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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
131

Efeitos da concorrência entre duas metacontingências em análogos de esquemas de razão sobre contingências comportamentais entrelaçadas / Effects of concurrence between two metacontingencies under an analogous of fixed ratio schedules on interlocking behavioral contingencies

Pedro Augusto dos Anjos Cabral 03 September 2015 (has links)
Os estudos sobre escolha e preferência do comportamento individual a partir de esquemas concorrentes tornaram mais clara a função relativa do reforço no comportamento. No nível cultural, por sua vez, não há estudos experimentais sobre a função relativa de consequências culturais a partir de metacontingências concorrentes, o que certamente limita a compreensão do que leva um grupo a escolher/preferir engajar-se em uma prática em detrimento de outra. O presente trabalho teve o objetivo de aferir experimentalmente a frequência relativa de duas contingências comportamentais entrelaçadas (CCEs) como função da exigência de dois esquemas de razão concorrentes para produção de consequências culturais. Os esquemas de razão para cada contingência entrelaçada foram diferentes a depender da condição (conc FR1 FR1, FR1 FR2, FR1, FR3, FR2 FR2 e FR2 FR3). As duas contingências entrelaçadas relevantes para a produção de consequências culturais foram descritas na instrução, de modo a reduzir variações. Participaram do estudo 12 estudantes universitários divididos em quatro tríades. A tarefa experimental consistiu na escolha de linhas de uma matriz composta por dez linhas e dez colunas, sendo as linhas compostas por cinco cores diferentes alternadas, de modo que cada cor estivesse presente em uma linha par e outra ímpar. Consequências individuais (ganho de fichas trocáveis por dinheiro) foram contingentes a escolhas de linhas ímpares. Consequências culturais (itens escolares a serem doados a uma instituição) foram contingentes a sequências específicas de cores, que correspondiam às escolhas de linhas por cada um dos três participantes. Teve-se como resultados que as Tríades I e II tenderam à estereotipia da CCE associada ao esquema de menor razão ao final das condições, o que não ocorreu para as Tríades III e IV. Para as Tríades I e II, variações tenderam a ocorrer após mudanças de condições em que havia aumento da intermitência de consequências culturais associadas à CCE mais frequente. Também para as Tríades I e II, verbalizações sobre o procedimento foram mais frequentes nos períodos em que variações entre as CCEs relevantes foram mais frequentes. Para as Tríades III e IV, durante a maior parte do estudo não houve diferenciação da frequência entre as duas CCEs às quais consequências culturais eram contingentes, embora tenha havido diferenciação das duas CCEs em relação a outras / Studies about choice and preference using concurrent schedules contributed to better understand the relative function of the reinforcer on behavior. However, at the cultural level there are no experimental studies regarding the relative function of cultural consequences using concurrent metacontingencies, which certainly restricts the understanding about which variables lead a group to choose or prefer to engage in a practice over another. The objective of this experimental study was to assess the relative frequency of two interlocking behavior contingencies (IBCs) as a function of two fixed ratio schedules to produce cultural consequences. The ratio schedules to each interlocking contingency were different depending on the condition (conc FR1 FR1, FR1 FR2, FR1 FR3, FR2 FR2 and FR2 FR3). Both relevant interlocks for the production of cultural consequences were described in the instructions in order to reduce variability. 12 college students participated, divided into four triads. The experimental task consisted of row choices in a matrix comprising ten rows and ten columns, the rows being composed of five different colors, so that each color was present in an even and in an odd row. Individual consequences (earn of coins interchangeable for money) were contingent to the choice of odd rows. Cultural consequences (school supplies to be donated) were contingent to specific sequences of colors that corresponded to the combined row choices of the three participants. The results showed that Triads I and II leaned towards IBC stereotypy associated to the low ratio schedule at the end of the conditions, which did not occur for Triads III and IV. Triads I and II showed that variations tended to occur after experimental condition changes in which there were increased of the ratio schedule to cultural consequences associated to the more frequent IBC. Also, for Triads I and II, verbalizations about the procedure were more frequent when variations between the two IBCs were higher. For Triads III and IV, for most of the study there was no difference in frequency of the two relevant IBCs, although there was difference between the two relevant IBCs in relation to others
132

Contingência e contigüidade no responder de ratos submetidos a esquemas de razão e intervalo variáveis / Contingencies and contiguity imposition on response by exposing rats to variable interval and variable ratio schedule

Cristina Moreira Fonseca 12 May 2006 (has links)
O presente estudo é formado por dois experimentos (Experimento 1 e Experimento 2) que empregaram procedimento de atraso de reforço não sinalizado non-resetting [esquema tandem em que o segundo componente ocorre em tempo fixo (FT)]. Os experimentos tiveram como objetivo geral manipular experimentalmente relações de contingência e contigüidade utilizando diferentes esquemas de reforço (esquema dependente de resposta, esquema dependente da resposta com liberação atrasada do reforço e esquema independente de resposta). Mais especificamente, os experimentos tiveram como objetivo verificar os efeitos produzidos pela introdução do atraso do reforço sobre a taxa e a distribuição de freqüência no tempo das respostas de pressão à barra, emitidas por ratos submetidos a esquemas de intervalo variável (VI) e razão variável (VR).No Experimento 1, os efeitos da introdução de um atraso de 5 s foram comparados à liberação de água independente da resposta (VT). Os resultados do experimento mostraram que, em linha de base (presença de contingência e contigüidade), o esquema VR gerou, relativamente ao VI, taxas de respostas mais elevadas. Com a introdução do atraso de reforço (presença de contingência e contigüidade reduzida) houve diminuição nas taxas de respostas dos sujeitos de ambos os grupos em relação à linha de base, com diminuição maior nas taxas de respostas dos sujeitos do Grupo VI. Na vigência do VT (ausência de contingência, mas não de contigüidade), esta diminuição foi ainda mais acentuada. Os efeitos diferenciados do atraso nos esquemas VI e VR foram detalhados por meio da distribuição de freqüência de respostas no tempo, de modo a se identificarem os valores de atraso que efetivamente ocorreram (isto é, o intervalo entre a liberação do reforço e a última resposta anteriormente emitida). Para os sujeitos do Grupo VI, os valores de atrasos registrados se concentraram geralmente em valores próximos ao atraso programado de 5 s enquanto que, para os sujeitos do Grupo VR, os intervalos efetivamente registrados assumiram valores menores. Uma explicação para esses resultados deve-se às próprias características dos esquemas. Deste modo, a probabilidade dos atrasos registrados se concentrarem no valor do atraso programado é maior no VI do que no VR. No Experimento 2, foi verificado o efeito da introdução de diferentes valores de atraso - 2, 5 e 8 s - sobre a taxa e a distribuição de freqüência de respostas, submetendo-se ratos ingênuos aos esquemas de VI e VR, com e sem atraso de reforço. Os resultados do Experimento 2 mostraram que, com a introdução dos diferentes valores de atraso de reforço (presença de contingência e contigüidade parametricamente manipulada), houve diminuições nas taxas de respostas dos sujeitos de ambos os grupos. A análise por meio da distribuição de freqüência dos valores de atrasos mostrou que para os sujeitos de ambos os grupos - VI e VR, os valores de atrasos registrados assumiram os menores intervalos quando o atraso foi de 2 s, concentraram-se em valores próximos ao atraso programado, quando o atraso foi de 5 s e, foram distribuídos entre os diferentes intervalos quando o atraso foi de 8 s. Resultados diferentes, porém, foram observados em dois sujeitos cujos valores de atrasos se concentraram nos valores de atrasos programados. No conjunto, os resultados de ambos os experimentos mostram que apesar das taxas de respostas semelhantes, identificam-se efeitos do atraso sob a distribuição do responder quando os sujeitos estão sob VI ou VR. Efeitos que não puderam ser observados quando a análise dos dados limitou-se à taxa de resposta, medida esta mais freqüentemente usada na investigação de relações de contingência e contigüidade. / The present study comprises two experiments (experiment 1 and experiment 2) that applied delayed reinforcement [non-resentting] procedure [schedule in which the second component operates on a fixed time condition (FT)]. The main purpose was to manipulate experimentally contingencies and contiguity relations by using different reinforcement schedules (response dependent schedule, response dependent schedule with delayed reinforcement and response independent schedule). The experiments investigated the effects of delayed reinforcement imposition on the lever press response rate and distribution of frequency on time, by exposing rats to variable interval (VI) and variable ratio schedule (VR). Experiment 1 compared effects of 5 s delays imposition with response independent water presentation. Experiment 1 showed that VR schedule engendered, in baseline condition (contingency and contiguity condition), higher response rates than did VI schedule. Delayed reinforcement (contingency and reduced contiguity condition) produced lower response rates, in both groups, than that of baseline condition. The lowest rates were observed in VI group. During VT condition (no contingency, but with contiguity), the rate decrease was accentuated. The different effects of delay under VI and VR schedules were showed in detail by the distribution of response frequency on time so that the effective delay values could be identified (the interval between reinforcement presentation and the last emitted response). In VI group, the observed delay values were in general near the programmed 5 s delay, whereas the intervals effectively observed, in VR group, were lower than the programmed 5 s delay. The schedules features can explain these results. The observed delays are more likely to be near the delay programmed value in VI than in VR schedule. Experiment 2 showed the effect of imposition of different delay values – 2, 5 and 8 s- on the response rate and frequency distribution, by exposing naïve rats to VI and VR schedules, with and without reinforcement delay. The experiment 2 revealed that the response rates decreased, in both groups, when different reinforcement delay values were presented (contingency and parametrically manipulated contiguity). The analysis of distribution of delay values frequency showed that the registered delay values were lower than the programmed 2 s delay, delay values were in general near the programmed 5 s delay and distributed over the different values in both groups (VI and VR). Different findings were, however, observed in two subjects whose delay values were near the programmed delay values. The results of both experiments, taken together, indicate that the analysis of distribution of delay values frequency reveals the different effects of delay on VI and VR schedule. These effects could not be observed when the data analysis took into account only response rate, a more usual measure employed in investigations on relationship between contingency and contiguity.
133

QFD aplicado em uma metodologia para avaliação da satisfação de clientes em uma cadeia logística

Tumelero, Nívia January 2002 (has links)
Este trabalho apresenta uma metodologia para avaliação da satisfação de clientes em uma cadeia logística, que visa buscar a melhoria dos serviços logísticos. A metodologia utiliza técnicas estatísticas, técnicas de pesquisa de mercado e técnica de análise de decisão. A técnica de análise de decisão utilizada nesta metodologia é o Desdobramento da Função Qualidade (QFD) aplicada para planejar melhorias no serviço logístico, priorizando as características do serviço demandadas pelos clientes e os indicadores de desempenho para o mesmo. A aplicação desta metodologia em uma empresa do ramo alimentício resultou na confirmação da metodologia proposta como instrumento de apoio na elaboração de planos de melhorias para sistemas logísticos. / This work introduces a methotology to avaliate the customer’s satisfaction in a logistc chain which objetcs to achieve the logistic services improvement. The proposed methodology apply statistic technics, market researches technics as well as analyses of decision technic. The decision analyses technic used in this methodology is the Quality Function Deployment (QFD) applied to plan a logistic services improvements, giving priority to features of service required by customes and its performance indicator. The employment of this methodology on a food producer company resulted into confirmation of the proposed methodology as a support instrument to the working up of improvement schedules to logistic systems.
134

Efeitos do comportamento do outro sobre desempenho em esquema múltiplo VT EXT em um procedimento de transmissão cultural / Effects of other person\'s behavior on performance in multiple schedule VT EX in a an cultural transmission design

Flávia Meneses Duarte 14 February 2014 (has links)
Responder mantido por relação acidental com reforço, comportamento supersticioso, pode ser facilitado por variáveis sociais como a modelação. O presente estudo investigou o comportamento supersticioso em um procedimento com ou sem substituição de participantes. No procedimento com substituição, um participante trabalhava em uma tarefa no computador enquanto outro o observava. Quando terminava a tarefa, o participante observador passava a realizar a tarefa e outro participante era chamado para observá-lo. A tarefa básica envolveu a programação de um esquema múltiplo com componentes de VT e EXT. Os participantes podiam emitir respostas, por meio da manipulação de um mouse, em um retângulo colorido apresentado na tela do computador. Dois grupos de oito participantes foram constituídos para avaliar a transmissão do padrão desenvolvido em VT EXT, designados Cultura A e Cultura B. Cada uma dessas duas culturas começava com um experimentador confederado, que respondia no componente VT e não respondia no componente EXT. As cores do retângulo que sinalizavam os componentes VT e EXT eram alteradas a cada troca de participante, de modo a favorecer o responder em ambas as contingências a cada vez que o novo participante era colocado na tarefa. Em um Grupo de Exposição Individual, cada participante foi exposto a três sessões experimentais seguidas, sem acesso a modelo. Ao final de cada sessão, os participantes eram solicitados a estimar o controle que tinham sobre a tarefa. Resultados mostraram que houve mais respostas em VT e em EXT para os participantes com o procedimento com troca de participantes do que para os do Grupo de Exposição Individual, indicando o efeito do comportamento do outro sobre o desempenho em esquema múltiplo. Participantes responderam tanto em EXT quanto em VT, mostrando que o desempenho não estava sendo mantido pela relação acidental com reforço, mas sim pela história prévia de observação do comportamento do modelo. Não houve qualquer tipo de correlação entre o desempenho não verbal e estimativa de controle / Superstitious behavior as response maintained by accidental relation with reinforcement can be facilitated by social variables such as modelling. Present study examined superstitious behavior in a procedure involving participants replacement or not. In replacement procedure one of the participants worked on a task on the computer while the other watched. When finished the task, the participant who was observing passed to perform the task and another participant was asked to observe. Programmed task involved basically a multiple schedule with VT and EXT components. Participants could emit responses by mouse clicking in a colored rectangle presented on computer screen. Two groups of eight subjects called \"Culture A\" and \"Culture B\" were made to evaluate developed EXT VT transmission. Each of these two cultures began with an experimenter confederate, who answered VT component but not EXT component. Rectangles color signaled VT and EXT components were changed when participant changed in order to favor responding in both contingencies with each new participant. In Individual Exhibition Group, each participant was exposed to three consecutive experimental sessions with no access. At the end of each session, participants were asked to estimate the control they had over the task. Results showed there were more responses in VT and EXT on replacing participants procedure than Individual Exhibition Group, indicating other\'s behavior effect on multiple schedule performance. Participants answered both EXT and in VT, showing that the performance was not being maintained by the accidental relation with reinforcement, but the history of observing models behavior. There was no correlation between nonverbal performance and estimation control
135

Estudo exploratório sobre os efeitos da constrição do crescimento cerebral pelo fechamento das suturas cranianas na aprendizagem discriminativa em ratos / Exploratory study on the effects of constriction of brain growth by the closure of the cranial sutures ins discriminative learning in rats

Nathalí Di Martino Sabino 29 March 2011 (has links)
A intervenção no cérebro e a possível influência no responder dos organismos têm sido alvo de diversas pesquisas que visam analisar tal relação. Deste modo, o presente estudo busca fornecer indicadores dos possíveis efeitos do fechamento das suturas cranianas sobre a aprendizagem discriminativa em esquemas de reforçamento. Para isso, serviram como sujeitos quatro ratos cirurgicamente intactos e nove submetidos a diferentes procedimentos cirúrgicos para o fechamento das suturas cranianas. Os sujeitos, com idades entre dois e oito dias de vida, foram submetidos a quatro fases experimentais em caixas de condicionamento operante. Na primeira fase, respostas de pressão à barra foram modeladas e, na seqüência, 60 respostas foram reforçadas em esquema de reforçamento contínuo (CRF) por três sessões consecutivas. Na segunda fase, o esquema de CRF foi substituído por esquemas de intervalos fixos (FI) com três valores aumentados gradualmente (FI 4 s, FI 8 s e FI 11 s). Na terceira fase, os sujeitos foram submetidos a um esquema múltiplo composto pelos componentes FI 11 s e Extinção (EXT), na presença e ausência de luz, respectivamente. Este treino discriminativo foi mantido até que ao menos 80% das pressões à barra ocorressem nos componentes de FI. Finalmente, na quarta fase, houve uma reversão das funções dos estímulos, de modo que a presença e a ausência de luz passaram a acompanhar, respectivamente, os componentes de EXT e FI. De modo geral, os resultados revelaram que os procedimentos empregados na constrição do desenvolvimento cerebral não produziram efeitos evidentes no comportamento dos ratos sob esquema de reforçamento, assim como na aprendizagem discriminativa e sua reversão / The intervention in the brain and the possible influence on the response of organisms has been the subject of several studies designed to examine this correlation. The aim of the present study is to provide indicators of the possible effects of the cranial sutures closure to the discriminative learning in reinforcement procedures. Four rats were used in a Non-Surgical condition group and another group was formed by nine rats that underwent various surgical procedures for the cranial sutures closure. The rats in the age between two and eight days underwent four experimental stages in operant conditioning boxes. In the first phase the bar press responses were modeled and, subsequently, 60 responses were reinforced under a scheme of continuous reinforcement (CRF) for three consecutive sessions. In the second phase, the scheme of CRF was replaced by schemes of fixed intervals (FI) with three values that were increased gradually (FI 4 s, FI 8 s FI s 11). In the third phase, the subjects underwent a multiple scheme with components FI 11 to Extinction (EXT) in the presence and absence of light, respectively. This discriminative training was continued until at least 80% of bar press response had occurred in the components of FI. Finally, in the fourth phase there was a reversal of the functions of the stimuli, so that the presence and absence of light started to follow, respectively, the FI and EXT components. The research result reveal that the procedures used in the constriction of the cerebral development did not produced evidences in the rats behavior under the reinforcement scheme, the discriminative learning and the reversion process
136

THE EFFECTS OF BEHAVIOR SKILLS TRAINING ON ACQUISITION OF SELF-INSTRUCTIONAL SKILLS FOR ELEMENTARY STUDENTS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY

Tincher, Amber 01 January 2018 (has links)
Research demonstrates that video modeling and visual activity schedules have been effective in teaching students with disabilities a variety of skills. However, the instructional procedures used to teach students to acquire the necessary skills to perform the tasks can take time for the students and the instructors. A behavior skills training package was investigated within a multiple probe design across students to determine if four elementary aged students with intellectual disability, with and without autism spectrum disorder, could acquire self-instructional skills. The dependent variables in the study were the effects of behavior skills training on the acquisition of self-instructional skills and the effects of video activity schedules on the acquisition of novel skills. The independent variable was behavior skills training. Three students were able to acquire the self-instruction skills in an effective and efficient manner using behavior skills training. After learning how to navigate the video activity schedules, three students were able to generalize and maintain the self-instruction skills to learn novel tasks. The results suggest that behavior skills training may be an effective instructional strategy for teaching self-instructional skills to students with intellectual disability.
137

EFFECTS OF ON-CALL WORK ON PROFESSIONAL SOCIAL WORKERS

Ocampo, Evelyn 01 June 2016 (has links)
This thesis attempted to examine the effects of on-call work schedules on professional social workers. This was achieved through the use of a demographic survey and qualitative face-to-face and phone interviews. A total of 15 interview questions were explored, the subjects included: the impacts of on-call work on psychological, physiological, emotional well-being and work family balance of professional social workers. Participants were recruited using availability sampling and the sample size consisted of nine participants. The nine interviews were transcribed and analyzed using thematic analysis. The researcher identified common themes related to on-call work schedules. Results found that participants suffered familial disruption as well as impacts on their well-being and support system. There was also a lack of access to patient information and similar difficulties experienced by participants while on-call. Participants also provided suggestions in order to improve on-call experiences. It is recommended that similar studies be conducted on a larger sample size to insure generalizability and a greater understanding of the impacts on-call work has on the social work profession.
138

The effects of task fluency and concurrent reinforcement schedules on student choice allocation between math tasks

Zaman, Maliha 01 December 2010 (has links)
Students may avoid working on difficult tasks because it takes them longer to complete those tasks, which results in a delay to reinforcement. Research studies show that reinforcer and response dimensions can be manipulated within a concurrent operants framework to bias choice allocation toward more difficult tasks. The current study extends previous literature on concurrent choice assessments by examining the effects of reinforcement schedules and fluency interventions on the choice allocation between low and high effort math tasks. The study was conducted with 4 second graders in an elementary school. The choice assessment conducted prior to fluency training (Phase 1) examined the effects of enriching the reinforcement schedule for the high effort tasks on student choice. During fluency training (Phase 2), strategies to increase fluency rates on high effort tasks were implemented. The choice assessment following fluency training (Phase 3) examined changes in choice pattern when the same choice alternatives were available as in Phase 1. A concurrent schedules with reversal design was used to identify student response allocation to tasks under different reinforcement conditions during the choice assessments. The fluency training phase was conducted as a case study design. The three important findings of this study were: (a) prior to fluency training, the 4 students allocated more time to low effort tasks when equal reinforcement was provided for both types of math tasks; the students then shifted to high effort tasks as the reinforcement schedule was enriched for these tasks; (b) fluency training strategies were effective in increasing the rate at which high effort tasks were accurately completed; and (c) all 4 students switched more quickly to high effort tasks following fluency training. Implications for educators are discussed.
139

Factors Affecting the Conditioned Reinforcing Strength of Stimuli in Differential Reinforcement of Other Behavior and Fixed-Time Schedules

Myers, Alexander M. 01 May 1978 (has links)
Two experiments were conducted in an attempt to provide a direct, response-independent test of the delay-reduction hypothesis of conditioned reinforcement. In both experiments, pigeons made observing responses, by pressing a treadle, for stimuli associated with the schedule component in effect . The consequences of an observing response were varied; an observing response produced: a) either the stimulus associated with the shorter component or the stimulus associated with the longer component depending on the schedule component in effect; b) the stimulus associated with the short component only; c) the stimulus associated with the long component only; or, d) neigher stimulus (no consequence). In Experiment I, naive pigeons were initially exposed to a mixed schedule with two differential reinforcement of other (ORO) behavior components; 10 seconds and 30 seconds (Phase One). In the second phase the same birds were exposed to an identical schedule, but the components were fixed time (FT) components (Phase Two). Reinforcement in both phases was six seconds access to food. In Experiment II, naive pigeons were exposed to both phases of Experiment I., but reinforcement density was altered. Each 10 second component was followed by 3 seconds of food and each 30 second component was followed by 9 seconds of food. In both experiments, differential observing behavior was maintained during the FT (Phase Two) procedure but not during the ORO (Phase One) procedure. In addition, equalizing reinforcement density (Experiment II) had the effect of altering the pattern of observing behavior but did not reverse or eliminate the preference shown for the stimulus associated with the shorter delay to reinforcement over the stimulus associated with the longer delay to reinforcement. It is suggested that some characteristic of the DRO procedure may have been responsible for the lack of differential observing. While the delay-reduction hypothesis of conditioned reinforcement was supported by the results of theFT procedure of both experiments, some amendments are required to account for the lack of differential observing during theDRO procedure. Reinforcement density appeared to have little effect upon observing behavior, but further research is advised concerning its effect upon observing response patterns.
140

The Post-Reinforcement Pause and Terminal Rate In Fixed-Interval Schedules

Lund, Charles A. 01 May 1971 (has links)
California Quail were exposed to fixed-interval schedules whose values ranged from FI 90 to FI 180. Post-reinforcement pause lengths and terminal rates were recorded and grouped into relative frequency distributions. The relative post-reinforcement pause length was found to be an increasing function of FI value such that at larger FI values a proportionally greater period of time was taken up by the post-reinforcement pause. Terminal rate (rate during the final 20% of the interval) was a decreasing function of FI value. The large amounts of variability in terminal rates observed indicated that terminal rate in fixed-interval schedules is not constant from interval to interval as is often reported in the literature. For a given subject, when overall rate of response for a session was plotted as a function of mean pause length for that session, no consistent relationship was found. Among the subjects there were two to three-fold differences in overall rate on FI 90, the only value to which all subjects were exposed. Differences among subjects in mean overall rates were correlated with differences in mean pause lengths, however. Thus, a subject's performance on a fixed-interval schedule could be characterized in terms of pause length and overall rate although rate in any given session was not necessarily correlated with mean pause length for that session, Differences between subjects in mean overall rates were also correlated with differences in mean terminal rates.

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