Reinforcement
Motivating Operations
Prompts
Discrimination
Chaining
100


What is Positive Reinforcement?



Stimulus is added that increases the future frequency of the behavior

100

What is an MO?

Environmental variable that alters the reinforcing effectiveness of a stimulus and the current frequency of all behavior that have been reinforced by that stimulus.

Strengthen but also weaken the value of a consequence as a reinforcer.

The term setting event has also been used to describe some of the variables that may fit under the definition of an MO.

100

What is a prompt?

Supplementary antecedent stimuli used to occasion a correct response in the presence of an SD (that will eventually control behavior).

Response prompts operate directly on the response.

Stimulus prompts operate directly on the antecedent stimuli

100

Describe simple discrimination

Enhancing or diminishing target responses by systematically using differential reinforcement to promote simple stimulus control.

Presenting a single discriminative stimulus to evoke or reduce a particular behavior.

The term contingency is involved

A discriminative stimulus à response à consequence

An antecedent evokes or abates the behavior.

100

Describe planned and unplanned models

Planned models

Pre-arranged antecedent stimuli that help learners acquire new skills

Shows the learner exactly what to do

Unplanned models

Occur in everyday social interactions.

200

Name a couple of factors that affect reinforcement

The time delay between the behavior and SR+

The context/stimulus conditions in which SR+ occurs

The “motivation” of the person, i.e., “How bad s/he wants it.”

200

What is the difference between an SD and MO

An SD controls a type of behavior because it has been related to the differential availability of an effective reinforcer for that type of behavior.

MO’s are related to the differential reinforcing effectiveness of a particular event.

200

Describe the difference between response and stimulus prompts

Response Prompts

Verbal instructions

Vocal

Non-vocal (e.g., written)

Modeling

A demonstration of the desired behavior

Physical Guidance

Partially physically guide the student’s movements

Stimulus Prompts

Movement cues

Pointing, tapping, touching, looking at

Position cues

Place one stimulus closer to the student

Redundance

Stimulus or response dimensions are paired with correct choice

200

Describe Conditional Discrimination

More complex than just teaching a fine discrimination.

Identifying when it is appropriate to engage in a particular response.

Also deals with more complex behaviors

Behaviors that can be appropriate in one context but inappropriate in another

200

What is shaping?

A process in which one systematically and differentially reinforces successive approximations to a terminal behavior.

Differential reinforcement:

Some members of a response class are reinforced (responses that are successively closer to the terminal behavior)

Other members of that response class (responses that are not closer to the terminal behavior) are not reinforced.

Successive Approximations:

The sequence of new response classes that emerge during the shaping process as a result of differential reinforcement.

300

Describe Rule Governed Behavior

Behaviors controlled by a rule (i.e., a verbal statement of an antecedent-behavior-consequence contingency) that enables human behavior to come under indirect control of temporarily remote or improbable but potentially significant consequences.

Indicators:

–No immediate consequence apparent

–Response-consequence delay > 30 s

–Large increase in frequency of the behavior occurs following one instance of reinforcement

–No observable consequence for the behavior exists (including no automatic reinforcement), but the ‘rule’ does

300

Describe an EO and an AO

Establishing Operations (EO’s)

–Increases the effectiveness of a stimulus as a reinforcer

–Usually involves decreased access to the stimulus (deprivation)

Abolishing Operation (AO’s)

–Decreases the effectiveness of a stimulus as a reinforcer

–Usually involves having increased access to the stimulus (satiation)

300

Describe the processes for transferring stimulus control: Most to Least Prompting, Least to Most Prompting, Graduated Guidance

Most-to-least prompts

Begin with the prompt that evokes the response and gradually fade to less intrusive prompts.

Physical guidance

Modeling

Verbal instruction

Natural stimulus

Least-to-most prompts

Provide the participant with an opportunity to perform the response with the least amount of assistance on each trial

Participant receives greater degrees of assistance with each successive trial without a correct response

Graduated guidance

Immediately fade physical prompts

Follow participant closely with hands

Gradually increase distance between hands and participant

300

Describe the process for match to sample

Matching two stimuli that are the same (i.e., two pictures of a girl).

Present the sample stimulus (i.e., picture of the girl)

Present other comparison stimuli (i.e., picture of a boy and a girl)

Reinforce when the learner matches the picture of the girl (sample stimulus) to the picture of the girl (comparison stimulus).

This exemplifies identity matching-to-sample.

300

Describe the two shaping methods

Across response topographies

Topography of behavior changes during shaping

Behaviors are still members of the same response class

Within response topographies

Topography of behavior remains constant

Another measurable dimension of behavior is changed (e.g., duration of the behavior)

400

Describe the four term contingency and provide an example 

MO-SD-Response-Reinforcement

400

Describe value and behavior altering effects

Value-altering effects:

MO = establishing operation (EO)

An increase in the reinforcing effectiveness of some stimulus, object, or event

MO = abolishing operation (AO)

A decrease in reinforcing effectiveness of some stimulus, object, or event


Behavior-altering effects:

Evocative effect

Increase in the current frequency of behavior that has been reinforced by some stimulus, object, or event

Abative effect

Decrease in the current frequency of behavior that has been reinforced by some stimulus, object, or event

400

What is Errorless Learning?

•Teaching method designed to minimize learner errors that are used to teach discriminations.

•Most-to-least prompting and fading methods are suitable to teach new skills without errors.

400

What is stimulus Equivalence 

A set of arbitrary, symbolic stimuli has formed an equivalence class if all stimuli in that set are reflexive, symmetrical, and transitive with each other.

Equivalence classes result from stimulus-equivalence training.

Those stimulus-control relations that emerge without being explicitly trained are called emergent relations.

400

Describe a Task Analysis

Breaking a complex skill or series of behaviors into smaller, teachable units

The product of a task analysis is a series of sequentially ordered steps.

500

Describe two different stimulus/reinforcer assessments

Paired Stimulus

Multiple Stimulus

Single stimulus

Concurrent schedule reinforcer assessment

Multiple schedule reinforcer assessment

Progressive-Ratio reinforcer assessment

500

Describe the 3 Conditioned Motivating Operations

CMO-S: 

Previously neutral stimulus that acquired its MO effects by being paired with a UMO.

CMO-R: 

Any stimulus that acquires MO effectiveness by preceding some form of worsening or improvement.

Exemplified a “warning stimulus” in an escape-avoidance procedure.

The organism learns to respond during the onset of the “warning stimulus” to avoid the aversive stimulus.

CMO-T:

An environmental variable establishes (or abolishes) the reinforcing effectiveness of another stimulus and evokes (or abates) the behavior that has been reinforced by that other stimulus.

500

Describe ethical considerations related to use of prompts

Evaluation of all individualistic elements must be conducted to determine appropriate procedures and specific prompt levels

Negative outcomes can result from incorrect use of prompting procedures

Negative outcomes can include: development of learned responses, prompt dependency, learned helplessness, lack of independence

Prompts should be faded at the earliest appropriate moment

500

Describe reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity 

Reflexivity refers to the results of simple, non-symbolic matching to sample.

Matching the picture of the girl to the picture of the girl.

Picture of the girl (A) = picture of the girl (A)

Symmetry

Reversibility of the sample stimulus and the comparison stimulus.

Teach two forms of symmetry.

If A = B, then B = A OR if B = C, then C = B

Ex. Picture of the girl (A) = written word “girl” (B) & written word “girl” (B) = picture of the girl (A)

Ex. Written word “girl” (B) & spoken word ”girl” (C)  & spoken word “girl” (c) = written word “girl” (B)

Transitivity

In this sequence, the learner makes the jump in learning A = C relations:

If A = B,  and

B = C, then

A = C

Ex. Picture of the girl (A) = written word “girl” (B), written word “girl” (B) = spoken word “girl” (C), THEREFORE picture of the girl (A) = spoken word “girl” (C).

500

Describe Forward Chaining, Backward Chaining, Total task chaining, Backward Chaining with Leap Aheads

Forward Chaining: Task is taught in the order that it occurs in naturally. Each step needs to be completed before the next step can begin. Reinforcement is provided after completion of each step. Contrived reinforcers often necessary

Backward Chaining: Teacher/Instructor completes all steps except for the last one. Reinforcement delivered after completion of the last step. As the learner progresses, the teacher completes less steps

Total Task Chaining: Learner is tasked with completing all steps. They are prompted as necessary on every step. After prompt is used, learner completes the next step. Process is continued until the learner completes every step independently.

Backwards Chaining with Leaps Ahead: Very similar to backward chaining. Main difference is that steps in the chain are probed only taught if learner cannot complete them. Even if every step is not taught, the learner must complete every step each time the chain is performed.