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PS 522: Behavioral Measures and Interpretation of Data Lisa R. Jackson, Ph.D.
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The process of applying quantitative labels to observed properties of events using a standard set of rules
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How scientists operationalize empiricism ◦ Without measurement, science is guesswork and opinion Applied behavior analysts measure behavior to answer questions ◦ Basis for talking about behavior ◦ Determining increases, decreases ◦ To test the usefulness of interventions
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To evaluate effects of intervention ◦ Before and after treatment ◦ During treatment To guide decision making To prevent mistakes ◦ Continue ineffective treatment ◦ Discontinue effective treatment
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In general, measurements can be classified into four different types of scales: Nominal Ordinal Interval Ratio Different scales allow you to use different data and analyze it differently You want to know how you want to analyze before you collect data, so you know what to collect, know what questions to ask
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Nominal scales put data into categories: Male/female, yes/no responses, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, behaviors You can calculate the mode, but not the mean or median Ex: You can’t average male/female
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Ordinal scales rank data in order You can determine the order, but not the difference between data You can ask how often a child kicks another child: always, frequently, infrequently, never, but you can’t tell how many more kicks frequently is than infrequently You can also ask how severe a disorder is, with 1 being mild and 7 being severe ◦ But you can’t tell if a 2 is 3x as severe as 1 or if 5 is 8x as severe as 2 With ordinal data, you can find a mean or percentile
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Interval scales put data into order at specific intervals The distance between 1 and 25 is the same as the distance between 72 and 96 Likert scales are an example of an interval scale, where the difference between 3 and 4 is the same as the difference between 6 and 7 With interval data, you can calculate a mean, median, standard dev, correlation, regression, ANOVA
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Ratios are a measure of a value in relation to a constant ◦ Time is an example: minutes are a unit of an hour, days are a unit of a year, etc ◦ A percentage is a ratio: 24 out of 30 on a test = 80% Ratio scales have an absolute zero, as compared to an interval scale where 0 is arbitrary With ratios, you can calculate mean, median, mode, standard dev, correlation, regression, ANOVA, ANCOVA, logarithms
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Dimensions are distinct features that can be measured Used to detect and compare changes in behavior and environment Looks at levels of behaviors, changes in behaviors, impact of the introduction or withdrawal of variable and stability of changes Three fundamental properties: ◦ Repeatability or countability: behavior can be counted ◦ Temporal extent: duration, measured in time, how long it lasts ◦ Temporal locus: when behavior occurs relative to other events Ex: latency (how long after an event) Inter-response time, time between 2 events
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A tally of the number of occurrences of a behavior ◦ The number of mat problems a child gets correct Reported as a standard number Count may not always provide much useful information, though If Katie got 5, 10 and 15 answers correct over 3 days, that might seem like improvement until you realize that the counts covered 5 min, 20 min and 2 hours Therefore, the time period must always be designated
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Rate/Frequency ◦ Ratio of count per observation period More meaningful than count alone ◦ Previous example: Katie got 1 problem correct/min,.5 problem correct/min, and.125 problem correct/min, so you can see she’s not improving Include counting time for reference Rate of correct and incorrect responses helpful in skill development Reported as number per standard unit of time
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Duration ◦ The amount of time a behavior occurs; how long someone engages in the target behavior Can be used for behaviors that have a high rate of frequency (rocking, hand flapping, etc) Duration of session: ◦ Cumulative time within an observation period, ex: during 30 min free play ◦ Amount of time person spends in an activity, no minimum or maximum time; time spent in the senior center Duration of each occurrence: how long each event lasts ◦ Bobby was out of his seat for 3, 7, 2, 4 and 8 min on Thursday Count and duration measures provide different pictures of same behavior
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Response latency ◦ Measure of elapsed time between onset of stimulus and initiation of response How long does the student delay before complying with directions? How long does the teen wait before retaliating against others? Typically reported as mean, median, and range
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Interresponse time (IRT) ◦ The amount of time that elapses between two consecutive instances of a response How long between outbursts? Shorter IRTS are associated with higher rates of response Longer IRTS are associated with lower rates of response Very useful when trying to reduce rates of responding using DRL Typically reported as mean, median, and range per observation period
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Percentage ◦ A ratio formed by combining the same dimensional qualities (number/number, duration/duration ◦ Expresses proportional quantity Proportion of correct to incorrect Proportion of observation intervals when behavior occurred Can’t be used for all measures, but is easily understandable
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Trials-to-criterion ◦ Number of response opportunities needed to achieve a predetermined level of performance How many trials required to tie a shoe correctly Often reported as the “cost” of a treatment or instructional method Often used to compare the efficacy of different treatments or instructional methods Can assess changes in competence ◦ Fewer trials needed to learn color red than blue than yellow = increasing skill in learning colors
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Topography ◦ The physical form or shape of a behavior Measurable dimension Malleable by consequences Important where form, style are valued ◦ Painting, sculpting, dancing, gymnastics, handwriting Specific topographies produce different outcomes ◦ Sitting up straight, looking at teacher vs. slouching with head on desk Not a fundamental quality of behavior
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Magnitude ◦ The force or intensity with which a response is emitted Important parameter for some responses ◦ Voice volume: too low or too high ◦ Pressing a pencil too hard or not hard enough Not a fundamental quality of behavior
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Thanks for participating! I am sure you have been asking questions here in seminar! Great job! But, if you have more, email me: Ljackson2@kaplan.edu Ljackson2@kaplan.edu These slides are posted in the Doc Sharing area for your review.
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