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Advanced ABA for Teachers. ED 556. Today…. Quiz Article Presentation by Lauren Questions about course requirements PsychINFO assignment questions Review: Technical language and basic concepts. Why Use Technical Terms?. Effective communication Demonstrates professionalism in your field
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Advanced ABA for Teachers ED 556
Today… • Quiz • Article Presentation by Lauren • Questions about course requirements • PsychINFO assignment questions • Review: Technical language and basic concepts
Why Use Technical Terms? • Effective communication • Demonstrates professionalism in your field • CH & H - Mastering the technical vocabulary of ABA is an important first step in becoming a behavior analyst • recommend students “study the field’s technical terminology with diligence” (p. xv) • ABA is a science • Using precise terminology facilitates goal of thorough understanding of socially important behaviors • Note: It takes practice to learn new terminology! • Especially when there are similar words already in your repertoire
Basic Concepts • What is ABA? • Technical definition: The science in which tactics derived from the principles of behavior are applied to improve socially significant behavior and experimentation is used to identify the variables responsible for the improvement in behavior • What you might say to your Aunt Sally: • A way in which to provide assistance to individuals by breaking complex skills into easier ones. As the individual begins to learn, we withdraw our assistance until they can learn in the same way others do.
Behavior • The activity of living organisms – everything a person does, including how he moves, what he says, thinks, and feels • A well-known technical definition: • “That portion of an organism’s interaction with its environment that is characterized by detectable displacement in space through time of some part of the organism and that results in a measurable change in at least one aspect of the environment” (Johnston and Pennypacker, 1993, p. 23)
Response • An instance of behavior • Response topographyrefers to the physical shape or form of the response • Response class: A group of responses with the same function (each response in the group is maintained by the same reinforcer or produces the same effect on the environment) • Examples • Saying “thank you” • Opening a bag of chips
Environment • Conglomerate of circumstances in which the organism exists • Includes not only the organism’s external features but physical events inside its skin • Example: itching • Stimulus: an energy change that affects an organism through its receptor cells • Stimulus Class: a group of stimuli that set the occasion for the same response • E.g., person dropping a bunch of papers, carrying lots of things, looking for a lost object, cleaning up an activity, setting up an activity • E.g., spoken word dog, written word dog, picture of a dog, actual dog
Respondent Behavior • The response component of a reflex • It’s elicited by a stimulus that precedes it • Does not require a history of learning – examples? • Respondent Conditioning • New stimuli can acquire the ability to elicit respondent behavior • Example: Teaching nighttime continence
Nocturnal Enuresis Therapy(“Bell & Pad”) • Enuresis can occur because the sensation of a full bladder does not elicit waking 1. Alarm Waking 2. Full bladder + Alarm Waking 3. Full bladder Waking
Operant Behavior • Any behavior whose future frequency is determined primarily by its history of consequences • It’s not elicited like respondent behavior – it’s maintained by consequences that have followed it in the past • Examples • Saying “hi”
Teacher walks in the room Bobby says, “hi” Teacher smiles and says, “hi!”
Operant Behavior • Any behavior whose future frequency is determined primarily by its history of consequences • It’s not elicited like respondent behavior – it’s maintained by consequences that have followed it in the past • Examples • Saying “hi” • Katie screaming when her mom gets out the vacuum cleaner – how could this be both respondent AND operant behavior?
Teacher walks in the room Bobby says, “hi” Teacher smiles and says, “hi!” Mom brings out vaccuum Katie screams and cries Mom puts the vacuum away
Consequence • Everyday usage? • Technical definition: stimulus that follows a given behavior in a relatively immediate temporal sequence and alters the probability of future occurrences of that type of behavior • Note that awareness of the consequence, intent, and trying to “get” the consequence are not part of the definition • 2 forms • A stimulus is increased or added to the environment • An already present stimulus is reduced or removed from the environment • 2 behavioral outcomes • The future frequency of the behavior increases • The future frequency of the behavior decreases
Three-Term Contingency • Operant Conditioning: establishment of a functional relationship between behavior and its consequences and between behavior and certain antecedent conditions • Antecedent - Behavior - Consequence • Contingency refers to the dependency of a particular consequence on the occurrence of behavior