Characteristics of Science & 3 Terms
Attitudes of Science
Respondent Vs. Operant Behavior
History of ABA
7 Components of ABA
100

An "inner" dimension exists that is the cause of behaviors. 

Mentalism

100

The universe is a lawful and orderly place

Determinism

100

Involves behavior determined by history of consequences

Operant behavior

100

Associated with behaviorism in the early 20th Century, "stimulus-response behaviorism"

Watson

100

Observable and measurable

Behavioral

200

A fictitious variable is contributes nothing to our understanding of the behavior.

Explanatory Fiction

200

Objective observation and measurement

Empiricism

200

Involves reflex responses that are elicited

Respondent behavior

200

1930s, analysis of behavior occurring primarily in a laboratory setting.

Experimental Analysis of Behavior (EAB)

200

Socially important

Applied

300

The true value of a statement is a function of how well it promotes effective action; the primary criterion by which behavior analysts judge the value of their findings.

Pragmatism

300

The only way to know, for certain, the relationship of phenomena

Experimentation

300

This type of behavior is evoked.

Operant

300

Associated with Skinner in the 1950s; recognized the "private events" as behaviors.

Radical Behaviorism

300

Demonstrates control or functional relation

Analytic

400

A collection of facts about observed events

Description

400

Requires scientists to continually question the truthfulness of facts

Philosophic Doubt

400

Selectionism by consequences during the lifetime of the individual organism

Ontogeny

400

Holds that inner variables do not exist and should not be considered in the study of behavior.

Methodological Behaviorism

400

Based on the principles of behavior

Conceptual or Conceptually Systematic

500

Correlation

Prediction

500

Requires that all simple, logical explanations for the phenomenon under study be ruled out before more complex or abstract explanations are considered

Parisomy

500

Selection in the evolutionary history of a species.

Phylogeny

500

Coined in 1968, this is the definition of ABA.

The process of applying sometimes tentative principles of behavior to the improvement of specific behaviors, and simultaneously evaluating whether or not any changes noted are indeed attributed to the process of application (p. 91).

500

Involves meaningful change

Effective