作者Frieder, Jessica E
ProQuest Information and Learning Co
Utah State University. Special Education and Rehabilitation
書名The effects of quality and magnitude of reinforcement on choice responding
出版項2009
說明1 online resource (241 pages)
文字text
無媒介computer
成冊online resource
附註Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 71-06, Section: B
Publisher info.: Dissertation/Thesis
Advisor: Peterson, Stephanie M
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Utah State University, 2009
Includes bibliographical references
The present study investigated the effects of a concurrent schedules arrangement, in which three dimensions of reinforcement (duration, attention, and stimuli) were manipulated, on choice responding, appropriate behavior, and problem behavior for three participants with disabilities who had escape-maintained problem behavior. Three experiments were conducted in which participants could choose between work, break, or problem behavior. In the first experiment, the choice analysis, three reinforcement dimensions were varied simultaneously for choice responses. In the second experiment, the component choice analysis, reinforcement dimensions were evaluated in isolation. In the third experiment, the effort analysis, increasing task demand requirements and how they affected response allocation were investigated. Results of the first experiment were consistent across all participants, and suggested that participants allocated their choices in favor of reinforcement contingencies that resulted in breaks with the longest duration, high preference stimuli, and high quality attention. Results of the second and third experiments, however, were idiosyncratic across participants. Component choice analysis results suggested that only specific reinforcement dimensions maintained responding for some participants, whereas all reinforcement dimensions maintained response allocation for others. Results of the third experiment suggested that as task demands increased, reinforcement contingencies that previously maintained responding in the second experiment did not always continue to maintain responding for all participants. This study contributes to and extends the literature on choice making in several ways. The majority of previously published investigations evaluated different dimensions of reinforcement when only two response options were concurrently available, and many of these studies only examined one or two reinforcement dimensions. The present study used a concurrent schedules arrangement in which three concurrently available response options existed. Like previous research the present study suggests that quality of reinforcement can be manipulated to effectively bias individuals’ responding in favor of adaptive responses, and the quality variables that impact choice responding may or may not be related to the function of problem behavior. However, further research is needed to understand how choice responding is impacted by increasing demand requirements, as this study demonstrated that choice responding was idiosyncratically affected by changing task demands
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest, 2019
Mode of access: World Wide Web
主題Behavioral psychology
Special education
Electronic books.
0384
0529
ISBN/ISSN9781109308594
QRCode
相關連結: click for full text (PQDT) (網址狀態查詢中....)
館藏地 索書號 條碼 處理狀態  

Go to Top