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Behavior Principles In Everyday Life

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Title: Behavior Principles In Everyday Life


1
Behavior Principles In Everyday Life
  • Chapter 6
  • Behavior Modification

2
Behavior Modification
  • Learning is central First, we need to learn
    useful behavior modification techniques, then
    learn to apply them to the task of changing
    behavior. The behavior we wish to change is
    called the target behavior.
  • The target behavior is given objective behavioral
    definitions that are designed to make it easy to
    measure the behavior in numerical units.
  • To understand the behavior as its starting point,
    we begin with baseline measurements of the target
    behavior before initiating behavior modification.

3
Behavior Modification Cont.
  • Behavior modification involves changing the most
    important antecedents and consequences that
    control behavior.
  • Behavior modification involves systematically
    applying behavior principles to the task of
    changing someones target behavior be it our
    own or someone elses behavior.

4
Goal Setting
  • How is a behavior selected to be a target for
    behavior modification?
  • There are two general classes of problems
    behavioral excesses and deficits. Behavioral
    modification is usually used to help people
    reduce behavioral excesses and learn desirable
    skills needed to overcome deficits.

5
Goal Setting Cont.
  • (1.) First, behavioral excesses are often more
    obvious than deficits, hence more likely to be
    noticed and targeted for change.
  • Excessive drug and alcohol use can create untold
    harm to a person and his or her family and
    friends.
  • Even less obvious behavior such as excessive
    nail biting can cause problems, damaging and
    disfiguring the nails and skin sometimes
    affecting a persons self-concept and social
    relations.

6
Goal Setting Cont.
  • (2.) Second, serious behavioral deficits are
    sometimes painfully obvious.
  • People who lack social skills often stand out in
    social groups awkward, fumbling, embarrassed.
    People who cannot read may suddenly catch our
    attention due to their lack of a basic skill.
    However, people with behavioral deficits often
    learn to avoid situations where deficiencies
    would be noticed. People who cannot read can act
    as if they have no problem and we may fail to
    notice.
  • Hence behavioral deficits are often less
    conspicuous than excesses.

7
Goal Setting Cont.
  • (3.) Third is something that applies to all
    people, even if they have no noticeable
    behavioral excesses or deficits. Increasingly,
    people are using behavior modification as a tool
    for developing their human potential learning
    skills that broaden their life experiences.

8
Behavioral Definitions
  • Behavioral research has benefited enormously from
    its focus on creating behavioral definitions,
    which are careful, detailed and objective
    definitions of behavior. Vague definitions make
    it difficult to identify behaviors clearly and
    change them effectively.
  • There are three benefits from using objective
    definitions.

9
Behavioral Definitions Cont.
  • (1.) First, objective data give us the basis for
    rewarding a job well done and not rewarding
    suboptimal behavior.
  • (2.) Second, objective records help us ask
    questions and create rules for correcting
    problems we may encounter during behavior
    modification.
  • (3.) Third, objective data help people evaluate
    the relative merits of different behavior
    modification programs.

10
Defining Chains of Behavior
  • Often it is useful to define a target behavior in
    terms of several smaller operant links that are
    joined together in a chain of activities.
  • Few things of great value are created by one unit
    of behavior. Many tasks that we wish to master
    consist of dozens, if not hundreds of small
    skills, and these must then be chained together
    to create the whole graceful act of a successful
    pole vault or a captivating song or a
    beautiful dance.

11
Target Behaviors
  • Define describe with ACTIVE verbs, avoid
    ambiguous terms. Saying a child or client was
    aggressive is too vague, describe specific
    observable behaviors seen when the misbehavior
    occurred hitting, pushing, throwing, yelling,
    etc.
  • Instead of saying client was defiant or
    confrontational, list specific body
    language/movements, talking back, etc.
  • Could someone who reads your target behavior
    description understand what you observed?

12
Defining Chains of Behavior Cont.
  • Careful behavioral observations help us attend to
    both the units of behavior and their place in the
    whole performance.
  • Using an ATM is a chain of behavior. Cooking a
    meal is a chain of behavior.

13
Functional Assessment
  • Both the antecedents and consequences that
    explain why a person does a behavior are called
    the controlling variables of the behavior.
  • Functional assessment is the technique used to
    identify the antecedents and consequences that
    control any given target behavior.

14
Functional Assessment Cont.
  • Functional assessment is useful in helping create
    powerful behavioral interventions.
  • In behavioral modification, the goal of reducing
    maladaptive and undesirable behaviors is almost
    always coupled with the goal of reinforcing
    alternative behaviors that are healthier and more
    useful, adaptive, and prosocial.

15
Functional Assessment Cont.
  • Functional assessment involves asking questions
    about antecedents and consequences, then
    observing or experimenting to see which of many
    possible hypotheses might be correct. What
    antecedent events have stimulus control over
    behavior? What outcomes (reinforcers or
    punishers) are contingent on the behavior?

16
  • Context of a behavior
  • The behavior
  • The Functions/Goals of a behavior

17
Context Questions
  • Who was involved?
  • When did the behavior occur?
  • Where did the behavior occur?

18
The Target Behavior
  • Defined/described in active, observable,
    unambiguous terms, using ACTIVE VERBS, talking,
    walking, hitting, shouting, smoking, etc., not
    described using nouns or adjectives, addiction,
    happiness, depressed/depression, etc.
  • Instead of saying client was defiant or
    confrontational, list specific body
    language/movements, talking back, etc.
  • Could someone who reads your target behavior
    description understand/recognize what you
    observed?

19
Function/Goal Questions
  • What happened as a result of the behavior?
  • Why do you think the behavior occurred? The
    function/goal of the behavior was?

20
The functions a behavior serves
  • With children in a typical classroom setting,
    most behaviors can be classified as one or more
    of the following functions
  • Gains interaction with peers
  • Escapes interaction with a peer or peers
  • Gains interactions from an adult
  • Gains an object or is allowed to do some activity
  • Escapes a teacher-directed activity

21
In other settings, some other possible behavioral
functions become likely
Gain adult attention Escape/avoid
task/event Escape/avoid adult attention Obtain
tangible reward Sensory stimulation Gain access
to peers or adults Gain access to activities Gain
access to objects Escape an activity Escape from
peers
22
Functional Assessment Cont.
  • (1.) First, we examine the entire the entire
    stimulus collage in search of any stimuli that
    regularly precede and predict the target
    behavior, since these are most likely to be the
    ones that have stimulus control over the
    behavior.
  • (2.) Second, we search for the consequences that
    are contingent on the target behavior, be they
    reinforces or punishers, since contingent
    consequences have the most powerful control over
    behavior.

23
Functional Assessment Cont.
  • (3.) Third, we experiment to see if we can change
    the behavior in predictable ways by altering the
    antecedents and consequences we have identified.
    Does removing the SD we think causes excess
    snacking reduce calorie intake? Does removing
    social attention reduce whining or self-pity? We
    may need to ask dozens of questions and
    experiment with several alternative hypotheses
    before we find the antecedents and consequences
    that control a behavior.

24
Functional Assessment
Systematically manipulating behaviors related to
identified functions and environmental factors
believed to prompt and maintain a behavior.
1. The target behavior must be operationally
defined 2. A recording technique must be selected
for observing and counting the target
behavior 3. The target behavior must be observed
before and after manipulating
variables 4. The results of behavioral
observations are placed on a graph to provide a
visual representation of the effects of the
manipulations.
25
A more detailed example from video
  • Manipulation of environmental events to test
    whether those events serve as motivation
    (reinforcers) for problem behavior

26
Steps in Functional Assessment
  • Indirect Assessment Attempts to gather
    information about challenging behavior w/o use of
    direct observation
  • Questionnaires, rating scales, etc.
  • Want to identify potential triggers (antecedent
    events) and incentives (reinforcers) for
    challenging behavior

27
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29
Func. Assessment contd.
  • Descriptive Assessment the direct observation of
    problem behavior and its antecedents and
    consequences under naturally occurring conditions
  • Identify environmental events correlated with
    onset of problem behavior (antecedents) and that
    occur as a result of problem behavior
    (consequences)

30
  • Experimental or functional analysis Involves the
    manipulation of environmental events to test
    whether these events serve as incentive
    (reinforcers) for the challenging behavior.
  • FOUR putative reinforcers tested
  • Attention, Access to a preferred tangible item,
    Escape, Sensory Stimulation
  • Under what conditions does the problem behavior
    become more probable?

31
Contextual Manipulation(moving child)
Baseline A
Manipulation B
100
90
80
Percentage of intervals talking to child across
aisle
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10
15-Minute Observation Sessions
32
Curricular Manipulation(high preference/easy
work)
Baseline A
Manipulation B
100
90
80
Percentage of intervals talking to child across
aisle
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10
15-Minute Observation Sessions
33
Functional Manipulation(asking for help and
requesting a break)
Baseline A
Manipulation B
100
90
80
Percentage of intervals talking to child across
aisle
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10
15-Minute Observation Sessions
34
Objective Measures
  • Keeping objective records of the form, frequency,
    and timing of behavior is essential for knowing
    how a behavior appeared during baseline
    conditions (before behavior modification) and how
    it changes after starting behavioral
    interventions.

35
Various Objective Measures Cont.
  • (1.) First, the number of times that a behavior
    occurs is a very useful measure.
  • (2.) Second, frequency data can be calculated by
    dividing count data by the length of the
    observation period.
  • (3.) Third, the time of a behaviors duration may
    be a valuable measure.
  • (4.) Fourth, useful measure is the percentage of
    some task that is completed.
  • (5.) Fifth, rating scales are useful in measuring
    some of the more subtle and elusive features of
    behavior.

36
Data Collection
  • Data needs to be collected in ways that allow
    them to be recorded on graphs, checklists,
    notebooks, ABC diaries, computers, or other such
    devices.
  • Direct Observation. When we can observe a
    behavior easily, we may be able to count or
    measure it by any of the five methods just
    described.

37
Data Collection Cont.
  • Indirect Observation. Sometimes data on behavior
    come from indirect observations We observe the
    results of the behavior, not the behavior itself.
  • Questionnaires and Their Variations. Sometimes
    questionnaires and interviews that are given to
    individuals who have experiences with the target
    behavior can yield valuable information about the
    ABCs of behavior.

38
Experimental Designs
  • There are several different experimental designs
    or scientific procedures that are useful in
    testing our hypotheses about the possible
    controlling variables that may influence a target
    behavior.

39
Reversal Designs
  • The most basic and important of experimental
    designs is called the reversal design, because it
    allows various types of behavioral interventions
    to be introduced and then removed or reversed
    under the experimenters control.
  • This simple reversal design is an ABA design
    where A indicates baseline, B is the experimental
    intervention, and the second A is the reversal to
    baseline. If the behavioral intervention proves
    to be useful, we may want to reinstate the
    intervention (B) a second time, creating an ABAB
    design.

40
Reversal Designs Cont.
  • Sometimes behavioral changes that appear in a
    successful intervention do not disappear in the
    reversal phase (the second A of the ABAB design).
  • If an intervention helps a person learn valuable
    skills that yield high levels of natural
    reinforcement such as riding without painful
    falls that reinforcement can sustain high rates
    of success during the reversal (phase 3, the
    second A), even though the behavioral
    intervention has ended.

41
Reversal Designs Cont.
  • The same is true for many behaviors - such as
    being polite, doing arithmetic, catching
    baseballs, and so on. Once learned, valuable
    skills may never be lost. Therefore, when
    behavioral interventions produce changes that are
    not lost during the reversal phase, we know
    something valuable was learned during the
    intervention. In addition, the absence of a
    decline in behavior during the reversal phase
    indicates the intervention does not have total
    control over the behavior. Natural reinforcers
    have taken control, making the behavioral
    intervention no longer necessary.

42
Reversal Designs Cont.
  • Some ethical issues can emerge when using
    reversal designs.

43
Multiple-Baseline Designs
  • Multiple-baseline designs begin baseline
    observations on any of the four things being
    studied be they people, behaviors, settings, or
    time then gradually shift each one, one at a
    time, to the experimental intervention.
  • Multiple-baseline design across different people.
  • Multiple-baseline design can be used across
    different behaviors.

44
Multiple-Baseline Designs Cont.
  • Multiple-baseline design can be used to study one
    behavioral intervention across different
    settings.
  • Finally, multiple-baseline design can be used
    across different times.
  • A major advantage of multiple-baseline design is
    that it allows us to study behaviors that we may
    not want to put on reversal.

45
Alternating-Treatment Designs
  • Alternating-treatment designs test the efficacy
    of two or more treatments by alternating among
    them in clearly different stimulus situations.

46
Group Experimental Designs
  • Group experimental designs allow us to evaluate
    the effectiveness of a behavioral intervention
    with an experimental group by comparing that
    group with a similar group of people called the
    control group that does not receive the
    intervention.
  • Group experimental designs differ in several ways
    from all the preceding designs, which are called
    single-subject designs.

47
Group Experimental Designs Cont.
  • Both group and single-subject designs are
    valuable, though for different reasons.
  • Group designs reveal average scores, which can be
    very useful in predicting how the average person
    would respond to various interventions.
  • In contrast, single-subject designs allow us to
    assess the behavior of each unique individual, by
    himself or herself, to see what kind of
    behavioral interventions help that individual
    attain desirable behavioral changes.

48
Group Experimental Designs Cont.
  • Group designs have been used in many branches of
    science, and they are invaluable when we need to
    see how an intervention will affect large numbers
    or special types of people.
  • However, studying data on group averages can
    obscure the fact that a given behavioral
    intervention may not help certain individuals
    change, even though it helped many.

49
Evaluation
  • The visual inspection of behavioral graphs offer
    us three ways to identify which behavioral
    changes are meaningful or not.
  • (1.) First, when every response during
    intervention is higher (or lower) than all the
    baseline responses, a major change has occurred.

50
Evaluation Cont.
  • (2.) Second, when dealing with behaviors that
    change slowly, behavior modification is
    considered effective if there is a clear trend
    for the behavior to improve during behavioral
    intervention.
  • (3.) Third, the weakest test, is to see if the
    frequency of the target behavior at the end of
    behavior modification is clearly different from
    baseline.

51
Evaluation Cont.
  • Arnold Lazarus (1997, p. 369) suggests that it
    may soon be unethical, unprofessional, and
    perhaps illegal to by-pass scientifically
    established treatments of choice for specific
    disorders.
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