MGMT 2103 CH. 5
two common reinforcement schedules used to change behavior
- continuous - intermittent
extinction
not returning phone calls of an insurance salesman so he will stop calling is the strategy for changing behavior
rewarding employees with perfect attendance records w/ $100 check is
positive reinforcement
punishment
process of weakening an undesired behavior by the contingent presentation of something displeasing or the withdrawal of something positive
performance management
process that defines expectations, evaluates performance against the expectations, and provides consequences
intermittent reinforcement
reinforcement of some, but not all instances of a target behavior
Skinner concluded that behavior is
respondent and operant
negative reinforcement
strengthening a desired behavior by removing a displeasing consequence
continuous reinforcement schedule
a target behavior is rewarded every time it occurs
Thorndike's law of effect
- Behaviors with unfavorable consequences tend to disappear - Behaviors with favorable consequences tend to be repeated
reinforcement theory states you can
- increase desired behaviors by providing pleasing consequences - strengthen desired behaviors by withdrawing a displeasing consequence
components of performance appraisal process
- monitoring performance - providing consequences - defining expectations
effective variable rewards examples
- spot rewards - celebrations of milestones - variable bonuses for achieving major goals
reinforcement schedules that produce strongest behavior that is most resistant to extinction
- variable ratio schedules - variable interval schedules
Skinner's operant theory
there is a purposeful if-then link between a target behavior and a consequence