Spelling suggestions: "subject:"reinforcement (mpsychology"" "subject:"reinforcement (bpsychology""
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Self-concept, self-reinforcement, and private speechSouthmayd, Stephen E. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Extinction of a free operant response in pre-school children following partial and regular schedules of primary and potential secondary reinforcement.Fort, Jane Geraldine 01 January 1960 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Electrical stimulation of the brain as a reinforcing stimulusBeninger, Richard J. January 1977 (has links)
Note:
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A behavioural-educational approach to reducing disruptive behaviour /Rose, Malcolm I. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparison of omission training with constant or changing reinforcers vs. extinction:response reduction and recoveryVatterott, Madeleine Kay. January 1984 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1984 V37 / Master of Science
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THE EFFECTS OF COUNSELING AND VERBAL REINFORCEMENT ON THE INTERNAL-EXTERNAL CONTROL OF THE DISABLEDCoven, Arnold Barrett, 1929- January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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A Behavioral Economic Analysis of Different Reinforcers: Sound-Clips Versus Points Exchangeable for MoneyAlvey, Debi A. 12 1900 (has links)
Human operant studies frequently use points exchangeable for money as reinforcers. Some studies employ more immediately consumable reinforcers to emulate properties of food reinforcers. This study examined demand for points/money and for sound-clips to compare their economic characteristics. Across four participants, demand was often higher and less elastic for points/money than for sounds. During subsequent exposures at each response requirement, demand for sounds often decreased to a greater degree than demand for points/money. Thus, sound-clips seem less durable than points/money across prices and across repeated exposure to the same price. Response rates for points/money were often higher than for sounds, suggesting that reinforcers that generate higher response rates may be less elastic than reinforcers that generate lower response rates.
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The Effects of Cumulative Consumption Feedback On Demand For Money As A CommodityBailey, Kathleen 05 1900 (has links)
Behavioral economic theory describes a relation between response requirement and magnitude of reinforcement, and combines these variables into one independent variable (unit price) affecting operant behavior. This study investigated the relative effects of cumulative feedback on consumption for money as a commodity. Subjects were exposed to ranges of unit prices with or without a cumulative feedback bar on the computer screen indicating monetary earnings. For all participants in this study, consumption of money was a decreasing function of unit prices and the results from the present study are consistent with the behavioral economic prediction that increasing the unit price of a commodity will decrease consumption of that commodity. Analyses of demand curves, elasticity coefficients and response rates suggested differences between Feedback and No Feedback groups, although these were small and not statistically significant. The small differences observed were consistent with a behavior strengthening effect of feedback.
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Topographical analysis of reinforcement produced variability: Generalizations across settings and contingencies.Gomez, Francisco 08 1900 (has links)
This study evaluated the effects of programming a variability contingency on one object and the generalization of variability across other objects and contingencies when the defining features of the variable responses were topographical differences. A dog's interactions with five different objects were measured under both ANY (where any physical contact with the object would be reinforced on a fixed ratio schedule) and the VAR contingencies (where only the novel responses per trial would be reinforced). The ANY contingency produced stereotyped responding of behavior with all objects. When one of the dog-object interactions was changed to the VAR contingency, a marked decrease in stereotypic behavior and an increase in novel responses in the form of topographical combinations were observed across both contingencies.
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Suppressive effects of a stimulus correlated with reprimands for automatically-maintained eye poking.McKenzie, Scott Daniel 05 1900 (has links)
A functional analysis, conducted to assess the variables maintaining the chronic eye poking of a female diagnosed with profound mental retardation, indicated that the behavior persisted in the absence of social contingencies. A procedure was initiated in a training environment in which a punisher (mild reprimand) was delivered contingent on eye poking in the presence, but not in the absence, of a neutral stimulus (wristbands). Using a combination of multiple baseline and multielement experimental designs, it was determined that that eye poking was suppressed in the presence of the previously neutral stimulus, even in environments in which the reprimand contingency was inoperative.
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