RBT terminology

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Are there medical tests for diagnosing autism?

No medical test

Unconditioned Reinforcer

Not learned Ex. food and water

Tangible extinction

Not letting the child gain access to desired item or activity

Escape extinction

Not letting the child leave the task or situation

Social extinction

Not providing the attention/affection that the behavior was functioning towards

Social concerns that are red flags for autism

Not responsive to other people's facial expressions/feelings Lack of initiation of activity or social play Does not show typical interest in, or play near peers Appears deaf at times Qualitative impairment in nonverbal communication Delay or absence of spoken language

operational definition

Objective • Refer only to the observable • Clear • Readable and unambiguous • Complete • Delineate boundaries of definition

Natural Free-Operant Observation

Observing and recording what activities the target person engages in when he/she has unrestricted choice of activities No response requirements All stimuli available within sight and reach Items are never removed

Antecedent Conditions

Occur prior to behavior of interest

C-10 (most to least) maximum to minimum prompting

Physically guide participant through entire performance Gradually reduce amount of physical assistance Modeling Verbal instruction Natural stimulus - start with prompt known to evoke the behavior & gradually move on to less intrusive, natural prompt

Positive Reinforcement vs. Negative Reinforcement

Positive reinforcement is adding something in order to increase a response Negative reinforcement is taking something negative away in order to increase a response

Cumulative Graphs

Positive slope or slope of 0

behavioral

Precise measurement of the actual behavior in need of improvement ---documents that it was the participant's behavior that changed Applied interventions deal with measurable behavior (or reports if they can be validated).

non-contingent reinforcement NCR

Presentation of a potential reinforcer on a fixed-time (FT) or variable-time (VT)schedule independent on occurrence of the target behavior -reduce behaviors)) provide reinforcement periodically, on a frequent basis Ex: average every 5 minutes

Contrived Free-Operant Observation

Provide learner with noncontingent exposure to each item prior to observation - for sampling purposes Place all items in view and within reach Observe for a set period of time and record the duration of time target person engages with each stimulus item

C-10 (least to most) minimum to maximum prompting

Provide 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 )) -provide most natural prompt possible

Checklists

Provides descriptions of specific behaviors

Reinforcer Assessment

Purpose: to determine if the stimulus is a reinforcer (does the behavior increase when the stimulus is delivered, contingent on that behavior)

Core Deficits of Autism Spectrum Disorder (DSM-IV criteria*)

Qualitative impairment in social interaction Qualitative impairments in verbal and non-verbal communication Restricted repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behavior, interests, and activities

What is ABA?

"Applied Behavior Analysis is the science in which procedures derived from the principles of behavior are systemically applied to improve socially significant behavior to a meaningful degree and to demonstrate experimentally that the procedures employed were responsible for the improvement of behavior" Cooper, Heron, and Heward (1987). • Which means ABA is a scientific approach for improving socially important behaviors

Antecedent

"Fast Trigger" Any condition or event that precedes the behavior

cumulative records

# of responses on ordinate against time

7 Dimensions of ABA

(1) Applied (2) Behavioral (3) Analytic (4) Technological (5) Conceptually Systematic (6) Effective (7) Generality

A-02 temporal extent:

(Behavior occurs for a period of time)duration -beginning to end of response

Behavior Intervention Plan

(Behavior support plan, behavior reduction plan) -Developed to guide parents, teachers and other professionals on how to decrease inappropriate behaviors and teach or increase replacement behaviors in all setting

antecedent

(Setting, individual factors) • An event that precedes the occurrence of the behavior of interest. • Antecedent events set the occasion for a response to occur

Extinguishing

(no longer reinforcing) the behavior we want to decrease

Direct Observation

*Preferred method for determining behaviors to target *A basic form of continuous observation -Anecdotal or ABC recording: Record only actions that are seen or heard -Be aware that observation can change behavior *Use of a form increases consistency of the sequence of behavior -Gives an overall description of behavior -Time devoted to this method: 20-30 min.

Ecological Assessment

*Recognizes the interactions of environment and behavior *Information gathered about the person and the environment they are in -Physiological and physical aspects of the environment may affect behavior

Social Significance

*To what extent will the proposed behavior change improve the person's life experience? *The presumption that we are always targeting behavior for the better of the ind. is not ethically acceptable. -Target behaviors should not be chosen for the benefit of others *Accountability is necessary

frequency (direct)

*most common -Tally # of times a behavior occurs -Clear beginning and clear ending -Hitting, kicking, spitting, statements, manding -Rate: per hour, minute, etc.

Trial by trial data points

+ - P

probe data marks

+ or -

Forward Chaining

- 1st step is taught, then 2nd and so on until sequence is mastered

Concurrent Schedule Reinforcer Assessment

- 2 or more contingencies of reinforcement operate independently and simultaneously for 2 or more behaviors

Percent of Occurrence

- 80-90% accuracy determines acquisition

Essential Components of a Written Behavior Reduction Plan

- Assess antecedent/consequence that may be maintaining the behavior. - Identify hypothesis of function of behavior. - Identify possible replacement behaviors. - Select and implement antecedent/consequence based interventions - Create crisis intervention plan. - Implementation, Generalization and Maintenance Procedures

How to Prepare for the Session as Required by the Skill Acquisition Plan

- Determine what occurred last session to decide where to start. - Select skill acquisition procedures to complete during the session - Prepare materials you will need for the skill acquisition procedure (including data collection materials)

Types of Differential Reinforcement

- Differential Reinforcement with Incompatible Behaviors - Differential Reinforcement with Alternate Behaviors - Differential Reinforcement with Other Behaviors - Differential Reinforcement with Low Rates of Behaviors

Preventing Crisis Examples

- Hair Pulling - put hair up, wear hat, safe distance - Biting - long/thick clothing, safe distance - Throwing Objects - clear area, avoid dangerous items, word behind/beside client

Essential Components of a Written Skill Acquisition Plan

- Identify the skill deficit. - Create a goal to address deficit - Identify measurement procedures - Assess current skill level (baseline) - Select and implement skill acquisition procedures - Collect data or target behaviors to determine effectiveness of acquisition proced. - Modify if needed to maintain/increase effectiveness

How to Assist with Individualized Assessment Procedures

- RBTs: can conduct observations of client's behavior in his/her natural environment Can provide observations of the client's behavior Can assist with conducting stimulus preference or reinforcer assessments

How to Prepare for Data Collection

- Read data from last session - Prepared materials/programs for current session based on data from last session - Determine what programs you plan to work on during the session - Gather materials - Set up the first set of programs so you're ready

Methods to Effectively Communicate With Supervisor

- Think about what you want to discuss and plan your approach. - Remain courteous and respectful. - Learn by observation or by asking what your supervisor's preferred method of communication is. - Pick the time and location carefully. Don't catch them on their way out the door or when they are busy preparing for something. - Introduce your concern or issue promptly and indicate why you are bringing it to their attention. Don't criticize co-workers or the company in general or blame others for a problem or difficult situation. Show initiative by proposing a solution to a problem or introducing an improved plan.

How to Implement Generalization and Maintenance Procedures

- Use natural reinforcement contingencies - transfer control from BI to naturally occurring stimuli - Use sufficient exemplars - use multiple settings, people and stimuli

C-11 over-generalization

- Using the same word "da da" for all men Ex:only reinforced response in the presence of the correct person

Responding Appropriately to Feedback and Maintain or Improve Performance Accordingly

- Welcome constructive feedback - Don't justify your position. - Accept feedback at face value. - Don't ruminate on feedback - Evaluate feedback before responding - Give yourself space from the person if you need to calm down. - Make your choice about how to use the feedback

Conditioned Reinforcement (Punishment)

- a consequence that increases (or decreases) the rate of behavior because it has been paired with another reinforcer (or punisher)

Unconditioned Reinforcement

- a reinforcer or punisher that is effective without previous experience

Preference Assessment

- a variety of procedures used to determine The stimuli the person prefers The relative preference values of those stimuli (high preference vs. low preference The conditions under which those preference values change when task demands, deprivation states, or schedules of reinforcement are modified

Automatic Positive / Direct Access

- access to positive reinforcement is produced directly through the problem behaviors or chain of behaviors

Social Positive / Socially Mediated Access

- access to positive reinforcement is produced through the behavior of another individual, someone else presenting the desired item or event to the child Ex. social attention from peers, teachers, staff, parents

Motivating Operations

- altering the value/effectiveness of stimulus, object or event - Deprivation / Satiation - changes the reinforcing effectiveness of some stimulus - changes the strength of behavior that has produced the stimulus in the past

Stimulus

- an energy change in the environment that affects a person through his/her senses

Punishment

- any stimulus when presented immediately following a behavior, that will decrease the frequency and future probability of occurrence.

Reinforcement

- any stimulus when presented immediately following a behavior, that will increase the frequency and future probability of occurrence

Behavior

- anything an organism does - interaction of a person and his/her environment

Incidents

- anything that causes an employee or client damage - report to supervisor immediately and contact HR dept.

Functional (Experimental) Analysis

- arranging antecedents and consequences so that their separate effect on a problem behavior can be observed and the function of the behavior can be determined

Probing

- asking a client to perform a task we are unsure they can perform without providing assistance RBT can assist

Survey

- asking the client or significant others what the client's preferences are (verbally or visually)

How to Assist w/ Training Stakeholders

- assist w/ training under supervision and should not train unless directly requested by supervisor - refer all ?s to supervisor - let parents know that RBTs aren't qualified to answer ?s about programs

Simultaneous

- both stimuli are present at once

Task Analysis

- breaking complex skills into smaller, teaching units, creating sequential steps

Multiple Stimuli without Replacement

- chosen item is removed from the array - order of placement of remaining items is rearranged - next trial begins with a reduced number of items in the array

Discrete Categorization

- classifying responses into discrete categories Ex. severity, duration, independence/prompting codes

Methods to Maintain Professional Boundaries

- conflicts of interest - occurs when a principle party, alone or connection with family, friends, or associates, has a vested interest in the outcome of the interaction - dual relationships - person acting as a therapist enters into another type of relationship with the client, a family member or close associate of the client, or promises to enter into such a relationship in the future. - improper use of social media - do not exploit persons over whom you have supervisory, evaluative or other authority.

Frequency / Event Recording

- count number of occurrences

Prompting

- cue or assistance to encourage a desired response

Discriminative Stimuli

- cue or stimulus that is present when a behavior is reinforced and can be changed / manipulated to alter behavior

Functional Assessments

- determining cause and effect relationship between environment and behavior RBT can assist

Functional Assessments

- determining the cause and effect relationship between the environment and a behavior and altering either the antecedent or consequence or teaching a replacement behavior

Partial Interval Recording

- did behavior occur at all during the interval

Whole Interval Recording

- did behavior occur during the whole interval

Descriptive Assessment

- direct observation of behavior under naturally occurring conditions

Response Generalization

- effects of a contingency spread to responses not yet associated with the contingency

Stimulus Generalization

- effects of a contingency spread to stimuli not yet associated with the contingency

Inter-Response Time

- elapsed time between two successive responses

Latency

- elapsed time from the onset of a stimulus to the initiation of a response

Enter Data and Update Graphs

- ensure the correct measurement procedure (continuous/discontinuous) is being utilized - select recording system for systematically collecting data - document data as it occurs - input data into excel file

Environment

- entire constellation of stimuli that can affect a person

Automatic Negative / Direct Escape

- escape (and avoidance) behaviors directly terminate (or completely avoid) an aversive event

Naturalistic Teaching Procedures

- focus on the generalized environment and are implemented within the home, daycares, and within general education environments. - focus is to teach the child language within the context of naturally occurring activities, thus instruction takes place during play and naturally occurring events rather than during specific instructional times

Spontaneous Recovery

- following an extinction session, temporary re-appearance of the behavior in the beginning of the next extinction session

Paired Stimuli

- forced choice - simultaneous presentation of two stimuli; observer records which of the two stimuli the learner chooses

Discrete Trial Training Procedures

- instruction is given (SD). - a prompt, cue or model from the teacher may be provided to help the child respond correctly (SP) - child responds to the instruction, either with help or without (R) - child's response is evaluated as correct, incorrect or no response - consequence is based on the child's response (SR) - Pause - so they know the trial has ended

Momentary Time Sampling

- is the behavior occurring at this point in time

Restraints

- last resort when a person is in danger to self or others - discontinue quickly as soon as safe - report to supervisor and HR dept

Backward Chaining

- last step is taught first, then 2nd to last and so on until the sequence is mastered

Explain How to Communicate with Stakeholders

- let them know you're available for them and you value their opinions / concerns - a partnership works best when messages are clear, specific and considerate of the other person's feelings - always talk with parents with the goal of strengthening the relationship - be open and honest - a solution does not need to be found every time. Sometimes just listen

Generating Session Notes

- make them clear enough for the supervisor to interpret - clearly describe antecedents - if antecedents are unclear, describe the environment before the behavior occurred - clearly describe consequent events - include the behavioral procedure or event that occurred that followed the behavior

Applicable Legal, Regulatory and Workplace Reporting Requirements

- mandated by law to report abuse and neglect

Permanent Product Recording

- measuring behavior after it has occurred by measuring tangible items of the effects a behavior has on the environment

Antecedent Based Interventions

- modifications are made to antecedents by manipulating some aspect of the physical/social environment before the behavior occurs to prevent/reduce occurrences of maladaptive behavior

Prompt Fading

- moving down the prompt hierarchy

Trials to Criterion

- number of consecutive opportunities to respond required to achieve a performance standard

Rate

- number of responses per unit in time

Free Operant Observation

- observing and timing how long a client engages with an item and which items they engage with

Generalization

- occurrence of behavior under different conditions. - Settings: home, school, community - People: responds to BI and parents - Time: uses toilet during day and night

Naturalistic Free Operant Observation

- occurring in the client's natural environment - engagement time is recorded for every item the client engages with

Single Operant Reinforcer Assessment

- one task is available during all phases - Baseline: no programmed consequences for task completion - Reinforcement: contingent on task completion the stimulus is delivered

Successive

- only one stimulus condition is present

Stimulus Prompts

- operate directly on the antecedent task stimuli to cue correct response (gestural, visual, positional, material)

Response Prompts

- operate directly on the response (physical, verbal, model)

Role of RBT in Service Delivery System

- paraprofessional who practices under close supervision of a BCBA, BCaBA, or FL-CBA - primary responsible for the direct implementation of behavior analytic services. - does not design intervention of assessment plans - RBT supervisor's responsibility to determine which tasks an RBT may perform as a function of their training, experience and competence.

Maintenance

- performance of mastered skills after a portion of all intervention has been stopped - condition where treatment has been discontinued or partially withdrawn - check every week, 2 weeks, or every month

Multiple Stimuli

- person chooses a preferred stimulus from an array of 3 or more stimuli - multiple stimuli presented together - assessment time is reduced

Extinction Burst

- predictable, temporary increase in the rate and intensity of a behavior when an extinction procedure is first used

Transferring Stimulus Control

- process in which prompts are removed once the target behavior is occurring in the presence of the SD. - prompt fading and prompt delay are used

Progressive Ratio Reinforcer Assessment

- provide a framework for assessing the relative effectiveness of a stimulus as reinforcement as response requirements increase. - response requirements for reinforcement are increased systematically over time independent of the participant's behavior

Contrived Free Operant Observation

- providing brief exposure to each item and then watching to see which items are engaged with

Continuous Measurement

- record every possible behavioral occurrence

Discontinuous Measurement Procedures

- records a sample of behavior during an observation

Variable Interval

- reinforce after about every N amount of time

Variable Ratio

- reinforce after about every Nth response

Fixed Interval

- reinforce after every N amount of time

Fixed Ratio

- reinforce after every Nth response

Continuous Reinforcement

- reinforcement is provided for each occurrence of behavior - typically used in the initial stages of learning a new behavior

Discrimination Training

- reinforcing occurrences of a behavior in the presence of one stimulus condition and not in the presence of another stimulus condition

Social Negative / Socially Mediated Escape

- remove or postpone aversive events - a negative reinforcer is removed through the behavior of another person (parent, staff, teacher, or peer)

Prompt Dependency

- requiring a prompt to perform a task

Intermittent Reinforcement

- some but not all occurrence of a behavior is reinforced - typically used to maintain established behaviors and when progressing toward naturally occurring reinforcement

Trial Based

- stimuli are presented to the learner in a series of trials and the learner's responses to the stimuli are measured as an index of preference

Single Stimulus

- successive choice - stimulus is presented and the person's reaction to it is noted

Stimulus Control

- the extent to which a behavior occurs when the antecedent stimulus is presented

Multiple Stimuli with Replacement

- the item chosen by the learner remains in the array and items that were not selected are replaced with new ones

Duration

- total extent of time in which a behavior occurs

Programming Generalization

- train loosely - variable reinforcement schedule, delay reinforcement, catch them being good - use natural stimuli - teach self management - reinforce generalization

line graph include

- use different symbols - do not connect data points *large span of time passed * discontinuity in time (horizontal axis) * follow up

Implement Stimulus Fading Procedure

- used to transfer stimulus control from prompted responses to natural stimuli - used to minimize the number of error responses occurring in the presence of natural stimulus

Indirect Assessment

- using interviews, checklists, rating scales or questionnaires to obtain information from individuals familiar with the client

Extinction

- withholding stimulus that normally occurs after a behavior - results in a decrease in the rate of behavior

Methods to Maintain Client Dignity

- work with clients on acquisition skills to make sure they are able to voice or signal their needs to those around them. - push for all to undergo training necessary to learn and communicate with the clients who are non-verbal - give choices throughout the day and be allowed to exercise their preferences for food, clothing, activities, etc. - include the person when possible - caregivers must take privacy serious

Legal, Regulatory, and Workplace Requirements for Data Collection, Storage and Transportation

- you are responsible for any and all records that you create, use or store. - HIPPA - dispose of records in accordance with applicable law or regulations - documents must be stored in a locked and secured location at all times. - any electronic device used to store information must be encrypted - if documents are lost or stolen - report to families

pace of instruction (teaching fluency)

-16-25 a minute -short intertrial intervals: 1/2 a second

interval recording

-A direct measurement technique, involves recording behavior as it occurs -For behaviors that dont look the same or vary in length -Divide into intervals that continuously follow each other

Defining characteristics of ABA

-Applied -Behavioral -Analytic -Technological -Conceptually -Effective -Generality

Ratio Schedule

-Based on counting the number of responses since last reinforcement -Types: fixed, variable

Interval Schedules

-Based on passage of time -Types: fixed, variable

Response (DTI)

-Behavior in response to the instruction -Correct (+) / incorrect (-) -Quality of response- eye contact, attending, effort -Allow 3 seconds to respond -Response should be consistent

Operant Behavior

-Behavior learned through repeated practice to receive a rewarder to avoid punishment -Produces some type of consequence -Different than respondent behavior which is predetermined

Intermittent Schedule

-Best used to maintain behavior -Behavior is reinforced some of the time -Generates high response rates -Prevents behavior from stopping

Behavior or organisms

-Biophysical Explanations -Genetic and Hereditary effects -Biochemical -Brain Damage -Developmental -Psychoanalytic theory -Behavioral -Cognitive

DTI and NaTS

-Break skills down into small steps -Teach steps until mastery -Provide repetition -Use prompt and prompt fading procedures

Discrete Trial Instruction DTI

-Breaking skills down into small steps -Teaching one step at a time until mastery -Providing repetition -Prompting and prompt fading procedures -Positive reinforcement

partial interval

-Checking off an interval if the behavior occurs at any point within the interval -May display over-exaggeration -Less observing -Used for behaviors you are trying to decrease

whole interval

-Checking off an interval if the behavior occurs throughout the WHOLE interval -Used when it is difficult to tell when the behavior begins or ends or if the behavior occurs at such a high rate -Underestimation -Wants to increase target behavior

Rules of Time Out

-Clear understanding of contingency -No reinforcement -2-10 minutes -Explain rules: behavior, how long -Consistent -Evaluate effectiveness on behavior -Planned ignoring

Feedback/Reinforcement stimulus/SR (DTI)

-Consequence that immediately follows the student's response -Lets student know if response was correct/incorrect -Reinforcement = increased likelihood that correct response will occur again

Direct Assessment

-Direct observation and tests are considered direct assessment because they observe behavior as it happens -Preferable to indirect methods -Interviews may be considered direct when interviewing the target individual with a focus on their verbal behavior

Errorless learning

-Early and immediate prompts -ensure success -prompts faded over time -student able to respond on own -decreases frustration/increases motivation

Reactive Effects of Direct Assessment: REACTIVITY

-Effects of the assessment procedure on the behavior being assessed -Reactive effects are usually temporary -Most likely when the observer is obtrusive -Self-monitoring usually effects the concerned behavior

Momentary Time Sampling

-Enables you to spend minimal time gathering data -Data is less representative -Only recording a sampling of the behavior -Record if it occurs in that precise moment -ex: 10 second intervals, record only if it is occurring at that last 10 second moment

Advantages of video-modeling

-Focuses on relevant stimuli -Watching videos is reinforcing

Unconditioned Reinforcers

-Food -Water -Sexual Stimulation

Types of chaining procedures

-Forward chaining -Backward chaining -Total task

duration (direct)

-How long a behavior persists -Total duration: how long did the behavior last from beginning to end

Indirect Assessment

-Interviews and checklists are considered indirect methods because they gain info from recollections, reconstructions, or subjective ratings of events

Errorless Teaching

-Introducing a new skill or behavior -Responses are prompted so the learner is correct and has frequent opportunities to contact reinforcement -ensures success -reduces behaviors associated with task avoidance

Mark Sundberg

-Known for VB-Mapp The first component is the VB-MAPP Milestones Assessment, which is designed to provide a representative sample of a child's existing verbal and related skills.

common graphs in ABA

-Line graphs: most common -Bar graphs -Cumulative graphs

Lovaas-based Approach

-Lovaas and his team were the first to show that children with autism could be taught functional skills through EIBI. They completed a study in which children received intensive discrete trial and natural intervention (an average of 40 hours of treatment per week), and reported a 42% recovery rate after years of intervention

Jack Michael

-MO/EO (motivating operations and establishing operations)

intensity (direct)

-Magnitude or force in response -Volume, force of hitting -ex: speaking volume- level 1: whispering, level 2 average, level 3 yelling

single case research design

-Most common -Participant serves as control and experimental group -Compares client before (control) and during (experimental) treatment

Motivating operations

-Motivating operations (MO) are environmental variables that: alter the effectiveness of some stimulus, object, or event as a reinforcer, and alter the current frequency of all behavior that has been reinforced by that stimulus, object, or event

Naturalistic approaches

-Natural settings -Natural consequences- direct reinforcement that fits the setting/situation -Providing choices -Errorless learning

operational definitions for behavior

-Objectivity in observations and measurement -what the behavior looks like -multiple observers can identify -includes verbs -objective and unambiguous -not internal states (happy/sad) but physical states/descriptions -a label is not used for a behavior (bad/good)

BF Skinner

-Operant Conditioning: Reinforcement and Punishment

Functional Assessment

-Physiological and medical factors -Days of the week -Times of day -Settings and circumstances that occur before the behavior -Circumstances that occur after the behavior

Primary Reinforcer vs. Secondary Reinforcer

-Primary reinforcers are biological; such as food, sex, drink -Secondary reinforcers are materials; such as money, prizes, candy, toys

Differential Reinforcement

-Procedure involving two behaviors -One behavior is reinforced/strengthened -Other behavior is being put on extinction

Conditioned Reflexes

-Produced by respondent conditioning. -Stimulus-Stimulus pairing procedure in which a neutral stimulus is presented with an unconditioned stimulus until the neutral stimulus elicits the conditioned response

Teaching with task variation

-Random intermixing of tasks -Keeps momentum moving -Increases attending and interest -faster rate of learning

Task variation

-Random intermixing of tasks- mastered tasks with new ones -Keeps momentum moving -Increases attending and interest -Faster rate of learning

Types of Intermittent Schedules

-Ratio -Interval

Ivan Pavlov

-Respondent or classical conditioning the process of pairing stimuli so than an unconditioned stimulus elicits a response (reflexive behavior)

Escape Behaviors

-Running away -Tantrums -Crying, screaming -Self Injurious behaviors -Ignoring instructions -Verbal threats -Aggression

Data collection

-Shows evidence of progress -provides information about rate of learning -highlights skills that are not being acquired -provides information about the effectiveness of teaching -Guides decision making for introducing new skills

Instructions/SD for DTI should be

-Simple, clear, concise- when starting -More natural- when student learns with practice -No extra phrases such as sit still, quiet hands, look at me or use of name -specific, one step at a time -do not repeat

Prompt Fading

-Time delay -Prompt fading -Stimulus fading

Functions of Behavior

-To gain attention: Pos. Reinforcement -To gain a tangible: Pos. Reinforcement -To gain sensory stimulation: Pos. Automatic Reinforcement -To escape from attention: Neg. Reinforcement -To escape from task: Neg. Reinforcement -To escape from sensory stimulation: Neg. Automatic Reinforcement

Behavior

-What people do or say -Can be observed and measured -Impacts the environment

the rights of individuals who receive behavioral treatment

-a therapeutic environment -treatment by competent behavior analyst -programs that teach functional skills -behavioral assessment and ongoing evaluation -most effective procedures available

what determines ethical procedures?

-community standards -laws -prevailing philosophies -individual freedoms -client's attitude and feelings -social validity/consumer satisfaction

features of the mand

-consequence is direct and specific reinforcement -directly benefits speaker -controlled by motivation: the deprivation in DISC reinforcement effectiveness

behavior ANALYSIS

-considers functions and tries to find replacement behaviors -pair reinforces with social praise -positive before punishment -public and privates settings

sanitize the environment

-contrive MOs -clear/control the environment from access to items the learner likes

EIBI (Early Intense Behavior Intervention):

-designed to work with young children in intensive settings using behavioral principles. -EIBI involves a high intensity (number of hours as well as reliability) of intervention. -EIBI can include discrete trial teaching, natural language teaching, social stories, video modeling, as well as other types of ABA-based strategies.

Functional Assessment

-does not emphasize a for a search or for diagnosis or classification. -classifies the behavior by its function, and than selects treatment(s) or intervention(s) which are effective by reducing behavior in the functional category. -Treatment(s) or Intervention(s) are classified by functional categories. Example: Student hitting another student, As a result someone may recommend interventions that actually strengthen the maladaptive behavior instead of reducing it.

quality of life concept

-empowering individuals -best practices -support -social justice -equal opportunity -understanding and exploring feelings

basic ideas of quality of life

-every person is entitled to a life of quality -quality of life is multidimensional: interconnected factors

JB Watson

-father of behaviorism -focused on observable behaviors

avoid for mand training

-generalized mands that represent multiple items such as toy, more, drink, etc. -carrier phrases such as: I want, can I have -yes and no

crisis plan

-heading "crisis plan" -client information section: name, birthday, date plan created -challenging behavior/target behavior: objective definition, clear, operational -antecedent interventions -escalation -crisis -post crisis

gross motor imitation

-imitation of body movements -no materials necessary -SD= non specific ("copy me") -overlap to make transfer of skills easier

fine motor imitation

-imitation of detailed, precise movements -may or may not use materials -SD= non specific ("do this" "do what I'm doing") -overlap: chose targets that are part of other programs

oral motor imitation

-imitation of movement of the mouth, tongue, lips, face, head -often pre-req for verbal imitation -SD= non-specific ("do this")

types of imitation

-motor/mimetic -verbal/echoic

ways to generalize

-multiple exemplars: toy car, pictures, real car -vary SD: whats that? what do you call that? -change setting/locations of teaching -teach multiple tacts: what is it? what do they do? what is this part called?

behavior MODIFICATION

-no consideration for function or causes -no thought to side effects -aversive consequences used -treatments in hospitals

escape behaviors can occur when

-reinforcement is too thin -during difficult tasks

children 18 months can

-respond to hearing their name -perform 4 different motor actions when asked -receptively identify 20 different objects or pictures in an array of 4

personal outcomes survey

-self report -direct observation -3-6 months

toy/object imitation

-teaching play skills -items student likes -2 sets of toys for instructor and learner -SD= non specific ("do this")

Respondent Behavior

-that happens in response to some stimuli, and is essential to an organism's survival. This behavior is characterized by involuntary action -elicited by antecedent stimuli, also known as phylogenic behavior example: the pupil starts to flicker when exposed to direct sunlight. If the pupil does not flicker, the eye will be more exposed to sun rays, which may lead to blindness

Behavioral Contingency

-the conditions under which a response/behavior produces a consequence

outcome (product) recording

-the product or result is observable -you dont look at the behavior but what the behavior produced -result observed after behavior is terminated

Multiple exemplars

-use of different materials, people, settings, wordings -facilitates generalization -makes therapy more natural

joint attention components

-value attention of others -capable of attention shifting between object/event and a person -able to request attention from another -discriminate that they have successfully directed someones attention to an object/event of interest -can take measures to repair deficits in their partner's attending

The latest data of autism statistics says:

1 in 68 American children

Stats of Autism in children

1 out of 42 boys and 1 in 189 girls

typically developing children begin to tact at

1 year old to share the experience with others

3 Types of Behavior Intervention Strategies

1. Antecedent Interventions 2. Replacement Behaviors 3. Consequence Interventions

C-04 discrete trail training DTT steps

1. Antecedent: tell client what to do 2. if needed provide prompt 3. client behavior 4. behavior reinforced 5. pause before next trail

Types of response/appropriate feedback

1. Correct with good attending = highest reinforcement 2. Correct with poor attending = moderate reinforcement 3. No response = corrective feedback and present SD with a prompt

Behavior Intervention Plan Includes

1. Identify target behavior you are trying to eliminate/decrease (operational definition) 2. Setting events and antecedents that may be triggering the behavior 3. Functions of behavior 4.Antecedent interventions 5. Replacement behaviors 6. Consequence interventions 7. Plan how to measure progress

Steps to Errorless Teaching

1. Introduce SD with full prompt immediately 2. Reinforce 3. Prompt fading

Key components to Response Cost

1. Size/magnitude of cost is not too big or too small 2. "fine" imposed immediately 3. Individual getting enough reinforcement 4. Take data

Imitation training pre-reqs

1. Stay seated 2. Attend to the teacher 3. Keeping hands off materials 4. Scan and track

Negative punishment procedures

1. Time out 2. Response cost

Socially mediated functions of behavior

1. To gain attention 2. To gain an item or activity 3. To avoid or escape a situation

Functions of Behavior

1. To gain attention 2. To gain an item or activity 3. To avoid or escape a situation 4. To gain automatic reinforcement

3 aspects of data that can be analyzed

1. changes in mean: draw horizontal line 2. changes in level: was there another variable 3. changes in trend: draw straight line for slopes

known/mastered targets uses

1. distractors 2. maintenance 3. build fluency 4. opportunities for reinforcement

core ethical principles

1. do not harm 2. respect autonomy/independence 3. benefiting others 4. being just 5. being truthful 6. treat clients with dignity 7. treat clients with caring and compassion 8. pursuit of excellence 9. accepting responsibility

importance of mands

1. further condition parents and teachers as reinforcers 2. benefits learners and allows them to control the environment 3. decrease problem behaviors by giving them functional communication 4. develops speaker and listener roles 5. increase social interaction value

Discrete Trial Cycle

1. instruction/Discriminative stimulus 2. Response 3. Feedback/reinforcement/Sr

exceptions to obtaining written release of info

1. it is the person themselves 2. if person is a minor, then release to parents/guardians 3. if it is staff who also work with that person 4. state inspectors

mand process

1. motivation 2. specific reinforcer 3. immediate benefit of the speaker

core domains of quality of life

1. personal development 2. self-determination 3. interpersonal relations 4. social inclusion 5. rights 6. emotional well being 7. physical well being 8. material well being

types of abuse

1. physical 2. sexual 3. mental/emotional 4. neglect 5. financial exploitation

prerequisite skills for teaching imitation

1. stay seated 2. attend to teacher 3. keep hands off materials 4. scan and track

crisis management 3 elements:

1. threat to self 2. element of surprise 3. short decision time

types of motor imitation

1. toy/object 2. gross motor 3. fine motor 4. oral motor

3 questions that ethics help behavior analysts address

1. what is the right thing to do? 2. what is worth doing? 3. what does it mean to be a good behavior analyst?

5 rules for writing an incident/accident report

1. write for an audience 2. account for everyone involved and everything that happened 3. be clear, complete and chronological 4. be timely and complete 5. provide necessary attachments

typical children mand

100 times per hour

tacting and ages

18 months: 10 items 3 years: 200 nouns/verbs, 50 two component 4 years: 1000 words with complete sentences

relationships with clients and students can happen

2 years after service formally ended

incorporating current targets with known/mastered targets

80% known/easy 20% acquisition/hard

Response Cost

A behavior reduction procedure in which the reinforcing stimulus is removed following the target behavior (ex: taking keys away from son after he came home late)

Functional Behavior Assessment FBA

A collection of different procedures of gathering information on antecedents, behaviors and consequences in order to determine the factors that lead to and maintain problem behavior

Conditioned Aversive Stimuli

A conditioned aversive stimulus is an initially neutral stimulus that becomes aversive after repeated pairing with an unconditioned aversive stimulus. This type of stimulus would include consequences such as verbal warnings, gestures or even the sight of an individual who is disliked.

generalized reinforcer

A conditioned reinforcer that as a result of having been paired with many other reinforcers does not depend on an establishing operation for any particular form of reinforcement for its effectiveness.

Fixed Ratio

A fixed number of responses

Contingency

A future event or circumstance that is possible but can not be predicted with certainty

Stimulus Class

A group of stimuli that share common elements

D-04 DRI differential reinforcement of incompatible behavior

A procedure for decreasing problem behavior in which reinforcement is delivered for a behavior that is topographically incompatible with the behavior targeted for reduction and withheld following instances of the problem behavior (e.g., sitting in seat is incompatible with walking around the room). Ex: cant flap hands if holding ball Ex: Goal, remain seated. Reinforce in-seat behavior, not out-of-seat behavior Ex: earn reinforcement for keeping hands to self

B-01 negative punishment

A response behavior is followed immediately by the removal of a stimulus (or a decrease in the intensity of the stimulus), that decreases the future frequency of similar responses under similar conditions. Sometimes called type II punishment

D-04 DRL Differential reinforcement of lower rates

A schedule of reinforcement in which reinforcement (a) follows each occurrence of the target behavior that is separated by a minimum interresponse time (IRT), or (b) is contingent on the number of responses within a period of time not exceeding a predetermined criterion. Practitioners use DRL schedules to decrease the rate of behaviors that occur too frequently but should be maintained in the learner's repertoire.

C-03 unconditioned reinforcer

A stimulus change that increases the frequency of any behavior that immediately precedes it irrespective of the organism's learning history with the stimulus. These are the product of the evolutionary development of the species (phylogeny). Also called primary or unlearned reinforcer

C-08 discriminative stimuli (SDrs)

A stimulus in the presence of which responses of some type have been reinforced and in the absence of which the same type of responses have occurred and not been reinforced; this is the reason that an SD increases the momentary frequency of the behavior)) antecedents to behavior that help client know when & where to engage in behavior

C-03 conditioned reinforcer

A stimulus that gains its reinforcing power through its association with a primary reinforcer; also known as secondary reinforcer

S-delta

A stimulus that tends to be present when a response is not reinforced, as a result of which the response is unlikely to occur in its presence.

B-04 3-term contingencies

ABC

The rationale

Accuracy, Accountability, Allow for formative (ongoing) and summative (terminal) evaluation of instruction

Learned Behaviors

Acquired changes in behavior during one's lifetime

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Behavioral

Actual target behavior, measurable

Positive Punishment

Addition of a pleasant stimulus to decrease behavior

Positive Reinforcement

Addition of a pleasant stimulus to increase behavior

behavior

All of the actions that living organisms make that are observable and measurable; the specific way the individual acts. • Behaviors are affected by both antecedents and consequences

C-06 backward chaining

All the behaviors identified in the task analysis are initially completed by the trainer, except for the final behavior in the chain. When the learner performs the final behavior in the sequence at the predetermined criterion level, reinforcement is delivered. Next, reinforcement is delivered when the last and the next-to-last behaviors in the sequence are performed to criterion. With this type of chaining, the first behavior the learner performs independently produces the terminal reinforcement.)) - start teaching the end of the chain - when steps are mastered, decrease # of steps your doing for the client to 3 steps.

C-06 total task method or presentation

Also called total task presentation or whole task presentation is a variation of forward chaining in which the learner receives training on each step in the task analysis during every session. Trainer assistance is provided with any step the person is unable to perform independently, and the chain is trained until the learner is able to perform all the behaviors in the sequence to the predetermined criterion.)) demonstrated the entire task and ask client to imitate the modeled chain

Functional Analysis

An analysis of the purposes (functions) of problem behavior, wherein antecedents and consequences representing those in the person's natural routines are arranged within an experimental design so that their separate effects on problem behavior can be observed and measured; typically consists of 4 conditions; 3 test conditions - contingent attention, contingent escape, and alone - and a control condition in which problem behavior is expected to be low because reinforcement is freely available and no demands are placed on the person

Antecedent

An environmental condition existing or occurring immediately before the behavior of interest

Reinforcer

An event that follows a behavior and increases some dimension of that behavior (examples: verbal, social, edible)

Punishment

An event that occurs after a behavior, that decreases that behavior

Behavior

Any observable movement of a living thing

Stimulus

Any thing or event. Ex. One letter of the alphabet can be "a stimulus," or one can talk about a whole book as "a stimulus."

Attitudes of Science

Attitudes of the Science Determinism: "Scientists presume that the universe, or at least that part of it they intend to probe with the methods of science, is a lawful and orderly place in which all phenomena occur as the result of other events" (p 5). Empiricism: "...the practice of objective observation. Every effort to understand, predict, and improve behavior hinges on the behavior analyst's ability to completely define, systematically observe, and accurately record occurrences and non-occurrences of the behavior of interest" (p 5). Experimentation: "is the basic strategy of most sciences. When events are observed to covary or occur in close temporal sequence, a functional relation may exist, but other factors may be responsible for the observed values of the dependent variable" (p 5). "An experiment is a carefully conducted comparison of some measure of the phenomenon of interest (the dependent variable) under two or more different conditions in which only one factor at a time (the independent variable) differs from one condition to another" (p 6). Replication: "the repeating of experiments (as well as repeating independent variable conditions within experiements)" (p 6). Parsimony: "requires that all simple, logical explanations for the phenomena under investigation be ruled out experimentally before more complex or abstract explanations are considered" (p 6). Philosophic Doubt: "requires the scientist to continually question the truthfulness of what is regarded as fact. Scientific knowledge must always be viewed as tentative, and the scientist must constantly be willing to replace with new discoveries even those facts of which he is most certain" (p 6).

What is Autism Spectrum Disorder?

Autism is a complex neurological disorder that typically appears during the first three years of life and lasts throughout a person's lifetime.

Variable Ratio

Average number of responses must be made before reinforcer *Highest response rates *Ex: slot machines

Imprinting

Rapid learning that occurs during a brief receptive period, typically soon after birth or hatching, and establishes a long-lasting behavioral response to a specific individual or object, as attachment to parent, offspring, or site.

Spontaneous recovery

Reappearance of the behavior that had previously been diminished

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Knowledge

Recall or recognition of information

Who was the founder of modern behaviorism?

B.F. Skinner

Classical Conditioning

Before Conditioning: Neutral Stimulus ---> No response During Conditioning: Neutral Stimulus --> UCS --> UCR After Conditioning: Neutral Stimulus --> CR

conceptual systems

Behavior change interventions are derived from basic principles of behavior Applied interventions arise from a specific and identifiable theoretical base rather than being a set of packages or tricks

Forward chaining

Behaviors identified in the task are taught in their naturally occurring order -One step at a time -Prompt fading -Reinforcement per step -Full prompts to complete all other steps -Teach 2nd step once 1st is completed

Socially Significant Behaviors

Behaviors that have immediate and long term benefits for the person engaging in them.

Deficit behaviors

Behaviors that occur too little or too infrequent Deficit Behaviors occur too little or infrequent

Continuous Schedule of Reinforcement

Best used when learning new behaviors

Why are Autism Rates Climbing?

Changes in diagnostic practices. Increased awareness Social factors (Advanced parental age) Almost half of the increase is still unexplained

Continuous vs. Intermittent Schedules

Continuous- In continuous schedules of reinforcement, you reinforce every instance the behavior occurs Intermittent- In intermittent schedules of reinforcement, reinforcement is not provided for every instance of the behavior. Intermittent schedules are used to maintain behaviors that you have already taught.

How do we know if something is a reinforcer?

Continuous----Intermittent---- Extinction

Prompting

Cue or action to assist or encourage the desired response from an individual

Variables of Reinforcer Effectiveness (DISC)

D- Deprivation I- Immediacy S- Size (magnitude) C- Contingency

DISC

D- deprivation I- immediacy S- size C- contingency

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Analytic

Data, analyzing, changes

Habituation

Decrease in or end of a response to a stimulus

Punishment

Decreases behavior

D-01: Identify the essential components of a written behavior reduction plan.

Define target behavior, function of behavior, setting, proactive strategies, reactive strategies, data, setting event, strategies to modify the environment

analytic

Demonstrates experimental control over the occurrence and non-occurrence of the behavior (a functional relation is demonstrated) Applied interventions require an objective demonstration that the procedures caused the effect

y axis

Dependent variable What am I trying to change

Stimulus Events

Described by physical features, by when they occur, and their effect on the behavior

Define DRO

Differential reinforcement of other behaviors (DRO) refers to a procedure in which positive reinforcement is delivered as long as the person does not display or engage in the target behavior. Target may be fighting - so in this instance the target is what not to do!

Extinction

Discontinuation of reinforcement that results in decrease in behavior -When the response no longer produces reinforcement

C-07 Discrimination

Discrimination is a term used in both classical and operant conditioning. It involves the ability to distinguish between one stimulus and similar stimuli. In both cases, it means only responding to certain stimuli but not to those that are similar.

Core Ethical Principles: Bailey and Burch

Do No Harm Respect Autonomy Benefit Others Be Just

Empiricism

Doing/ When an experimenter demonstrates a functional relationship

A-03 momentary time sampling

Record whether the beh is occurring at the end of the interval -Recorded as percentage - continuous behavior (yes/no)

Repertoire

Refers to all the behaviors a person can do.

Independent Variable

Refers to the intervention being used to change behavior

C-06 chaining

Refers to various methods for linking specific sequences of stimuli and responses to form new performances)) - teach new behaviors - involves linking a sequence of responses, task, to the same terminal reinforcer

C-03 continuous reinforcement CRF

Reinforce it each time it occurs

Non-contingent reinforcement

Reinforce without placing any clear demands

FR fixed ratio

Reinforcement occurs at fixed response intervals: (FR 5 = giving reinforcement after every fifth response)

Variable Interval

Reinforcer is delivered for the first response that occurs after a variable amount of time

Differential Reinforcement of Incompatible Behaviors DRI

Reinforces a behavior that is incompatible to the problem behavior and put the target problem behavior on extinction

D-04 differential reinforcement DR

Reinforcing a behavior when it occurs under specific conditions and not other (to help the client discriminate when & when not to engage in the behavior) or when we reinforce a specific behavior under certain conditions but not other behaviors -only the appropriate response (or behavior you wish to increase) and applying extinction to all other responses

Differential Reinforcement of Alternate Behaviors DRA

Reinforcing an appropriate alternative to the problem behavior and extinguishing the problem behavior through extinction

Operant Conditioning

Reinforcing consequences immediately following the response increases it's future likelihood: aversive consequences immediately following the response decrease it's future likelihood -OC occurs automatically -Immediate consequences has the greatest effect -Consequences only effect future behavior -Consequences select any behavior that has preceded them

Differential Reinforcement of Other Behaviors DRO

Reinforcing the absence of the problem behavior for a specific amount of time -Interval schedules of reinforcement (fixed)

Response Cost

Removal of a pleasant stimuli or privileges after a behavior

Negative Reinforcement

Removal of an aversive stimulus that increases the rate of behavior; reduction or termination of an ongoing stimulus that results in the likelihood of the behavior occurring again

Negative Punishment

Removal of an aversive stimulus to decrease behavior

Negative Reinforcement

Removal of an aversive stimulus to increase behavior

Response Cost

Removing reinforcement for an undesirable or disruptive behavior.

Stereotypy

Repetitive or ritualistic movements (ex: stimming)

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Technological

Replicate procedures

Reinforcers What can effect reinforcement

Satiation: To satisfy fully Deprivation: To lack necessities

Sensitization

Sensitization is an increase in the response to an unharmful stimulus when that stimulus occurs after a punishing stimulus.

started verbal operants

Skinner

Phoneme

Smallest contrastive unit in the sound system of a language

Common Functions of Behavior

Social Positive / Socially Mediated Access Social Negative / Socially Mediated Escape Automatic Positive: Direct Access Automatic Negative: Direct Escape

Socially Significant Behaviors

Social, language, academic, daily living, self care, vocational

Spontaneous Recovery

Something as small as seeing a name can be an antecedent and cause the behavior to reoccur

Spontaneous Recovery

Spontaneous recovery refers to after a behavior has decreased (via extinction) the behavior may reoccur - however if it is not reinforced will disappear again quickly.

Premack Principle

States that the opportunity to engage in a behavior that has a high probability of occurring can be used to reinforce a behavior that has a lower probability of occurring

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Synthesis

Stimulate the buying of items and receipt of correct change

Setting Events

Stimuli in the environment that do not necessarily happen immediately before the behavior occurs, but still affect the probability that the behavior will occur ex(MOs): medications, sleep, diet, daily schedule, how stimulating the environment is, being cold, pain

Discriminative Stimuli SD

Stimuli in the environment that signal behavior and that are associated with reinforcement

Unconditioned Punishers

Stimulus (light, sound, temp.) which is intensified enough that's it's delivery will decrease or decrease fully behavior

Antecedent Interventions

Strategies that focus on structuring and modifying the environment and conditions that occur before a behavior, so that the behavior is less likely to occur -Eliminating triggers -"Proactive approach"

Intervention

Study/Therapy

stimulus fading procedure

Superimposition involves pairing two stimuli in which one of the stimuli will invoke the correct response, and then gradually fading away one of the stimuli.

Exceptions to HIPAA

Suspecting abuse or neglect

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Conceptually

Systematic

Pivotal Response Training (PRT)

Targets increasing social-communicative repertoires and the child's responsiveness to the environment. Focuses not only on language, but also on motivation, self-regulation, responding to multiple cues, and self-initiation of social interactions

Hierarchy of Response Competence: FLUENCY

The ability to express one self easily or being fluent

Hierarchy of Response Competence: GENERALIZATION

The action of being generalized, or a general statement or concept obtained by inference from specific cases.

A-02 duration

The amount of time in which behavior occurs (it is the basic measure of temporal extent) bx that is hard to tell beginning or end

Applied Behavior Analysis

The application of behavior laws, to change socially significant behavior to a meaningful degree

Dependent Variable

The behavior targeted to change

Respondent Extinction

The conditioned stimuli is presented without the unconditioned stimuli until it does not elicit the conditioned response anymore.

consequences

The event(s) that immediately follow the behavior of interest. • A stimulus that is added or removed that alters the future probability of the behavior

Hierarchy of Response Competence: ACQUISITION

The learning or developing a skill

Intertrial interval (ITI)

The pause before the next trial begins 1-3 seconds

Fixed Interval

The person only gets the reinforcer once the response is given after the fixed amount of time

Response Topography

The physical form or characteristics of the response. For example, the way that a rat presses a lever.

Topography

The physical form or characteristics of the response. For example, the way that a rat presses a lever.

Environment

The physical setting and circumstances in which the organism exists. -Influences primarily through stimulus change not static stimulus conditions.

Effect and Operation

Effect: Did the behavior increase? Operation: A consequence is delivered

4 common functions of behavior

Escape/Avoidance: The individual behaves in order to get out of doing something he/she does not want to do. Attention Seeking: The individual behaves to get focused attention from parents, teachers, siblings, peers, or other people that are around them. Seeking Access to Materials: The individual behaves in order to get a preferred item or participate in an enjoyable activity. Sensory Stimulation: The individual behaves in a specific way because it feels good to them.

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Comprehension

Ex. Coins worth

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Application

Ex. Counting out coins

non-contingent reinforcement NCR Example:

Ex: kissing child every 5 minutes

C-11 Maintenance

Extent to which a learner continues to perform the target behavior after a portion or all of the intervention is terminated AKA durability, behavioral persistence

Fixed Interval vs. Variable Interval

Fixed interval- reinforcement becomes available after a specific period of time Variable interval- the time periods that must pass before reinforcement becomes available will "vary" but must average out at a specific time interval

Fixed Ratio vs. Variable Ratio

Fixed ratio- reinforcement should be delivered after a constant or "fixed" number of correct responses Variable ratio- the delivery of reinforcement will "vary" but must average out at a specific number

Consequence interventions

Focus on modifying the environment and contingencies that occur after the behavior to increase or decrease behaviors

Systems of ABA

Frequency, rate, duration, latency, topography, locus, force

Consequence

Fundamental change that follows behavior

Incidental Teaching

Goal: increase spontaneous language and to generalize skills that are learned in more structured context Focuses on providing and creating opportunities that increase the child's motivation to use language.

Respondent Conditioning

The principle of respondent conditioning states that if a neutral stimulus is followed closely in time by an unconditioned stimulus which elicits an unconditioned response then the previously neutral stimulus will also tend to elicit the response in the future

HIPAA

Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act -Carry health info from one employer to another -Privacy rule: protected health info

Punishment

The process by which a stimulus change that reliably follows a response decreases the future probability of that response.

carrier phrase examples

I see a dog It is a yellow car

B-01 reinforcement

INCREASES behavior, a behavior is more likely to occur in the future environmental events that occur after a behavior • increases the likelihood of that behavior occurring in the future. • Must serve to increase the occurrences of a particular behavior • A basic principle of behavior analysis, one of the most important! • Reinforcement is in the eye of the beholder • Must be used contingently to increase a behavior • Must be used immediately to be most effective • Typically used continuously when teaching a new behavior

NaTS reinforcer

IS related to the material being taught

Risk of recurrence autism

If parents have a child with some form of autism, there is a 1 in 5 chance (20%) chance that their next child will have autism too The chance of twins having autism is far higher when twins are identical than when they are fraternal. Having more than one older sibling with autism further increased the chance of diagnosis to 32%

Error Correction

If they begin to get an old target wrong, pair SD with prompt so they aren't wrong

Applied Behavioral Analysis

The science devoted to the understanding and improvement of human behavior.

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Effective

Improves behavior

effective

Improves behavior sufficiently to produce practical results for the participant(s), ---Improvements in behavior must reach clinical or social significance, Extent to which changes in the target behavior(s) result in noticeable changes Applied interventions produce strong, socially important effects are the effects large enough to be socially significant

Reinforcement

Increases behavior

Innate behaviors

Inherited and preformed correctly for the first time an organism is exposed to a stimulus

Instruction Control

Instructional control' refers to the time when the child learns how to pay attention to simple requests the clinician makes. It happens when the child begins embracing the program demands.

interspersal technique

Intergrade easier items to more challenging

applied

Investigates socially significant behaviors with immediate importance to the participant behaviors targeted for change are socially significant (ABC)

Mand

It involves requesting /asking for something with or without the item present example: "can i have a cookie?"

Hierarchy of Response Competence: MAINTENANCE

The state of being maintained

Relevance of Behavior Rule

The target behavior should be selected when it is determined that the behavior is likely to produce reinforcement in the persons natural environment and therefore be maintained

Parsimony

The use of no unnecessary concepts, principles, and assumptions.

D-03 Ex: Adam goofs off, Johnny laughs. What is the SDr for goofing off?

Johnny: remove Johnny

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Generality

Lasting overtime

Conditioned

Learned

Hierarchy of Interventions

Level I: Strategies of differential reinforcement DRA, DRO, DRI, DRL Level II: Extinction (terminating reinforcement) Level III: Removal of desirable stimuli response-cost procedures time-out procedures Level IV: Presentation of aversive stimuli unconditioned aversive stimuli conditioned aversive stimuli overcorrection procedures

Sensory extinction

Masking/removing the sensory stimulus (ex: button pushing)

Basic steps of acquisition

Mass trial - mass trial with distractors - random rotate

behavior

Measurable and observable, quantifiable, socially significant

C-04 discrete trail training DTT

Method systematically evokes & reinforces a response by structuring the presentation of instructions & support in routine steps to show client what behavior will receive reinforcement -teaching in simplified and structured steps. Instead of teaching an entire skill in one go, the skill is broken down and "built-up" ((controlled by given an opportunity to emit the response)) method of teaching in simplified and structured steps. Instead of teaching an entire skill in one go, the skill is broken down and "built-up" using discrete trials that teach each step one at a time

Prompt Hierarchy

Most: physical Verbal Gestural Model Positional Least: Material

DTI reinforcer

NOT related to the material being taught

Positive Punishment vs. Negative Punishment

Negative punishment happens when a certain desired stimulus/item is removed after a particular undesired behavior is exhibited, resulting in the behavior happening less often in the future. Positive punishment works by presenting a negative consequence after an undesired behavior is exhibited, making the behavior less likely to happen in the future.

A-02 frequency is;

beginning and end response can be easily detected (data)# of responses

instructional demand

behavior alters based on the way instructions are delivered

C-06 forward chaining

behavior identified in the task analysis are taught i their naturally occurring order A method for teaching behavior chains that begins with the learner being prompted and taught to perform the first behavior in the task analysis; the trainer completes the remaining steps in the chain. training only occurs on the steps previously mastered & current step (no training on steps after that) teach 1st step - using modeling, reinforce each correct, eventually without prompt - once not using prompt, add 2nd step - continue adding 1 step at a time

event recording

behavior observed continuously, each instance recorded immediately as it occurs

mental/emotional abuse

behavior that is demeaning, intimidating, or threatening and creates emotional pain, distress, and may result in difficult behaviors

Unconditioned Response

behavior that occurs naturally due to a given stimulus

crisis

behaviors that risk harm to self, others or the environment

Task Analysis

breaking up a complex skill into smaller, teachable units, the products of which is a series of sequentially ordered steps or tasks

If reinforcement grew too thin and escape/avoidance occurs

bring reinforcement back on a denser schedule

pairing

building trust with the student and associating instructor, materials and setting with reinforcement

Selection by Consequences

causal mode found only in living things, or in machines made by living things. It was first recognized in natural selection, but it also accounts for the shaping and maintenance of the behavior of the individual and the evolution of cultures

medical model

change to show they have the same potential with some help

cause/effect

choices and outcomes, self advocacy, creating supports

examples of motor imitation

clap hands, touch nose, arms up, tap table, etc.

copying text

client copies their name from yours

behavioral momentum used when:

client engages in problem behavior to escape or avoid engaging in an aversive event (( another name for high-p request sequence))

C-11 response generalization

client engaging in a different response under the same stimulus condition Ex: How are you? Good, fine, okay - different response, same stimulus

response fluency

clients behavior occurs smoothly, rapidly, with little apparent effort

listener responding: class

collection, category

baseline

condition prior to the introduction of a treatment -behaviors assessed in natural setting w/o intervention

goal of social programming

connect the learners with the verbal community

B-01 punishment

consequence that decreases the future likelihood of the behavior - severe behavior

motor/mimetic imitation

copying the motor movements of a model

One of the most important changes in the fifth edition of the DS

creation of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

reliable

data are consistent (each recorded is recording the same behavior the same way)

analysis

data driven, a function between treatment and behavior is evident

valid

data is accurate (using ounces,lb,etc)

probe data

data on initial trial

community support skills standards CSSS

define core skills of community support work

delayed prompting

delay response between response

D-04 DRO differential reinforcement of other behavior (zero occurrence)

delivers a reinforcer whenever the problem behavior has not occurred during or at specific times "reinforcement for not responding")) - reinforce after behavior has not occured

VR variable ratio

delivery of reinforcement is based on a particular average number of responses. (e.g., on a VR 10 schedule an average of 10 responses must be emitted for reinforcement, but the number of responses required following the last reinforced response might range from 1 to 30 or more). -Bx becomes most resistant to extinction

mand

demand, command, asking, requesting for tangible, information or attention (usually first operant to develop

Preference assesments

determine what is motivating in the moment -free operant - forced choice

What is the primary reason to obtain diagnosis?

diagnosis is to help determine appropriate treatment and education.

Extinction

disappearance of a previously learned behavior when the behavior is not reinforced

physical imitation

doing what you see another do

E

effort of response, how much or how hard the learner has to work in order to obtain reinforcer -will engage in behavior that involves less effort

children with difficulty communicating are more likely to

engage in challenging behavior to get their needs met

Antecedent

environmental events that occasion behavior. Something that happens before behavior

fundamental beliefs

equality, inclusion, empowerment, self-determination, rights

D-03 discriminative stimuli (SDs)

event that occurs before a behavior is a stimulus that 'tells" or signals what will happen if a behavior occurs

Consequence

events that follow behavior

data should be analyzed

every 2 weeks

Behavior

everything we do! based upon our environment observable activity

functional relationships

exist when a behavior naturally produces a consequence

neglect

failure to provide care, supervision, or services that are necessary to health and well being of an individual and the failure results in pain, injury, distress or deterioration of behavior

magnitude

force or intensity with which a response is emitted (conducted)

B-01 response cost

form of punishment in which the loss of a specific amount of reinforcement occurs, contingent on an inappropriate behavior and results in the decreased probability of the future occurrence of that behavior +moderate to rapid effects +convenient +can be easily combined with other procedures Ex- money taken away with traffic ticket

A-02 What are two types of continuous measurement

frequency and duration

structure environment

furniture, weapons, clothing

non contingent reinforcement

given freely independent of the child's behavior (child must not be engaging in problem behavior)

Forced choice

giving your learner choices of several items and seeing what they pick

individual support or service plan

goals, strategies, objectives

Shaping

gradually molding or training an organism to perform a specific response (behavior) by reinforcing any responses that are similar to the desired response

C-09 fading

highlighting a physical dimension (color, size, position) of a stimulus & the gradually face exaggerated dimension)) gradually moving from max prompting to minimum or no prompting

Stimulus fading

highlighting a physical dimension of a stimulus to increase the likelihood of a correct response then the highlighted or exaggerated dimension is eventually faded out (ex: boundary cones)

modeling

imitative prompts

I

immediacy of reinforcement -will engage in behaviors that produces reinforcement quickly

violating confidentiality is ok when

immediate health or safety risk

Differential Reinforcement

implementation of reinforcing only the appropriate response (or behavior you wish to increase) and applying extinction to all other responses

verbal behavior/language cannot develop

in the absence of a community

C-05 naturalistic teaching procedure

incidental teaching IT

essential components of a skill acquisition plan

include a description of the target skill being taught, materials needed for teaching, prompting strategies to be used, the consequences for correct or incorrect responding, mastery criteria, reinforcement strategies, and plan for generalization and maintenance.

sense of space

inclusion, active participation, being in and out of the community

after learner has 50 single word mands

increase length of mands (open to open door)

D-05 extinction burst

increase the clients problem behavior before it decreases

Establishing Operations

increases the current effectiveness of some stimulus, object, or event as reinforcement

Reinforcement

increases the likelihood that a response will occur. Note that reinforcement is defined by the effect that it has on behavior - it increases or strengthens the behavior

Schedules of Reinforcement

influence how fast a behavior is acquired and the strength of the response

Probe data

initial trial of the session

relationships

interactions, social networks, community participation, valued roles, positive experiences

B-02 Preference Assessment

interview observation preference assessment

recording data/measuring behavior: indirectly

interviews, rating scales, questions, surveys, etc.

Overcorrection

involve having the student engage in repetitive behavior as a penalty for having displayed an inappropriate action.

stimulus control

is a phenomenon that occurs when an organism behaves in one way in the presence of a given stimulus and another way in its absence Ex: Masturbation

Event recording

is a process for documenting the number of times a behavior occurs Behavior must have discrete beginning and ending

Functional behavioral assessment (FBA)

is a variation on procedures originally developed to ascertain the purpose or reason for behaviors displayed by individuals with severe cognitive or communication disabilities

Private Event

is experienced only by one person. It is described as private activity, thought or experience. It can also be stimuli experienced by only one person for instance a headache

types of mands

items, actions, assistance, stop, attention, information

cooperating with other professionals is okay as long as

its consistent with principles of behavior analysis and serves clients effectively

social skills development 9-18 months

joint attention

Tact

labeling/naming an item, action or property of an item that is PRESENT or something with which the individual comes into contact example: how does the dog feel? (Child touches it and says "soft"

B-01 inclusion timeout

least intrusive/aversive form of timeout and most common used. - restrict the client from participating in the ongoing activity due to misbehavior.

C-10 graduated guidance prompting

least to most prompting Immediately fade physical prompts Follow participant closely with hands Gradually increase distance between hands and participant)) 1st trying to evoke the behavior with natural Sd and continue to progress from least to most prompt until wanted response occurs -gradually reduce the pressure that you are applying to shadowing further and further away until the client can do the skill without physical guidance

M

magnitude of reinforcement -will engage in behaviors that produce more

competing contingencies

maintenance and generalization factors and potential reinforcers or punishers

an operational definition for shouting

making a related or unrelated comment or question with voice volume louder than other's in the class and without being called on

behavioral momentum

making requests that are easy for the child before making requests that are more challenging or difficult.

the first form of verbal behavior that children engage in

manding

examples of social behavior

mands, turn taking, greetings, games, asking questions, etc.

Generalization

mastery across locations, teachers, time and materials

VERMI

matching law

trials of criterion

measure # of response opportunity needed to achieve predetermined level of performance

A-03 partial-interval

measure instances of behavior

A-02 temporal locus: response latency

measure of time between environmental event and a response -measuring how long it takes for a behavior to begin after a specific verbal demand or event has occurred Ex: Time between event and reaction

A-02 continuous measurement

measured that all instances of response of interest is detected during observation period

A-02 discontinuous measurement

measurement in which some instances of the response may not be detected

A-04 permanent product (outcome)

monitor the occurrence of problem behavior -measuring behavior after it has occurred by measuring the effect on the environment "ex post facto"

A-05 line graph are

most common

peer attention is the consequence of

most social behavior

positive psychology

motivation and potential: what makes people thrive

tact

named or labeled

behavior trap

natural contingencies took over control, or trapped the behavior

systems of support

natural, education and training, environmental, personal strengths, technological, incentives and professional services

FBA consent is

necessary

Expressive targets

no tangible distractors, must use expanded trials

tact reinforcement

non specific reinforcer, anything that increases behavior that is not the object being said

echoic reinforcement

non specific, praise or attention

tact antecedent

non verbal sensory stimulus in the environment

physical abuse

non-accidental, inappropriate contact or the use of force with an individual that causes physical pain or injury

tacts can be

observable: color of the sky unobservable: pain

A-03 whole-interval

observer is interested in behavior that occurs during the entire interval (5-10 seconds). Examples of ongoing behaviors that can be observed writing, walking, reading, or working on a given assignment. Recorded as percentage - continuous behavior (yes/no) -underestimate

direct measurements

observing the behavior and recording it as it occurs -less subjective types: -event recording -duration -interval recording -time sample recording

A-03 partial-interval

observing whether a behavior occurs at any time during the interval. Once the length of an observation session is identified, the time is broken down into smaller intervals that are all equal in length. Recorded as percentage (yes/no) -record multiple behaviors -measure instances of behavior

Stimulus Control

occur when an organism behaves in one way in the presence of a given stimulus and another way in its absence. example: the presence of a stop sign increases the probability that "braking" behavior will occur.

Reinforcers should be contingent

on target behaviors only

examples of oral motor imitation

open mouth, smile, stick out tongue, blow kisses, puff up cheeks, etc.

in a normal progression in ITT materials go from

orderly to messy array

match to sample

pairing one kind of thing with another (one kind of dog with another)

tact

pairing/labeling the word with a picture or item

B-01 nonexclusion timeout

participant is not completely removed physically from the time-in setting

C-11 generalization

performance and adaptation of a behavior under conditions different than the setting in which is was originally learned. • the trained behavior occurs at other times or in other places without having to be retrained completely in those particular times or places, or if functionally related behaviors occur that were not trained directly. ex; several species of fish

functional skill level

performance level of client able to attain sucess

B-02 multiple-stimulus assessment with MSWor without replacement MSWO

person chooses a preferred stimulus from an array of 3 or more stimuli; by presenting multiple stimuli together, time is saved 1.multiple stimulus pre. with replacement MSW: stimulus selected remains in array 2. multiple stimulus pre. without replacement MSWO stimulus selected removed from array - less time to complete

B-01 exclusionary timeout

person is removed from the environment for a specified period, contingent on the occurrence of the targeted inappropriate behavior

goals

personal outcomes, education, employment, community living, possessions

Modeling

physical display of the desired response

topography

physical form or shape of a behavior

Gestural prompt

physical gestures to indicate the desired response

Physical prompt

physically manipulating the individual to produce the desired response; guidance -least intrusive to encourage independence

B-02 free operant assessment

place a # of items out and let client interact with them, record interaction time with each

examples of fine motor imitation

pointing, thumbs up, squeeze playdough, press buttons

B-01 negative practice

practice the unwanted behavior repeatedly - caught smoking; smoke several times in a row; smoking becomes aversive or a punishing experience

parents can do

preference assessments

B-02 single-stimulus assessment/presenation

present stimuli one at a time random order - record interaction/no interaction - duration - beh

providing a zero second prompted mand

present the item they desire and the prompt together

proactive approach

preventing crisis/antecedent interventions by preventative measures: timers, schedules, functional communication

Comorbidity

primarily a medical term that is used to describe how mental disorders co-occur with one another. More often in children and adolescents.

A-0 measurement

process of applying quantitative labels to observe events using standard set of rules

Unconditioned Stimulus

produces an automatic, natural reaction

PHI

protected health information: oral, electronic or paper

HIPAA federal law

protects individuals health information

crisis management

protocol provides step-by-step guide how to deal with serious behaviors that threatens to harm either the client, others, or property

D-04 DRD Differential reinforcement of diminishing rates

provide reinforcement when the rate of the behavior is equal to or less than a specified limit - reinforce improvement or fewer infractions per unit of time Ex: praise after every 2x, praise after every 1x

generality

provides behavior change that lasts over time, appears in environments other than the one in which the intervention that initially produced it was implemented, and spreads to other behaviors not directly treated by the intervention Applied interventions are designed from the outset to operate in new environments and continue after the formal treatments have ended

VI variable interval

providing reinforcement for the first correct response following the elapse of variable duration of time occurring in a random or unpredictable order. VI produce a low - moderate, steady response rates (pop quizz at unpredictable times). The larger the average interval, the lower the overall rate of response

intraverbal

provoked by another's verbal behavior, conversational

echoic to tact transfer

puts words with the objects

only accept situations that you are

qualified to handle

R

rate of reinforcement, how often -will engage in behavior that produces consistent reinforcement

frequency/hours

rate per hour

scatterplot

records the bx throughout the day; can be used to compare when it occurs more or less

reduce response demand

reduce amount of time & effort required to engage in the activity Ex: long hw; cover much of the hw

Unconditioned reinforcement

refers to reinforcement that does not need to be learned or conditioned. For example may include food, drink, escape from pain, and physical attention

Conditioned reinforcement

refers to reinforcement that gets its value by being paired with another reinforcer (It is "conditioned."). -may include things such as tokens, money, praise, grades, toys, etc

C-11 maintenance

reinforce it each time it occurs

Verbal Behavior

reinforced through the mediation of another person's behavior (facial expressions, pointing, speaking, writing)

FI fixed interval

reinforcement is delivered for the first response emitted following the passage of a fixed duration of time since the last response was reinforced (e.g., on an FI 3-minute schedule, the first response following the passage of 3 minutes is reinforced)

Deprivation

reinforcement is very valuable

Generalized Reinforcers

reinforcer that acquires its reinforcing strengths through its relation to MULTIPLE reinforcers example: money

D-04 DRA differential reinforcement of alternative behavior

reinforces occurrences of a behavior that provides a desirable alternative to problem behavior but not necessarily incompatible with it)) reinforce acceptable alternative behavior & place problem behavior in extinction

imitation is automatically

reinforcing

Shaping

reinforcing successive approximations of a target behavior

SD

related to the differential availability of a currently effective form of reinforcement for a particular type of behavior example: the gas gauge in our car is a discriminative stimulus. The gauge controls our behavior by telling that we better emit a target behavior of buying gas otherwise an unpleasant consequence will result

Establishing/Motivating Operation

related to times when certain events are more valuable than others at times example: ads for an iPad make the desire for an iPad even greater. If the target behavior is saving money to buy a new computer, and if the iPad ad is successful in making you want one, then you are more likely to save for the iPad

matching law

relative rates of responding tend to equal the relative rates of reinforcement that they produce

B-01 bonus response cost

remove points or tokens from a pool of bonus reinforcers that the client has not earned

B-01 timeout

removing access to reinforcers, contingent on the occurrence of the severe infraction, for short period of time (2min) no longer than 5 min

B-01 negative reinforcement

removing something from the student that is aversive to increase the likelihood of behavior.

stimulus-stimulus pairing SSP

repeated pairing of a neutral stimulus with a reinforcing stimulus and the neutral stimulus becomes conditioned as a reinforcer

B-01 positive practice

repeatedly practicing a positive alternative behavior contingent upon the infraction Ex: mark wall, mark paper

bar graphs

represent the average of some data under different conditions

mand

request and demanding

Discrimination training

requires one response and two antecedent stimulus conditions. The response in the presence of one stimulus is reinforced while a response in the presence of the other is not

C-03 intermittent reinforcement makes the behavior more

resistent to extinction (when it does not produce reinforcement)

listener responding

responding to the mands of another, receptive language

C-11 stimulus generalization

response remains the same, but the stimulus or stimuli changes Ex: Looking at the face of several people, and say hello. - different stimulus, same response

B-01 restrained timeout

restrained contingent to problem behavior

A-05 data

results of measurement - quantified form - data collected must be graphed

Philosophy of normalization

select target's that are as culturally normal as possible

contact desensitization

shaping; differentially reinforce clients closer & closer approximation toward approaching an object of fear

SD feature example

show me the one thats red

cumulative graphs

show the sum of some measure over time (ex: total number of pages a student has read over time) -Can only have a slope of 0 or a positive slope

social skills development 1-3 months

smiling

social skills development 8-10 months

social referencing (facial expressions)

D-02 Motivating Operant MO/Establishing Operant EO

social/physical/food/tangible

B-01 corporal punishment

spanking,hitting, etc

schedules of reinforcement

start with continuous and fade to a variable ratio

Discriminative stimulus SD

stimuli in the environment that signal behavior and that are associated with reinforcement

shaping

systematically and differentially reinforcing successive approximations to a terminal behavior; used to help learners acquire new behaviors

C-07 discrimination training

teach client to know under what conditions a behavior is likely to be reinforced or not reinforced ((The conventional procedure requires one behavior and 2 antecedent stimulus conditions. Responses are reinforced in the presence of one stimulus condition , the SD, but not in the presence of the other stimulus the S-delta; example - to teach the color red, teacher places red ball (SD) and yellow ball (S-delta) in front of student and tells student to point to red ball. If he point to red ball, he gets reinforced. If he points to yellow ball, he does not))

D-04 DRA helps

teach the client what to do to get what they want in a more productive way

inadvertent prompts

teacher unaware of subtle prompts (glances, mouthing words)

problem with having a child "work for a break"

teaches that the child should escape or avoid work and that the best possible reinforcer is getting away from the teacher/work

mastery criteria

the ABA consultant determines the number of independent correct responses over a number of days needed for a target to be considered mastered (learned)- eg one independent response over a period of x days

Mastery criteria

the ABA consultant determines the number of independent correct responses over a number of days needed for a target to be considered mastered (learned)- eg one independent response over a period of x days.

stimulus overselectivity

the behavior is controlled by one or more non-relevant stimuli Ex: Table, chair out of place, client doesn't response to request

imitation

the emission of a behavior that is topographically similar and temporarily proximal to the behavior of a model

scrolling

the learner goes through a variety of signs or vocalizations to mand for an item/activity *do not reinforce these responses

behavior analysts use

the least restrictive procedures

it is NOT joint attention if

the motivation is merely to receive the relevant item

Premack principle

the opportunity to engage in a high-frequency or preferred behavior (i.e. playing video games) as a reinforcer for a low-frequency behavior (completing homework).

B-01 contingent observation

the person is repositioned within an existing setting such that observation of ongoing activities remains, but access to reinforcers is lost (sit away from group)

visual inspection

the process by which data is analyzed in order to determine whether or not changes in some measure can be attributed to the introduction of an intervention

DRO

the reinforcer is given as long as the targeted inappropriate behavior does not occur or it is given in the absence of targeted behavior. This serves to directly decrease the inappropriate behavior

DRI

the reinforcer is given when another behavior is used or observed

DRA

the reinforcer is given when another more appropriate behavior is used or observed

Extinction bursts

the sudden increase of behavior after extinction is implemented

latency (direct)

the time that occurs between the SD and the response

Generalization

the transfer of learning, is the process by which a behavior reinforced in one situation will be exhibited in another situation.

A-02 temporal locus: interresponse time

time that passes between occurrences of the inappropriate behavior. measure time between end of one response & beginning of the next response - measures time between 2 response

Prompt fading

to reduce assistance to a least intrusive prompt (ex: hand over hand to a light touch)

A-02 rate

total # of response over a period of time - response are free operant

SD class example

touch the food/fruit

examples of listener responding

touching a picture, following instructions

generalization

transfer of skills overtime, to untrained responses and across different environments

Transfer across operants

transfer of stimulus control from one operant to another

Time delay

transfers stimulus control to the natural stimulus by delaying the presentation of the prompt after that natural stimulus has been presented

breach

unacceptable, impermissible use or disclosure of PHI that compromises the security or privacy of PHI

C-11 generalization more likely to occur

under similar antecedent stimuli

assessment

use of empirical data to refine programs & improve learning

Video-modeling

used taped sequences as examples of behavior -Used to teach social skills, daily living skills, language acquisition or play skills

Verbal prompt

using vocalizations to indicate the desired response -can be: utterance- sound or part or a word, many words, or paragraph; question prompt or intraverbal prompt -difficult to fade

V

value of reinforcement, strength of MO for reinforcer -will engage in behavior with stronger MO

indiscriminate contingencies

vary the reinforce delivery schedule; so the client cant predict the next reinforcer

echoic

verbal imitation -Ex say dog: client says dog

Visual prompt

visual cue or picture- any object or printed material that is used to help teach a new behavior

echoic

vocal imitation, repeating the word

Free operant

watching what your learner chooses to do when they can play with anything available

Intraverbal

what one person says is based on what another person says (not in contact with the item, action or property) but does not match it exactly example: what says "Choo Choo"? (Child says train)

Echoic

what one person says is exactly the same as what another person says example: i say "car", you say "car"

Backward chaining

when all the behaviors that are identified in the task analysis are done by the teacher except the final behavior -Then all but the last two steps are done and so on

financial exploitation

when an employee misuses, mishandles, or exploits the property, possessions, or assets of an individual and includes using a person's property or assets without their consent, under false pretenses, or through coercion or manipulation

operational definition

when applied to data collection, is a clear, concise detailed definition of a measure.

pure mand

when learner cant see items and still requests it

C-03 intermittent reinforcement

when some not all, of the correct occurrences are reinforced - once the behavior has been taught or close to fluency decrease frequency of reinforce delivered

Transfer Trial Procedures

when you represent the original SD then use a lesser prompt than the first

cold probe data

whether the student was able to independently give the correct response upon first presentation of SD; yes or no

SD function example

which one can you eat

Time out

withdrawal or removal of opportunity to receive positive reinforcement for specific amount of time

D-05 extinction

withholding or blocking whatever reinforcers are supporting the unwanted behavior - reinforcer no longer follows a bx; future bx decrease under similar circumstance

hard data

written down

Comorbidity - What are They?

• ADHD • DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIOR DISORDERS (OPPOSITIONAL DEFIANT AND CONDUCT DISORDERS) • MOOD DISORDERS • ANXIETY DISORDERS • PTSD/ACUTE STRESS DISORDER • ADJUSTMENT DISORDERS WITH ANXIETY, DEPRESSION, MIXED EMOTIONS, AND CONDUCT • PHYSICAL AND OTHER COMORBIDITIES

NOT socially mediated functions of behavior

To gain automatic reinforcement

Prepare for the session as required by the skill acquisition plan.

To prepare for the session, have your materials and the environment set up so that you can run the plan as designed. Also, be sure to have reinforcement items easily accessible.

Systematic Desensitization

Treatment that practices engaging in successive approximations, toward the target or desired behavior often paired with anxiety reduction exercises and positive reinforcement

Unconditioned Aversive Stimuli

Unconditioned aversive stimuli naturally result in pain or discomfort and are often associated with biologically harmful or damaging substances or events. Examples include extreme heat or cold, bitter flavors, electric shocks, loud noises and pain. Aversives can be applied naturally (such as touching a hot stove) or in a contrived manner (such as during torture or behavior modification).

x axis

Unit of time Time frame: ex days

Aversives

Unpleasant stimuli that induce changes in behavior through punishment; by applying an aversive immediately following a behavior, the likelihood of the behavior occurring in the future is reduced. Aversives can vary from being slightly unpleasant or irritating (such as a disliked color) to physically damaging. It is not the level of unpleasantness, but rather the effectiveness the unpleasant event has on changing behavior that defines the aversive.

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Evaluation

Use of the money for item or alternative use such as buying candy

Defining Characteristics of ABA: Applied

Used to solve socially significant problems

C-05 Incidental teaching IT

Using natural opportunities that are sometimes planned and sometimes unplanned

Motivating Operations (MO)

Variables in the environment that alter the relative value of a particular reinforcer at a particular time

Motivating Operations

Variables in the environment that can alter the relative value or a particular reinforcer at a particular time (ex: sleep, illness, hunger, medication, etc.)

Video self-modeling

View themselves as examples of behavior

listener responding to tact transfer example

What is it? Barbie Can you give me barbie?

Baseline

What the child's behavior starts or looks like before therapy

Stimulus Control

When a behavior is emitted more often in the presence of a particular SD (setting, objects, people)

Positive Reinforcement

When an occurrence of behavior is followed by the addition of a stimulus which results in increased behavior

Hierarchy of Learning Levels: Analysis

When given items and cost asked if you can buy them

Extinction Burst

When the behavior is no longer reinforced it will briefly increase intensely or frequency or duration

Positional prompt

When the target is placed closer to the individual

Other Variables That Might Affect the Client

When writing session notes, report on: - illness - significant changes in family dynamic - medication changes - changes in sleep patterns

Pairing

When you have paired yourself with reinforcement and you have become the "giver of all good things"

Time Out

Withdrawal or opportunity to earn positive reinforcement or loss of access to a positive reinforcer for a specific period of time

Extinction

Withholding reinforcement from a previously reinforced item -Does not always mean ignoring

technological

Written description of all procedures in the study is sufficiently complete and detailed to enable others to replicate it Applied interventions are described well enough that they can be implemented by anyone with training and resources.

Line graphs consist of

Y axis X axis Baseline side Treatment side Phase change line Titles

D-03 establishing operation EO/MO

a condition of deprivation or aversion that temporarily alters (usually raises) the value of a particular reinforcer. EX: food deprived makes food more of a reinforcer

Task Analysis

a list of written out steps that contain all of the components necessary to complete the task.

Joint Control

a means of accounting for performances, especially generalized performances, for which a history of contingency control does not provide an adequate account

Prompt hierarchies

a planned sequence of prompts in order of intrusiveness -Most to least (least to most is used with behaviors already learned or more complex behaviors that involve problem solving)

Chaining

a specific sequence of responses with each sequence associated with a particular stimulus condition

Reinforcement Assessment

a strategy that can be used by classroom teachers to determine the items, activities, and events that a student finds reinforcing

transfer trials

a trial that is presented after a prompted trial where the initial prompt is faded so that the learners response is eventually evoked by the MO and not the prompt

Total task presentation

a variation of forward chaining in which the student is taught each of the steps in the task analysis all at once -Student is helped with every step

occupational therapists do not have to

abide by BACB code of conduct

goal of services

achieve greater community inclusion, productivity, independence and self-determination

joint attention

act of sharing experiences with another; a child's actions that verify or produce simultaneous attending with another to some object or event in the environment

listener responding: function

action the item can do

B-01 positive punishment

add an aversive consequence following behavior, reduce likelihood behavior occurring in the future

B-01 positive reinforcement

adding/presenting something the student values to increase the likelihood of behavior.

verbal behavior

affecting the environment through the behavior of some other person or the person herself (self-talk)

B-02 paired-stimulus assessment

aka "forced-choice" simultaneous presenting 2 stimuli; the observer records which of the 2 the learner chooses; each stimulus is matched randomly with all other stimuli in the set. Data shows how many times each stimulus was chosen; stimuli are then rank ordered (high-low)

mixed VB box

all the tacts, listener responding, imitation, intraverbals, echoics and textuals the learner has mastered

Motivating operation

alter the effectiveness of some stimulus, object, or event as a reinforcer, and alter the current frequency of all behavior that has been reinforced by that stimulus, object, or event -effect -behavior more/less likely

disclose the minimum

amount of info

Conditioned Response

an automatic response established by training to an ordinarily neutral stimulus

Contingency

an established relationship between an A,B,C

social behavior

an interaction between two individuals

standard celebration chart

analyze frequency of behavior changes over time

intraverbal

answering a question

D-03 motivational operations - MO interventon

antecedent events that change the value of the consequence along with the immediate discriminative stimulus (SD) Ex: Class clown, provide short hang out with friends before class

intraverbal antecedent/reinforcement

antecedent: verbal stimulus reinforcement: non specific

abuse

any form of mistreatment by one person that causes harm to another

sexual abuse

any sexual behavior or sexual contact between an employee and an individual even if it is consesual

support

anything that empowers or allows a person to engage with their environment more effectively

treatment integrity

assurance that all program implementers implement the intervention as planned

social skills development 4-7 months

attention from caregivers acts as a reinforcer

listener responding: feature

attributes the item has such as color, shape, sounds


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