CATEGORY 1: FOUNDATIONS OF BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS (A.1–A.5)
CATEGORY 2: BASIC CONCEPTS (B.1–B.6)
CATEGORY 3: REINFORCEMENT & PUNISHMENT (B.7–B.12)
CATEGORY 4: STIMULUS CONTROL & GENERALIZATION (B.12–B.17)
CATEGORY 5: ADVANCED CONCEPTS (B.18–B.24)
100

Q: What are the three goals of behavior analysis as a science?

A: Description, prediction, and control.

100

Q: A specific instance of behavior is called what?

A: A response.

100

Q: Reinforcers that do not require learning to be effective are called what?

A: Unconditioned reinforcers.

100

Q: When a behavior occurs more often in the presence of a specific stimulus, this is called what?

A: Stimulus control.

100

Q: Behavior controlled by verbal instructions rather than direct experience with consequences is called what?

A: Rule-governed behavior.

200

Q: The idea that all behavior has a cause describes which philosophical assumption?

A: Determinism.

200

Q: A group of stimuli that share common features is called what?

A: A stimulus class.

200

Q: A punisher that acquires its effect through learning is what type?

A: Conditioned punisher.

200

Q: Responding only to “red lights” but not “green lights” is an example of what?

A: Stimulus discrimination.

200

Q: A verbal operant controlled by a motivating operation and reinforced by the item requested is what?

A: Mand.

300

Q: How does radical behaviorism explain behavior?

A: By including both observable behavior and private events as subject to the same environmental variables.

300

Q: Which type of conditioning involves reflexive, elicited behavior?

A: Respondent conditioning.

300

Q: A schedule in which reinforcement is delivered after a fixed number of responses is what schedule?

A: Fixed Ratio (FR).

300

Q: A child saying “dog” for different breeds of dogs is what type of generalization?

A: Stimulus generalization.

300

Q: A verbal response influenced by more than one variable describes what?

A: Multiple control.

400

Q: Which branch focuses on discovering principles of behavior through basic research?

A: The Experimental Analysis of Behavior (EAB).

400

Q: The removal of an aversive stimulus following a behavior describes what type of reinforcement?

A: Negative reinforcement.

400

Q: A reinforcement schedule involving two or more component schedules presented alternately, each with its own SD, is called what?

A: Multiple schedule.

400

Q: A behavior continuing to occur after intervention has ended describes what?

A: Response maintenance.

400

Q: Symmetry, transitivity, and equivalence are examples of what kind of learning processes?

A: Emergent relations.

500

Q: Name four of Baer, Wolf, and Risley's seven dimensions of ABA.

A: Applied, behavioral, analytic, technological, conceptually systematic, effective, generality.

500

Q: A consequence that occurs directly as a result of the behavior, without another person delivering it, is what type of contingency?

A: Automatic contingency.

500

Q: What is the term for withholding the unconditioned or conditioned stimulus that previously elicited a reflex?

A: Respondent extinction.

500

Q: What is the main difference between motivating operations and stimulus control?

A: MOs alter the value of a consequence; stimulus control alters the probability of a response due to an SD.

500

Q: When an individual allocates responses in proportion to the reinforcement available on each option, this describes what principle?

A: The matching law.

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