Title: SelfDirected Behavior Modification Project
1Self-Directed Behavior Modification Project
Reference Watson, D. L. Tharp, R. G. (1997)
Self-directed behavior Self-modification for
personal adjustment (7th ed.). Pacific Grove, CA
Brooks/Cole.
2Identifying the Target Behavior
- Specific behavior to be changed (concrete and
observable) - Specific situations in which the behavior occurs
- Choose a behavior that you are motivated to
change. - Short-term vs. long-term goals
3Specifying Behaviors in Situations
- 1. Make a list of concrete examples.
- 2. List the details of your problem.
- 3. Become an observer of yourself.
- 4. Your strategy should always be to increase
some desirable behavior.
4When youre not doing what you want to be doing
- My goal is _________________
- (what you want to do)
- when_____________________.
- (the situation)
5When the problem is getting rid of some
undesirable behavior
- I want to quit goofing off and study more or
- I want to increase studying in those situations
in which I should study.
6Specifying Behaviors in Situations
- 5. Specify the chain of events that will lead to
your goal. - 6. Observe other people who are successful at
what you are trying to do, and then try their
tactics yourself. - 7. Think of alternative solutions.
7Anticipating Obstacles
- Expect mistakes.
- Dont blame mistakes on your personality.
- Prepare for temptations.
8Observing your Behavior Structured Diaries
- Antecedents
- Behavior
- Consequences
9(No Transcript)
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12Antecedents Behaviors Consequences
feeling stressed spanking
feeling bad kids misbehavior
But if instead
substitute kids misbehavior
punishment feeling good
(no spanking)
13Simple counting Frequency or duration
- Number of alcoholic drinks per day
- Number of cigarettes smoked per day
- Minutes studying per day
- Number of days jogging per week
- Number of times biting nails per day
- Hours slept per night
- Money spent on junk food per day
14Four rules for self-observation
- Do the counting when the behavior occurs, not
later. - Be accurate and strict in your counting. Try to
include all instances of the behavior. - Keep written records.
- Keep the recording system as simple as possible.
Try to fit it into your usual habits.
15Principles of Self-Regulation
- Throughout life, regulation by others and the
self (particularly through verbal instructions)
acts as a powerful guide to behavior. - Operant behavior is a function of its
consequences. - A positive reinforcer is a consequence that
maintains and strengthens behavior by its added
presence.
16Principles of Self-Regulation
- A negative reinforcer is a consequence that
strengthens behavior by being subtracted from the
situation. - Behavior that is punished will occur less often.
- An act that was reinforced but no longer is will
begin to weaken. - Intermittent reinforcement increases resistance
to extinction.
17Principles of Self-Regulation
- Most operant behavior is eventually guided by
antecedent stimuli, or cues, the most important
of which are often self-directed statements. - An antecedent can be a cue or signal that an
unpleasant event may be imminent. This is likely
to produce avoidance behavior.
18Principles of Self-Regulation
- Through conditioning, antecedents come to elicit
automatic reactions that are often emotional. - Many behaviors are learned by observing someone
else (a model) perform the actions, which are
then imitated.
19Antecedents
- What stimuli seem to control the behavior? In
what situations does the behavior occur? - Do you react automatically to some cue with
undesirable behavior? - Do you react to some cue with an unwanted
emotion? What is the conditioned stimulus for
it? - What are you saying to yourself before the
behavior?
20Behavior
- Is it strong and quite frequent, or is it weak
and not very frequent? - Is any element of your problem due to something
you are avoiding, perhaps unnecessarily? - Are you aware of models in your past whose
behavior you may have copied? - Is the behavior resistant to extinction either
because it is intermittently reinforced or
because it is an avoidance behavior?
21Consequences
- Are your desired behaviors positively reinforced?
- What actions make the desired behavior difficult?
Are they reinforced? - Is it possible that the desired behavior is being
punished? - Is your own self-speech rewarding or punishing
your behavior? - Are the consequences for some behaviors difficult
to identify, perhaps because of intermittent
reinforcement?
22Features of a good plan
- Rules that state the techniques to use in
specific situations - Goals and subgoals
- Feedback about your behavior based on your
self-observations - A comparison of the feedback to your goals to see
if you are progressing - Adjustments in the plan as conditions change
23Goals for next 2 weeks
- Literature review
- Baseline data of target behavior (graph or chart,
1-2 weeks) - Both due in class on Tues, October 3