Top Banner
Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior
30
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Reinforcement: Part 1

Week 5: Increasing Behavior

Page 2: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Positive Reinforcement

• Delivered Immediately after a behavior• Delivered contingent upon a behavior• Increases probability of future behavior

Page 3: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Potential Rule Governed Behavior

• When no immediate consequence• Behavior changes without reinforcement• Large increase in behavior follows one

instance of reinforcement• Rule exists

Page 4: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Some important Points

• We do not reinforce people• Practice is not reinforcement• Feedback is not always reinforcement• Artificial Reinforcement does not mean “fake”

Page 5: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Motivating Operations

• Establishing Operations: Increases temporarily the immediate effectiveness of a reinforcer.– Deprivation

• Abolishing Operations: Decreases temporarily the immediate effectiveness of a reinforcer– Satiation

Page 6: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.
Page 7: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

4 term Contingency

EO A B CNo water Drinking Drink Fluid intake

Fountain

Page 8: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Reinforcement Classification

• Unconditioned– Unlearned– Primary

• Conditioned– Secondary– Learned

Page 9: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Generalized Conditioned Reinforcement

• Neutral Stimulus that is paired with many other reinforcers– The more reinforcers are paired with a neutral

stimulus the more likely the neutral stimulus becomes a GCR

– E.g. money

Page 10: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Premack Principle

• LPR Before access to HPR• Response-Deprivation Hypothesis (Timberlake

& Allison, 1974).– This is an important consideration when

developing treatments.– Don’t just make HPR contingent. – It must be contingent and be deprived relative to

free operant levels!

Page 11: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Identifying Potential Reinforcers

• Stimulus Preference Assessment– Ask People

• Open ended questions• Choice Format• Rank-ordering

– Observe• Contrived• Naturalistic

– Experiment• Single Stimulus• Paired Stimuli• Multiple Stimuli

Page 12: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Identifying Potential Reinforcers Continued

• Reinforcer Assessment– Concurrent Schedule of Reinforcement• May cause premature rejection (preference does not

mean ineffective reinforcer).

– Multiple Schedule Reinforcer Assessment– Progressive-Ratio Schedule Reinforcer Assessment• Increase response effort (schedule) and see how

behavior changes.

Page 13: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Other Methods of Identifying Reinforcers

• ABAB• Non-contingent Reinforcement• Differential Reinforcement

Page 14: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Non-Contingent Reinforcement?

• What is wrong with this term?• Presenting Reinforcement on a time schedule

Page 15: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Tips for Using Reinforcement

• Easily Achieved Initial Criterion• Sufficient Magnitude of Reinforcer• Vary Reinforcer• Direct contingencies when possible• Use prompts with reinforcement• Reinforce each occurrence initially• Use praise/attention with other reinforcers• Gradually increase response-to-reinforcement

delay (some call this fading – it is not – Thinning)

Page 16: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Negative Reinforcement

• Removal of aversive stimulus• Immediately after a behavior• Increases probability of behavior in future

Page 17: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Escape Versus Avoidance

• Escape – Termination• Avoidance – Prevention

Page 18: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Examples?

Page 19: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Schedules of Reinforcement

Page 20: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Fixed Ratio

• Reinforcement delivered after a specific number of target responses are emitted.– Post Reinforcement Pause• Larger the ratio longer the PRP

– DeLuca & Holborn (1990)• Provided FR schedule to pedaling behavior of fat

people. Fat people started pedaling more

Page 21: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Variable Ratio

• Reinforcement provided contingent upon a variable number of responses.

• Strong Consistent Performance• Group Contingencies makes use of VR

Schedules

Page 22: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Fixed Interval

• Reinforcement provided after first response after specified period of time.

• PRP and Scallop Effect• Slow rates of responding

Page 23: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Variable Interval

• Reinforcement provided after first response after variable duration of time elapsed.

• Constant stable rate of responding• Limited Hold: amount of time R+ is available

once interval elapses.

Page 24: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Differential Reinforcement

• DR-Other• DR-Alternate• DR-Icompatiable• DR-Lower Rates• DR-Higher Rates

Page 25: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Compound Schedules of Reinforcement

• Can be:– Successive or simultaneously– With or without discriminative stimuli– Reinforcement for each element or for the

combination of all.

Page 26: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Concurrent Schedules of Reinforcement

• 2 contingencies of reinforcement operating independently and simultaneously– E.g. you can study or go out for the night

• Behaviors are Matched to maximize rates of reinforcement

Page 27: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Discriminative Schedules

• Multiple Schedule (Stimulus discrimination)– Alternating two or more schedules– Uses an S+ to signal each schedule• (e.g. 1 behavior class but two different situations for

two different reinforcement schedules)

• Chained Schedule– Specific order of presentation– Behavior may be different for each schedule– All schedules must be complete for final outcome

Page 28: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Nondiscriminative Schedules

• Mixed Schedules– Same as Mult. But no discriminative stimulus– FR15/FI1 sometimes after FR15 and sometimes

after FI1• Tandem Schedules– Same as chained but no discriminative stimulus– FR 15/FI2 means first instance will be 15 response

and second will be in 2 minutes

Page 29: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Combined Schedules

• Alternative Schedules– Either or Schedule (whichever comes first)

• Conjunctive Schedules– Both Schedules being met before reinforcement is

provided

Page 30: Reinforcement: Part 1 Week 5: Increasing Behavior.

Matching Law

• Myerson Article