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Chapter 9 PSY

B.F. Skinner

TermDefinition
Acquisition That part of operant conditioning in which an operant response is followed by a reinforcer, thereby increasing the rate with which the response occurs.
Avoidance Contingency Situation in which the organism can avoid an aversive stimulus by engaging in appropriate activity.
Behavior Therapy Approach to treating behavior disorders that is based on any one of several learning theories.
Chaining Situation in which one response brings the organism into contcact with the stimuli that (1) reinforce that response and (2) stimulate the next response. It can also involve other people.
Classical Conditioning Type of conditioning studied by Ivan Pavlov and used by J.B Watson as a model for his version of behaviorism.
Conditioned Response (CR) Response similar to an unconditioned response that is elicited by a previously neutral stimulus.
Conditioned Stimulus (CS) Stimulus that, before classical conditioning principles are applied, is biologically neutral; that is, it does not elicit a natural reaction from an organism.
Contingency Contracting Agreement between two people that when one acts in an appropriate way, the other one gives him or her something in value.
Contingency Management Purposive manipulation of reinforcement contingencies so they encourage desirable behaviors.
Contingent Reinforcement Situation in which a certain response must be made before a reinforcer is obtained; that is, no response, no reinforcer.
Continuous Reinforcement Schedule Schedule of reinforcement that reinforces a desired response each time it occurs. No response, nor reinforcer
Cultural Engineering Use of contingency management in designing a culture.
Culture According to Skinner, a set of reinforcement contingencies
Differential Reinforcement Situation in which some responses are reinforced and others are not.
Discriminative Operant Operant response that is made under one set of circumstances but not under others
Discriminative Stimulus (SD) Cue indicating that if a certain response is made it will be followed by reinforcement.
Echoic Behavior Accurate repeating of what someone else had said.
Escape Contingency Situation in which an organism must respond in a certain way to escape from an aversive stimulus. All negative reinforcement involves an escape contingency.
Extinction Weakening of an operant response by removing the reinforcer that had been following the response during acquisition. When a response returns to its operant level, it has been extinguished.
Fixed Interval Reinforcement Schedule (FI) reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response that is made only after a specified interval of time has passed. (ex. 30 second intervals)
Fixed Ratio Reinforcement Schedule (FR) Reinforcement schedule that reinforces every nth response. For example, every fifth response the organism makes is reinforced (FR5) (ex. a child is given candy for every 3-10 pages read).
Functional Analysis Skinner's approach to research that attempted to relate measurable environmental events to measurable behavior and bypass cognitive and physiological processes altogether.
Generalized Reinforcers Class of secondary reinforcers that have been paired with more than one primary reinforcer, they do not depend on a particular motivational state.
Negative Reinforcement Type of reinforcement that occurs when a response removes a primary or secondary negative reinforcer.
Noncontingent Reinforcement Situation in which no relationship exists between an organisms behavior and the availability of reinforcement.
Operant Behavior Behavior that cannot be linked to any known stimulus and therefore appears to be emitted rather than elicited.
Operant Conditioning AKA "Type R Conditioning" Modification of response strength by manipulation of the consequences of the response. Responses that are followed by a reinforcer gain in strength; responses not followed by a reinforcer become weaker, Willful
Operant Level Frequency with which an operant response is made before it is systematically reinforced.
Partial Reinforcement Effect (PRE) Fact that a partially or intermittently reinforced response will take longer to extinguish than a response on a continuous or a 100% schedule of reinforcement.
Partial Reinforcement Schedule Schedule of reinforcement that sometimes reinforces a desired response and sometimes does not. In other words, the response is maintained on a schedule of reinforcement somewhere between 100% and 0%.
Positive Reinforcement Type of reinforcement that occurs when a response makes available a primary or secondary positive reinforcer.
Primary Negative Reinforcer Negative reinforcer that threatens an organism's survival -- for example, pain or oxygen deprivation.
Primary Positive Reinforcer Positive reinforcer that enhances an organism's survival -- for example, food or water.
Primary Reinforcer Any stimulus that is positively or negatively related to an organism's survival, such as food, water, oxygen, shelter, and sexual activity.
Punishment Either removing a positive reinforcer or presenting a negative reinforcer.
Radical Behaviorism Proposed by J.B. Watson, by which only directly observable events, such as stimuli and responses, should constitute the subject matter of psychology.
Rate of Responding Used by Skinner to demonstrate operant conditioning. If a response is followed by a reinforcer, the rate of frequency with which it is made will increase; if a response is not followed by a reinforcer its rate or frequency will stay the same.
Respondent Behavior Behavior that is elicited by a known stimulus
Respondent Conditioning AKA "Type S Conditioning" Another term for classical or Pavlovian conditioning, Reflexive
Secondary Negative Reinforcer Negative reinforcer that derives its reinforcing properties through its association with a primary negative reinforcer
Secondary Positive Reinforcer Positive reinforcer that derives its reinforcing properties through its association with a primary positive reinforcer.
Secondary Reinforcer Objects or events that acquire reinforcing properties through their association with primary reinforcers. In the situation with the light, lever and rat, the light becomes the secondary reinforcer.
Shaping Gradual development of a response that an organism does not normally make. Shaping requires differential reinforcement and successive approximations.
Skinner Box Small experimental chamber that Skinner invented to study operant conditioning
Stimulus Generalization The tendency to emit operant responses in situations other than those in which the responses were learned. As the similarity between the original reinforcing situation and other situations increases, so does the probability of responding to them similarly
Successive Approximations Situation in which only those responses that are increasingly similar to the one ultimately desired and reinforced.
Superstitious Behavior Behavior that develops under noncontingent reinforcement in which the organism seems to believe that a relationship exists between its actions and reinforcement, when in fact no such relationship exists.
Time Out From Reinforcement A form of punishment by which an organism is denied access to positive reinforcers that are normally available in the situation for a specified interval of time.
Type R Conditioning AKA "Operant Conditioning" Term Skinner used to describe the conditioning of operant or emitted behavior to emphasize the importance of the response (R) to such conditioning.
Type S Conditioning AKA "Respondent Conditioning" Term Skinner used to describe classical conditioning to emphasize the importance of the stimulus (S) to such conditioning.
Unconditioned Response (UR) Natural, automatic response elicited by an unconditioned stimulus (US)
Token Economies Usually occurs within an institutional setting such as a psychiatric hospital or school. Within these, desirable behavior is reinforced by tokens (or points/cards) that can subsequently be traded for desirable objects such as a reward (ex. food).
Unconditioned Stimulus (US) Stimulus that elicits an automatic, natural response from an organism. Also called a "primary reinforcer" because conditions ultimately depends on the presence of a US.
Variable Interval Reinforcement Schedule (VI) Reinforcement schedule in which a certain average time interval must pass before a response will be reinforced. For example, the organism is reinforced on the average of every 30 seconds. (ex.- a boss may reward their staff because the've been doing good)
Variable Ratio Reinforcement Schedule (VR) Reinforcement schedule in which a certain average number of responses need to be made before reinforcement is obtained. For example, the organism is reinforced on the average of every fifth response (VR5). (ex. gambling or a salesperson)
Verbal Behavior Skinner's term for language
Walden Two Novel written by Skinner to show how his learning principles could be applied to cultural engineering.
Created by: annalise5590
 

 



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