Stimulus Control Chapter 17.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Social Learning / Imitation
Advertisements

Building Student Independence 1. Staying connected 2.
Chapter 16: Motivating Operations
SPED 3380 Antecedent Interventions. INCREASE OR MAINTAIN A BEHAVIOR REDUCE A BEHAVIOR ESTABLISH A BEHAVIOR Haus & Polsgrove, 1980 Antecedents ConsequencesAntecedents.
Overview of Conditioning. Need to Examine Behavior Look at the behavior of an organism’s interaction with its environment Displacements in space through.
PowerPoint Slides to Accompany Applied Behavior Analysis for Teachers Seventh Edition Paul A. Alberto Anne C. Troutman ISBN: Alberto &
Chapter 20: Chaining Cooper, Heron, and Heward
Behavioral Theories Of Learning
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 10 – Stimulus Control of Behavior.
Developing Stimulus Control. Peak Shift Phenomena where the peak of the generalization curve shifts AWAY from the S- – Means that the most responding.
Stimulus Control Advanced Applied Behavior Analysis
Stimulus Control and Language. Why is Understanding Stimulus Control so Important in Teaching Children with Autism? “Because the aim of virtually all.
Stimulus Control.
Chapter 13 (Cooper) Chapter 17 (Sulzer-Azaroff)
Chapter 11 Instructional Procedures © Taylor & Francis 2015.
Supporting the Instructional Process Instructional Assistant Training.
PowerPoint Slides to Accompany Applied Behavior Analysis for Teachers Seventh Edition Paul A. Alberto Anne C. Troutman ISBN: Alberto & Troutman.
Chapter 3 Methods for Recording Behavior EDP 7058.
Motivating Operations
Stimulus Control.
Antecedent Control Procedures
Planning Lessons - Step One The Plan Specify objectives Select learning activities Organize learning activities Specify evaluation procedures.
Developing New Behavior Week 9. Non Contingent Reinforcement Potency (e.g. amount/quality) of “R+” Include Extinction Vary “Reinforcement”
Module 4: Thursday, November 4, What should we have completed by now? MOU Rubric Next Steps for District Plan.
Building Student Independence 1. Getting re-connected 2.
Common Instructional Practices for Students on the Autism Spectrum Lorien Quirk, M.Ed., BCBA Behaviorist Program Manager Mt. Diablo Unified School District,
Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior Discrimination Generalization Generalization Gradients Peak Shift Concepts Overview of stimulus control of operant.
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Terminology –Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS): evokes an unconditioned response without previous conditioning.
Learning Theories Learning To gain knowledge, understanding, or skill, by study, instruction, or experience.
The Structured Classroom Series Instructional Practices Mini-Session.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Antecedent Control: Rules and Goals Chapter 17.
Behavior Intervention Prompting and Prompt Fading: Teaching Children with Autism 1 This software is licensed under the BC Commons LicenseBC Commons License.
Instruction & Reinforcement. Identify a student and using instructional procedures in your book teach a skill: Use at least 4 strategies. Incorporate.
Antecedent Based Interventions
10/23/2014 Dr. Y. Xu 1 ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities This week’s topics:  Embedded learning opportunities.
Chapter 17 Capitalizing on Existing Stimulus Control: Rules and Goals.
1 ABA 635 Concept Formation Caldwell College Applied Behavior Analysis Dr. Ken Reeve.
Setting Limits on Behavior. Community Guidelines Conversation: Quiet side conversations totally OK, please take cell phones outside Help: Raise your hand.
Prompting: Impact on Inferences about Student Learning Project #H325A
Behavior Modification II: ABC Complexities Lesson 7.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Getting a New Sequence of Behaviors to Occur with Behavioral Chaining Chapter 11.
Chaining.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Changing the Control of a Behavior with Fading Chapter 9.
Shaping.
Chapter 3 Identifying, Developing, and Managing Operant Antecedents.
Discrimination & Complex Stimulus Control Chs12 & 13.
Conferina Naională de Analiză Aplicată a Comportamentului (ABA), Ediia a III-a Conditional Discrimination Procedures: Understanding to Application Conferina.
Chapter 9 Principles of Learning. You walk into a kitchen and smell your favorite food. - What physically happens to you? - What happens mentally?
Equivalence Classes Ps625 Concept Formation Dr. Ken Reeve Caldwell College Grad ABA Programs.
Chapter 2: Behavioral Learning Theory What causes change in behavior?
PS527: Implementing Behavioral Change Welcome and Hello I am your professor for this course: G. Evelyn LeSure-Lester, Ph.D.
Advanced ABA for Teachers ED 556. Today… Quiz Article Presentation by Lauren Questions about course requirements PsychINFO assignment questions Review:
Differential Reinforcement: Antecedent Control and Shaping Lecture Notes for SPEC 3020 November 17, 2009.
FIRM PROBLEM SOLVER (MAND) TALKER (MAND>ECHOIC) LISTENER (ADHERE TO) Unit 1.
CHAPTER 5: Behavioral and Social Theories of Learning © (2015, 2012, 2009) by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Educational Psychology: Theory.
Stimulus Control Justin Daigle, BCBA, LBA. Stimulus “An energy change that affects an organism through is receptor cells” (Michael, 2004, p.7) Note: Stimulus.
Chapter 18: Imitation Cooper, Heron, and Heward
Basic Learning Processes Robert C. Kennedy, PhD University of Central Florida
Cooper, Heron, and Heward Applied Behavior Analysis, Second Edition Copyright © 2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 19: Shaping.
 Systematic desensitization ◦ Technique developed by Joseph Wolpe  Teach relaxation skills  Create fear hierarchy  Sufferers learn to relax while.
Conditioning and Learning Unit 6 Conditioning and Learning Modules
Seminar 4 Applied Behavior Analysis I PS 360 Israel A. Sarasti, Ph.D.
Unit 4 Projects will be returned by Sunday if they were submitted by the deadline Rubrics are at the end of your paper Questions? Antecedent Control Procedures-ch16.
Antecedent Control: Modeling, Guidance, and Situational Inducement
Getting a New Sequence of Behaviors to Occur with Behavioral Chaining
Antecedent Control: Modeling, Guidance, and Situational Inducement
Stimulus Control.
Getting a New Sequence of Behaviors to Occur with Behavioral Chaining
Changing the Control of a Behavior with Fading
Chapter 9 Developing Appropriate Behavior with Fading
Presentation transcript:

Stimulus Control Chapter 17

What is stimulus control? Stimulus control occurs when The rate, latency, duration, or amplitude of a response is altered In the presence of an antecedent stimulus Stimulus control is acquired when Responses are reinforced only in the presence of a specific stimulus Known as the discriminative stimulus (SD) And not in the presence of other stimuli Known as stimulus deltas (S

The Development of Stimulus Control SD Response SR+ Friendly conversation Telephone rings Pick up phone and say “hello” Response S SO Doorbell rings Pick up phone and say “hello” Friendly conversation withheld

Not to be confused with respondent conditioning UCS Response Meat powder Dog salivates Neutral S Response Bell rings Dog salivates UCS Meat powder

Not to be confused with respondent conditioning CS Response Bell rings Dog salivates Notice the absence of any consequence stimuli in this example. Salivating is a respondent behavior. Also notice that here control is established by pairing specific antecedent stimuli.

Stimulus Control and Motivating Operations Similarities Both events occur before the behavior of interest Both events have evocative functions However, they are different!

Motivating Operations Remember, a motivating operation is something that changes the value of a stimulus as a reinforcer Establishing operation (EO) makes the reinforcer more valuable Abolishing operation (AO) makes the reinforcer less valuable

MOs and Stimulus Control EO SR- SD Response Difficult Worksheet Task break provided Teacher 1 Student displays aggression Response SO EO S Difficult Worksheet Teacher 2 Student displays aggression Task break withheld

Stimulus Generalization Occurs when stimuli that share similar physical characteristics with the controlling stimulus evoke the same behavior as the controlling stimulus

Stimulus Discrimination Occurs when new stimuli that are similar to the controlling stimulus do not evoke the same response as the controlling stimulus

Stimulus Control and Stimulus Generalization are a Continuum

Development of Stimulus Control Stimulus discrimination training Requires one behavior Two antecedent stimulus conditions (the SD and the S) Responses that occur in the presence of the SD are reinforced (thus, the response increases in the presence of the SD) Responses that occur in the presence of the S are not reinforced (this, the response decreases in the presence of the S Can also result in a lesser amount or quality of reinforcement

The Development of Stimulus Control SD Response SR+ Friendly conversation Telephone rings Pick up phone and say “hello” Response S SO Doorbell rings Pick up phone and say “hello” Friendly conversation withheld

Concept Formation Not a hypothetical construct or mental process Complex example of stimulus control that requires Stimulus generalization within a class of stimuli Stimulus discrimination between classes of stimuli

Example: Concept of Red Stimulus generalization across all red objects Light red to dark red Different objects (car, ball, pencil) Stimulus discrimination between red and other colors Red ball vs. yellow ball Red dress vs. blue dress

Teaching Concepts Requires discrimination training Antecedent stimuli representative of a group of stimuli sharing a common relationship (examples) are presented, along with… Antecedent stimuli from other stimulus classes (nonexamples) So that the examples form a stimulus class

Types of Stimulus Classes Feature stimulus class Stimuli share common physical forms (i.e., topographical structures) Stimuli share common relative relationship (i.e., spatial arrangements) Developed through stimulus generalization Arbitrary stimulus class Do not share a common stimulus feature Limited number of stimuli Developed using stimulus equivalence

Stimulus Equivalence The emergence of accurate responding to untrained and nonreinforced stimulus-stimulus relations following the reinforcement of responses to some stimulus-stimulus relations Useful for teaching complex verbal relations Reading Language arts Mathematics

Testing for Stimulus Equivalence Must have a positive demonstration on 3 different behavioral tests that represent the following mathematical statement: If A = B, and B = C, then A = C

Tests for Stimulus Equivalence Reflexivity Occurs when in the absence of training and reinforcement, a participant selects a stimulus that is matched to itself (A = A) Matching to sample

Tests for Stimulus Equivalence Symmetry Occurs with reversibility of the sample stimulus and the comparison stimulus (if A = B, then B = A) Teach spoken word “bicycle” = Present and participant matches to spoken word “bicycle” (as opposed to “car” or “airplane”)

Tests for Stimulus Equivalence Transitivity Requires demonstration of three untrained stimulus-stimulus sequences A = B relation (spoken name = picture) “Bicycle” (spoken name presented) (Child selects picture)

Tests for Stimulus Equivalence Transitivity Requires demonstration of three untrained stimulus-stimulus sequences B = C relation (picture = written word) (picture presented) bicycle airplane car (Child selects written word)

Tests for Stimulus Equivalence Transitivity Requires demonstration of three untrained stimulus-stimulus sequences A = C relation (spoken word = written word) “bicycle” (spoken word presented) bicycle airplane car (Child selects written word)

Matching-to-Sample Participant observes the sample stimulus The comparison stimuli are then presented Participant makes a selection response Matches are reinforced Nonmatches are not reinforced

Matching-to-Sample Conditional discrimination training Same selection must be correct with one conditional stimulus, but incorrect with one or more other sample stimuli Sample 1 Sample 2

Factors Affecting Stimulus Control Consistent use of reinforcers contingent upon correct responding in the presence of the SD is critical Also important are: Pre-attending skills Stimulus salience Masking and overshadowing

Pre-attending A prerequisite skill for stimulus control Looking at instructional materials Looking at teacher when responses are modeled Listening to oral instructions Sitting quietly for short periods of time These may need to be taught before stimulus control procedures are implemented

Stimulus Salience Prominence of the stimulus in the environment Increased saliency facilitates efficiency of instruction

Masking and Overshadowing Increase or decrease salience of stimuli Competing stimuli may block the evocative function of an SD To limit the negative effects of these: Rearrange the environment Make instructional stimuli more intense Consistently reinforce behavior in the presence of instructionally-relevant stimuli

Using Prompts Supplementary antecedent stimuli used to occasion a correct response in the presence of an SD (that will eventually control behavior) Response prompts operate directly on the response Stimulus prompts operate directly on the antecedent task stimuli

Response Prompts Verbal instructions Modeling Physical Guidance Vocal Non-vocal (e.g., written) Modeling A demonstration of the desired behavior Physical Guidance Partially physically guide the student’s movements Intrusiveness increases

Stimulus Prompts Movement cues Position cues Redundance Pointing, tapping, touching, looking at Position cues Place one stimulus closer to the student Redundance Stimulus or response dimensions are paired with correct choice

Transfer of Stimulus Control Prompts should be used only during acquisition Transfer stimulus control from prompt to naturally-existing stimuli quickly using fading

Transferring from Response Prompts Most-to-least prompts Physically guide participant through entire performance Gradually reduce amount of physical assistance Modeling Verbal instruction Natural stimulus

Transferring from Response Prompts Graduated guidance Immediately fade physical prompts Follow participant closely with hands Gradually increase distance between hands and participant

Transferring from Response Prompts Least-to-most prompts Provide participant with an opportunity to perform the response with the least amount of assistance on each trial Participant receives greater degrees of assistance with each successive trial without a correct response

Transferring from Response Prompts Time delay Varying the time interval between presentation of a natural stimulus and the presentation of a response prompt Constant time delay Begin with a 0-sec delay Then use a fixed delay (e.g., 3 sec) Progressive time delay Gradually and systematically increase delay (e.g., in 1-sec intervals) according to some rule

Transferring from Stimulus Prompts Stimulus fading Highlighting a physical dimension of a stimulus and then gradually fading that exaggerated dimension Superimposing one stimulus on top of another and gradually fading it out

Transferring from Stimulus Prompts Stimulus shape transformations Use an initial stimulus shape that will prompt a correct response This shape is gradually changed to form the natural stimulus, while maintaining correct responding