Principles of Behavior Change

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Principles of Behavior Change

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Title: Principles of Behavior Change


1
Principles of Behavior Change
  • David M. Lewandowski, Ph.D.
  • Winter 2002
  • Psych 524

2
  • Office hours Tuesday 330 430
  • Wednesday 330 430
  • or by appointment
  • Office is located in the Department of
    Psychology and Counseling Room 34060
  • Phone number 534-4972
  • E-mail d-lewand_at_govst.edu

3
Principles of Behavior Change
  • Introduction Basic Principles

4
Terminology and Scope
  • The major goal of behavior therapy is to help
    clients deal with psychological problems.
  • Furthermore, application of the procedures have
    focused on assisting people in improving everyday
    behaviors.

5
What is Behavior Therapy?
  • Scientific an approach that involves precision
    and empirical evaluation.
  • Active Action oriented therapy rather than
    verbal therapy.
  • Present focus deal with the here and now.

6
Self-control three advantages
  • Client involvement assures that the change may
    last
  • Personally empowering
  • Learn skills that may last a life time

7
  • Learning focus Based on theories of learning.
    Most of our behavior is learned, therefore, can
    be unlearned.
  • Other Characteristics
  • Collaborative, individualized, stepwise
    progression, brevity, and treatment package.

8
Behavior Therapy is also called
  • Behavior Modification
  • Applied Behavior Analysis
  • Conditioning Therapy

They all refer to the systematic application of
scientifically established principles of learning
in the area of changing human behavior.
9
Historical background
Although behaviorism can be traced back to 1st
century Rome, the term behavior therapy, wasnt
introduced until the 1950s by Ogden
Lindsey. Two publications that helped establish
this new discipline were Skinners Science and
Human Behavior and Wolpes Psychotherapy by
Reciprocal Inhibition. In the 1970s behavior
therapy emerged as a major force in Psychology,
also impacting on psychiatry, social work, and
Education.
10
Many of the other therapies have long since
disappeared!
The reason being, unlike Behavior Therapy, they
had no significant empirical data to back their
claims. Over 5000 articles and hundred of books
have been published on the various behavioral
approaches. Also, the relationship between the
client and the therapist is collaborative,
similar to other applied sciences.
11
People we should know in the areas of behaviorism
  • Psychology 101 revisited!

12
William James
  • In 1890, included a chapter on Habits in his
    text book
  • Many of the principles that are important to
    Behavior Therapy today were discussed in this
    chapter
  • Most importantly, he changed the view from
    introspective to behavioral

13
Edward Thorndike
  • Important contributor to the underlying theory of
    behavior modification
  • He was the precursor of the various Skinnarian
    paradigms
  • Thorndikes Law of Effect is the major
    underpinning of Skinners Law of Reinforcement

14
Ivan Pavlov
  • First to try to modify the behavior of animals
  • During the 1920s he made dogs neurotic than
    tried to cure them!
  • Developed the classical or respondent
    conditioning model

15
John Watson
  • Considered the father of behaviorism in this
    country
  • Used respondent conditioning to create a phobia
    in a child (little Albert)
  • Once stated that he could take 12 children and
    make them into whatever he wanted using these
    principles
  • Died before he could cure Albert Mary Cover
    Jones did the desensitization!

16
B.F. Skinner
  • Consider the most influential psychologist since
    Freud
  • Book Science and Human Behavior formed the
    foundation for future work in the area
  • Looked at human behavior in terms of operant
    conditioning
  • Gave hippies a reason to exist in the 1960s!

17
Hippie
  • A young person who adopts unconventional dress
    and behavior, questioning the middle class life
    it values

18
Skinner disciples
  • Ogden Lindsey coined term Behavior Therapy
  • Teodoro Ayllon Work was critical in overcoming
    the resistance to the behavioral model
  • Nathan Azrin Developed the first token economy

19
Joseph Wolpe
  • Conceptualized neurosis in terms of Pavolvian and
    Hullian learning principles
  • Further developed the behavioral techniques of
    systematic desensitization and assertiveness
    training.
  • Cashed in on the work done by Andrew Salter on
    more than one occasion!

20
Albert Bandura
  • Developed social learning theory
  • This included not only principles of classical
    and operant conditioning, but also observational
    learning
  • Theory emphasized the role of cognitions

21
The Cognitive Behaviorists
  • Aaron Beck
  • Albert Ellis
  • Donald Meichenbaum

22
Assumptions Underlying Behavior Therapy
  • The cornerstones for the course!

23
OneRelative to psychotherapy, Behavior Therapy
tends to concentrate on maladaptive behavior
itself, rather than on some presumed underlying
cause.
24
For example
  • Psychoanalyst would agree that the client is
    experiencing anxiety when confronted with the
    snake. However, they would believe that it is due
    to a unconscious perception of the phallic like
    properties of the snake, repressed thoughts of
    castration, and of course, a sexual love for the
    mother!

25
Various behaviorist would look at it differently
  • For Wolpe, the underlying cause is the anxiety
    and he would deal with that
  • Ellis would deal with the irrational beliefs held
    bout the snake
  • Skinner would reinforce successive
    approximations, since the problem would be
    defined as snake avoidance

26
Professors note
The psychoanalytic model is a medical or
disease model and is thus, perpetuated by
those trained in the medical professions. Therefo
re, maladaptive behavior is assumed symptomatic
of underlying pathology. If the underlying
cause is not treated with this type of approach,
symptom substitution - appearance of
another symptom - would result. This doctrine is
an offshoot of psychoanalytic theory.
27
TwoBehavior Therapy assumes that maladaptive
behaviors are, to a considerable degree, acquired
through learning.
28
There is no theory today that would discount the
role that the environment plays on human
development.
29
For example.Not all maladaptive behavior is a
consequence of an unfortunate learning history.
Case in point, someone who has experienced
traumatic head injury.Also, more importance is
being given to biological predisposing factors
(biochemical imbalance leading to schizophrenia).
30
ThreeBehavior Therapy assumes that
psychological principles, especially learning
principles, can be effective in modifying
maladaptive behavior.
31
  • Research abounds in the this area in relation to
    working with the mentally retarded.

32
FourBehavior Therapy involves setting specific,
clearly defined treatment goals.
33
Professors noteMaladaptive behavior is not a
result of a disturbed personality. Therefore,
the focus is not on the restructuring of the
personality, but rather on alleviating a specific
problem.
34
FiveThe behavior therapist adopts his/her
method of treatment to the clients problem.
35
SixBehavior Therapy rejects classical trait
theory.
36
Trait How do we define it?
  • A predisposition to similar behavior in a wide
    variety of situations. That is to say, relatively
    stable and enduring personality characteristics.

37
Two alternatives to trait theory
  • Situationalism - maintains that the behavior is
    under the direct stimulus control, thus highly
    situation specific (I.e. acting aggressively in
    presence of certain stimuli).
  • Interactionism - is a midway position. That is
    to say, that the behavior is a result of the
    interaction between external stimuli and person
    variables.

38
SevenBehavior Therapy concentrates on the here
and now.
39
  • Insights may be distorted. Plus, there is no
    guarantee that this will lead to the reduction of
    maladaptive behavior.

Boy I thought that tree was bigger!
40
  • The behavioral therapist will employ different
    procedures, depending on the presenting concern
    of the client.

41
Therefore, as opposed to the dynamic therapists,
behavioral therapists are more likely to accept
the clients presenting concern as accurate.
42
Professors noteMust remember, however, that
ninety percent of the time, the presenting
concern isnt always the real problem!
43
Overt and Covert Behaviors
  • Overt behaviors are actions that can be directly
    observed.
  • Covert behaviors are things we do that cannot be
    directly observed.

44
ABC Model Why we behave the way we do
  • Antecedents are events that occur or are
    present before the behavior is performed.
  • Behavior that occurs
  • Consequences are events that occur after the
    behaviors have been performed.

45
Triadic Reciprocal Determinism
Environment
Covert behavior
Overt behavior
46
Maintaining antecedents
  • Serve two functions
  • 1. They serve as prerequisites for the
    behavior I.e. going to the movies
  • 2. Provide situational cues for
    performing the behavior set the
  • stage for the behavior to occur

47
EightBehavior Therapy is supported by empirical
evidence.
48
  • Behavior Therapy is seen as an extension of the
    assessment process. As a result, emphasis is
    placed on gathering information to support

49
The Practice of Behavior Therapy
  • An Overview

50
The eight step process
  • Clarifying the problem Presenting concern is
    often stated in vague terms needs to be
    operationalized. That is to say, defined in
    behavioral terms. The who, what, where, when and
    why of the behavior.

51
  • Designing a target behavior a narrow, discrete
    aspect of the problem that can be clearly defined
    and easily measured.
  • 1. Narrow in scope
  • 2. Unambiguously defined
  • 3. Measurable (pg 51)
  • Frequency
  • Duration
  • Intensity
  • Amount of by-product
  • 4. Appropriate for the problem and client
  • 5. Measuring the baseline

52
  • Formulating treatment goals Goals are developed
    in conjunction with the client, and the client
    assuming the majority of the responsibility for
    deciding on the therapy goals.
  • Therapist takes a more active role if the
    clients goals are deemed unrealistic or to
    result in negative consequences.

53
  • Identifying maintaining conditions This is a
    critical step in the process, since this is the
    focus of change in order to change the target
    behavior.
  • Designing a plan to change the maintaining
    conditions
  • Implementing the change plan
  • Evaluating the success of the change plan
  • Conducting follow-up assessment

54
Behavioral Assessment
  • Objectivity vs Subjectivity

55
The Traditional Approach
This is the approach that most people are
familiar with and is often represented. It
involves the use of projective techniques, which
require a subjective interpretation. Projective
methods give the subject an abstract,
unstructured stimuli, such as an inkblot or an
incomplete sentence, and require the person to
interpret the stimulus and respond.
56
The Objective Approach
There is no subjective interpretation of the
results. Observations are made and scored with a
quantitative analysis of the person being the
end result. This is then compared to other
people in their age group to determine if there
is a statistically significant difference in the
behavior.
57
Goals of Behavioral Assessment
  • Select and define target behaviors precisely
  • Identify the maintaining conditions of the target
    behaviors
  • Measure the changes in the target behavior over
    the course of treatment

58
Behavior assessment is
  • Multimodal measurements are made of two or more
    modes of behavior
  • Multimethod assessment use two or more methods
    to gather information (pg 75)

59
Characteristics of behavior assessment
  • Individualized used to gather information about
    clients problem and maintaining conditions.
    Therefore, diagnosis is not a goal.
  • Present focus Here and now is important
  • Directly samples relevant behavior See it and
    measure it

60
  • Narrow focus Looks at discrete behaviors and
    specific circumstances
  • Integrated with therapy Assessment is a integral
    and continuous part of therapy

61
Behavioral Interviews
  • Initial interviews have four parts
  • 1. Establishing rapport with the client
  • 2. Understanding problem/target behavior
  • 3. Gather data about maintaining
    conditions
  • 4. Educate client about technique

62
Establishing rapport
  • This step involves developing a relationship of
    mutual trust. Unconditional acceptance of the
    client is the key.

63
Gaining an understanding
  • Often clients describe their presenting concerns
    in a vague manner using trait terms. Need to
    operationalize so that a target behavior can be
    selected.

64
Data gathering
  • Looking for the antecedents and consequences of
    the behavior (ABC model). The who, what, when,
    where, how and how often of the experience.

65
Educate the client
  • Provide client with information about the
    technique and behaviorism in general. What the
    client can expect to happen.

66
Methods for collecting data
  • Direct self-report inventories direct questions
    requiring a yes or no, true or false response.
    Highly efficient way of gathering information.
  • Behavioral Checklists and Rating Scales
    Completed by someone other than the client.
    Accuracy depends on the informant.

67
  • Self recording Involves the client observing and
    recording their own behaviors. Three possible
    problems with this method are clients ability to
    be accurate and honest interrupts ongoing
    activities, and the client may change as a result
    of recording their behavior.
  • Systematic naturalistic observation recording
    specific behaviors as they are naturally
    occurring.

68
  • Simulated observation setting up an environment
    that closely resembles that in which the problem
    behavior occurs.
  • Role playing client enacts the problem behavior
    for the therapist and how they typically would
    handle the situation.
  • Physiological measurements direct measurements
    of physiological responses are made such as heart
    rate, blood pressure, etc.

69
All things considered Behavioral Assessment
  • Each behavioral assessment method has its
    strengths and limitations and should be looked at
    in light of the type of information needed.
    Multimethod and multimodal assessment helps
    overcome the limitations of single methods and
    provideds more complete information about the
    clients problem.
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