Foundations
Reinforcement vs Preference
Motivation & Satiation
In Practice (RBT/BCBA Decisions)
100

This is a systematic way to identify items that may function as reinforcers.

What is a preference assessment?

100

This must be demonstrated through behavior change to be confirmed.

What is reinforcement?

100

This occurs when a reinforcer loses effectiveness due to overuse.

What is satiation?

100

This team member typically conducts formal preference assessments and analyzes results.

Who is the BCBA?

200

This occurs when a stimulus increases or maintains behavior in the future.

What is reinforcement?

200

This does not always result in increased responding.

What is preference?

200

This term refers to conditions that influence reinforcer effectiveness.

What is motivation (or motivating operation)?

200

This team member often implements informal checks during sessions.

Who is the RBT?

300

This term refers to liking something but not necessarily increasing behavior.

What is preference?

300

This is the key difference between reinforcement and preference.

What is behavior change?

300

Limited access to a reinforcer before session increases its effectiveness; this is called this.

What is deprivation?

300

When responding decreases across sessions, the BCBA should do this.

What is reassess preferences (or conduct another preference assessment)?

400

This is the main reason preference assessments are used before interventions.

What is to identify effective reinforcers?

400

A client likes music but does not work for it; this explains why music is not functioning as one.

What is a reinforcer?

400

This is one strategy used to prevent reinforcers from losing value.

What is rotating reinforcers?

400

If a client stops working for a reinforcer mid-session, the RBT should do this first.

What is offer alternative reinforcers (or check motivation)?

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