Questions (Chapter 9-10) Flashcards

(52 cards)

1
Q

Behavior analysts reject ______________ explanations of behavior. Such “explanations” put the cause of behavior in the individual’s vaguely defined “mind.”

A

Mentalistic

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2
Q

If the only evidence for the cause (motivation) is the effect (performance), then the explanation is ______________.

A

Circular

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3
Q

There are two kinds of ______________ operations. These environmental and/or biological events temporarily alter the efficacy of a reinforcer, and change the probability of behaviors that produce that reinforcer.

A

Motivating

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4
Q

The first kind of MO is the ______________ operation. When these environmental and/or biological events occur, they temporarily increase the efficacy of a specific reinforcer, and they increase the probability of behaviors that produce that reinforcer.

A

Establishing

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5
Q

The second kind of MO is the ______________ operation. When these environmental and/or biological events occur, they temporarily decrease the efficacy of a specific reinforcer, and they decrease the probability of behaviors that produce that reinforcer.

A

Abolishing

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6
Q

Having a garden full of corn is an ______________ (establishing or abolishing) operation because it temporarily decreases the reinforcing value of a store-bought ear of corn, and it decreases the probability of purchasing one at the grocery store.

A

Abolishing

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7
Q

Spilling sriracha sauce on your shirt is an ______________ (establishing or abolishing) operation because it temporarily increases the reinforcing value of a clean shirt, and it increases the probability of going home to get one.

A

Establishing

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8
Q

Having an itchy back is an ______________ (establishing or abolishing) operation because it temporarily increases the reinforcing value of the stimulation produced by a good scratching, and it increases the probability that you will ask your partner to scratch your back.

A

Establishing

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9
Q

A _______________ ______________ is a structured interview or written survey that asks the individual to identify highly preferred activities.

A

Reinforcer Survey

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10
Q

The reason for asking someone to complete a reinforcer survey is to identify something that might function as a ________________, if provided contingent upon a desired behavior.

A

Reinforcer

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11
Q

For individuals with limited or no language ability, or for nonhuman animals, a useful way of identifying potential reinforcers is the stimulus ____________ ______________.

A

Preference Assessment

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12
Q

The final product of a stimulus preference assessment is a list of stimuli rank ordered from most to least preferred. This list is known as a preference ______________. Stimuli at the top of this list are most likely to function as reinforcers.

A

Hierarchy

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13
Q

The Premack principle states that access to a _____-probability behavior can function as a reinforcer if made contingent upon emitting a _____-probability behavior.

A

High
Low

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14
Q

A benefit of the Premack principle is that it allows us to predict what will function as a reinforcer _____________ we try it out. This allows us to avoid the circularity problem.

A

Before

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15
Q

When measuring reinforcer efficacy, an individual’s ______________ can tell us which of the available stimuli is most likely to be the most effective reinforcer.

A

Choice or Preference

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16
Q

A second measure of reinforcer efficacy is __________________. This measure quantifies how much behavior can be maintained by a specific reinforcer.

A

Breakpoint

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17
Q

List the four dimensions of reinforcer efficacy.

A

Contingency
Size
Quality
Immediacy

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18
Q

The second graders will complete more math problems when working for a gold star than a silver star. Which of the four dimensions of reinforcer efficacy is most relevant in this example?

A

Quality

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19
Q

The second graders were less enthusiastic about working for gold stars after the gym teacher gave the children a sheet of gold stars for free. Which of the four dimensions of reinforcer efficacy is most relevant in this example?

A

Contingency

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20
Q

Research has shown that infants will babble more when a social reinforcer is provided contingent on this vocal response (Ramey & Ourth, 1971). However, if this reinforcer is delayed by as little as 3 seconds, it will lose its ability to reinforce this response (presumably because the delay makes it difficult for the baby to learn the IF babble → THEN social-reinforcer contingency). Which of the four dimensions of reinforcer efficacy is most relevant in this example?

A

Immediacy

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21
Q

When a behavior becomes habitual, an AO no longer has its twin effects. The AO no longer ______________ the efficacy of a specific reinforcer and it no longer decreases the _____________ that yields that reinforcer.

A

Decreases
Behavior or Response

22
Q

When a behavior becomes habitual, it is evoked by _____________ stimuli, even when the individual is not motivated to acquire the consequence.

23
Q

Habits are formed when an operant behavior is ________________ hundreds, if not thousands, of times in the presence of an antecedent stimulus.

24
Q

Behavior analysts define a __________________ as a contingent consequence that decreases the future probability of behavior below its pre-punishment level.

25
Punishers are contingent consequences, so they happen __________ (before/after) behavior.
After
26
The effect of a reinforcer is that it _________________ the future probability of behavior, whereas the effect of a punisher is that it ____________ the future probability of behavior.
Increases Decreases
27
The process or procedure whereby a punisher decreases the future probability of an operant response is called ______________________.
Punishment
28
Positive reinforcers __________________ the future probability of behavior, and negative reinforcers __________________ the future probability of behavior.
Increase Increase
29
Positive punishers __________________ the future probability of behavior, and negative punishers __________________ the future probability of behavior.
Decrease Decrease
30
When a positive punisher is delivered, a stimulus is _________________. When a _________________ punisher occurs, a stimulus is removed, reduced, or prevented.
Presented Negative
31
When a car thief is convicted and put in prison, they are unable to steal cars for the duration of their sentence. Based on this information alone, can we classify the prison sentence as a punisher?
No, because we need to know if future probability of punished behavior decreases. After consequence is over does problem behavior decline?
32
Punishment is used in applied (clinical) settings when the behavior is _______________ to oneself or others.
Dangerous
33
When designing an effective intervention that will include punishment, it is important to identify the ___________________ that maintains the problem behavior.
Reinforcer
34
When the reinforcer maintaining problem behavior has been identified, the behavior analyst designing the punishment-based intervention will explore procedures that can _______________ the efficacy of those reinforcers. If the reinforcer can be weakened, the punisher will be more effective.
Weaken
35
An effective punishment-based intervention will combine punishment with _______________________ or ________________ _______.
Extinction Differential Reinforcement
36
Punishers are more effective when delivered ______________________ after the problem behavior occurs.
Immediately
37
If it is impossible to deliver the punisher immediately, then the next best practice is to clarify the ________________ (IF→THEN) relation between the past behavior and the present punisher.
Contingent
38
7. Punishers are effective only when they are delivered __________________ on the problem behavior. Administering noncontingent punishers will not work.
Contingent
39
In the Oliver et al. (1974) study (see Figure 10.6), noncontingent punishment actually ___________________ the future probability of aggressive behavior.
Increased
40
Punishing a problem behavior every once in a while is not an effective way to use punishment. Instead, punishers should follow _________ instance of problem behavior.
Every
41
Arranging the least-restrictive punishment contingency means finding a punisher in the Goldilocks zone. That is, the punisher should not be too ______________, nor should it be so benign that it does not decrease problem behavior.
Aversive
42
A _________________ punisher is a contingent consequence that functions as a punisher because, in the evolutionary past of the species, this consequence decreased the chances of survival.
Primary
43
________________ punishers signal a delay reduction to a backup punisher.
Conditioned
44
A conditioned punisher will be more effective in decreasing problem behavior when (1) the backup punisher (US) is a phylogenetically important event, (2) the conditioned punisher (CS) is highly salient, (3) the conditioned punisher signals a large ___________ _____________ to the US, and (4) the conditioned punisher is not redundant with another stimulus that already signals the US is coming.
Delay Reduction
45
A time-out from ________________ __________________ is a signaled response-contingent suspension of a positive-reinforcement contingency, the effect of which is to decrease the future probability of problem behavior.
Positive Reinforcement
46
The data suggest one should never provide more than _________ verbal warning(s) before administering a time-out from positive reinforcement.
One
47
Time-out from positive reinforcement will not reduce problem behavior if, during the time-out, the availability of ___________________ is not reduced.
Reinforcement or Reinforcers
48
In applied settings, behavior analysts refer to negative punishers as _________________ ____________ punishers. These involve a response-contingent reduction or removal of a stimulus that functions as a positive reinforcer; the effect of which is to decrease the future probability of problem behavior.
Response-Cost
49
When a stimulus signals that a behavior is very likely to be punished, the frequency of that behavior ___________________.
Decreases
50
When humans observe a stimulus that suggests the dominant god(s) of their culture is(are) watching, anti-social behavior ___________________.
Decreases
51
Using punishment to reduce problem behavior is itself an operant behavior. That is, this behavior is ____________________ when the problem behavior decreases.
Reinforced
52
In cooperation/competition games, humans increasingly prefer the version of the game that allows them to use _____________________. The reason why is that they experience the benefits of this behavior-influencing consequence.
Punishment or Punishers