulus change that occurs after a response has been emitted, increases the future probability of that response, and results from the action of another individual.
What is mediated reinforcement?
300
A reinforcement contingency in which the behavior removes an aversive stimulus without the mediation of another person.
What is automatic negative reinforcement?
300
An ideal recording procedure for a teacher in a classroom of 25 students needing to record behavior data on a specific student.
What is momentary time sampling?
300
A stimulus that acquires MO effectiveness by preceding some form of worsening or improvement.
What is a reflexive conditioned motivating operation?
400
A behavioral theory that provides an operant analysis of how/why people are able to form equivalence classes.
What is relational frame theory?
400
Data collected before any teaching is done for day to see if the child can respond after several hours of no teaching.
What is cold probes?
400
Name the 3 schedule types that are most resistant to extinction.
What is ratio, variable, and lean.
400
A measurement procedure that involves recording tangible outcomes of behavior.
What is permanent products?
400
A stimulus that acquires its MO effectiveness by being paired with another MO, and has the value-altering and behavior-altering effects as the MO with which it was paired.
What is surrogate conditioned motivating operation?
500
The year in which Murray Sidman first published research on stimulus equivalence?
What is 1971?
500
Refers to a fast-paced verbal behavior instruction, usually done at the table using errorless teaching, fading in demands, mixing and varying, prompting procedures, and an established VR.
What is intensive trial teaching?
500
An engagement based assessment procedure in which an individual is presented with 1 stimulus at a time for a specific period of time, and the duration of engagement is recorded.
What is single stimulus engagement preference assessment?
500
An experimental design that is effective for evaluating the effects of instruction on skill sequences in which it is highly unlikely that that subject's performance on later steps in the sequence can improve without instruction or mastery of earlier steps in the chain.
What is multiple probe design?
500
An environmental variable that, as a result of learning history, establishes or abolishes the reinforcing effectiveness of another stimulus and evokes or abates the behavior that has been reinforced by that other stimulus.
What is transitive conditioned motivating operation?