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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.
1

The Evocative and Repertoire-Altering Effects of Contingency-Specifying Stimuli

Mistr, Kathryn N. (Kathryn Noel) 08 1900 (has links)
The effects of deadlines in contingency-specifying stimuli among nine 4 to 5 year old children were investigated. Each child was given verbal statements differing in the specified deadline, the delivery of the reinforcer, and the opportunity to respond. The results indicated: (a) statements not specifying deadlines or reinforcers failed to control the children's behavior reliably, (b) specifying deadlines, either immediate or delayed, and immediate reinforcers exerted reliable control over the children's behavior when the opportunity to respond was immediately available, and (c) specifying delayed deadlines or no deadlines and immediate or delayed reinforcers did not reliably control the children's behavior when the opportunity to respond was delayed.
2

The Function-Altering Effects of Contingency-Specifying Stimuli

Ford, Victoria L. 08 1900 (has links)
Three children between the ages of 3 and 3 1/2 were asked to choose a colored object from an array of 5 colors in a baseline condition. After color preferences were established, stickers, small toys and praise were made contingent on choosing the least preferred color. After the first experimental condition resulted in consistent choosing of the least preferred color, a second experimental condition was implemented. At the beginning of each session a contingency-specifying stimulus (CSS) was presented, each CSS specifying a different color to be selected. Both contingency-shaping and CSS presentation resulted in stimulus control over responding. However, CSS presentation resulted in immediate redistributions of behavioral units across CSS sessions.
3

Um modelo experimental do transtorno obsessivo-compulsivo baseado nas relações funcionais entre respostas verbais e não verbais / An experimental model of obsessive-compulsive disorder based on the functional relations between verbal and nonverbal responses

Abreu, Paulo Roberto 18 September 2013 (has links)
Modelos experimentais do transtorno obsessivo compulsivo (TOC) com humanos mostram que uma forma de evocar comportamentos de checagem é apresentar instruções que especificam consequências aversivas para o comportamento inefetivo na execução de tarefas. Atualmente há na área somente um estudo experimental com delineamento de sujeito único. Os presentes dois experimentos com 16 participantes verbalmente habilidosos tiveram o objetivo de testar se instruções com especificação de consequência aversiva ou apetitiva poderiam ter o efeito de produzir respostas de checagem. Em um restaurante experimental, as instruções foram apresentadas durante uma tarefa de separação de sementes misturadas. No Experimento 1, cinco de oito participantes apresentaram maiores porcentagens de checagens sob especificação de consequência aversiva. No Experimento 2, sete de oito participantes apresentaram maiores porcentagens sob especificação de consequência apetitiva. Concluiu-se que determinadas instruções alteraram a função discriminativa e/ou motivadora dos estímulos envolvidos na tarefa experimental. Sugere-se que o presente delineamento pode permitir a formulação de análises funcionais do fenômeno comportamental normalmente envolvido em alguns casos de TOC / Experimental models of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) with humans show that a way to evoke checking behaviors is to provide instructions that specify aversive consequences for behavior ineffective in performing tasks. Currently there is only one experimental study with a single subject design in this area. The present study presents two experiments with 16 verbally skilled participants tested whether instructions specifying the appetitive or aversive consequence could have the effect of producing checking behaviors. In an experimental restaurant, the instructions were presented during a task of separation of mixed seeds. In Experiment 1, five of eight participants showed higher percentages of checks under specification of aversive consequence. In Experiment 2, seven of eight participants had higher percentages under specification of appetitive consequence. It was concluded that certain instructions alter the discriminative and motivate function of the stimuli involved in experimental task. It is suggested that this design may allow the formulation of functional analysis of behavioral phenomenon normally involved in some cases of OCD
4

Um modelo experimental do transtorno obsessivo-compulsivo baseado nas relações funcionais entre respostas verbais e não verbais / An experimental model of obsessive-compulsive disorder based on the functional relations between verbal and nonverbal responses

Paulo Roberto Abreu 18 September 2013 (has links)
Modelos experimentais do transtorno obsessivo compulsivo (TOC) com humanos mostram que uma forma de evocar comportamentos de checagem é apresentar instruções que especificam consequências aversivas para o comportamento inefetivo na execução de tarefas. Atualmente há na área somente um estudo experimental com delineamento de sujeito único. Os presentes dois experimentos com 16 participantes verbalmente habilidosos tiveram o objetivo de testar se instruções com especificação de consequência aversiva ou apetitiva poderiam ter o efeito de produzir respostas de checagem. Em um restaurante experimental, as instruções foram apresentadas durante uma tarefa de separação de sementes misturadas. No Experimento 1, cinco de oito participantes apresentaram maiores porcentagens de checagens sob especificação de consequência aversiva. No Experimento 2, sete de oito participantes apresentaram maiores porcentagens sob especificação de consequência apetitiva. Concluiu-se que determinadas instruções alteraram a função discriminativa e/ou motivadora dos estímulos envolvidos na tarefa experimental. Sugere-se que o presente delineamento pode permitir a formulação de análises funcionais do fenômeno comportamental normalmente envolvido em alguns casos de TOC / Experimental models of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) with humans show that a way to evoke checking behaviors is to provide instructions that specify aversive consequences for behavior ineffective in performing tasks. Currently there is only one experimental study with a single subject design in this area. The present study presents two experiments with 16 verbally skilled participants tested whether instructions specifying the appetitive or aversive consequence could have the effect of producing checking behaviors. In an experimental restaurant, the instructions were presented during a task of separation of mixed seeds. In Experiment 1, five of eight participants showed higher percentages of checks under specification of aversive consequence. In Experiment 2, seven of eight participants had higher percentages under specification of appetitive consequence. It was concluded that certain instructions alter the discriminative and motivate function of the stimuli involved in experimental task. It is suggested that this design may allow the formulation of functional analysis of behavioral phenomenon normally involved in some cases of OCD
5

The Importance of Science Instruction: A Case Study of Exemplary Teaching and Administrative Support

Dace, Minnie Lavetta 06 May 2017 (has links)
There were several purposes to this case study using a convergent parallel mixed method design. The first purpose was to explore how one exemplary high school science teacher (EST) and her selected supporting administrator rated the importance of particular elements of science instruction. The second purpose was to describe how an EST explained her practices of fostering success for her students. The third purpose was to identify the administrator’s practices that supported the EST as described by both educator participants. Data for this study were collected through two researcher-developed instruments, interviews, and documents. The EST completed the Questionnaire of Exemplary Science Teachers (QEST), and the administrator completed the Questionnaire for Administrator Perception of Exemplary Science Teachers (QAPEST). The researcher also conducted an interview with each participant and analyzed documents (i.e., lesson plans, students’ course grades, and Biology Subject Area Testing Program results). The EST examined data to provide context to the case study. Results of the study revealed that both the EST and administrator understood and closely agreed on the importance of science and in the methods of planning and teachingscience. Results also indicated that students taught by the EST were successful in a science program. The EST used a combination of specifying objectives, diagnosing and evaluating student learners in science instruction, planning of science instruction, and delivering of science instruction to assist her students in becoming successful. Results also revealed that the EST and the administrator believed that building strong personal relationships with the students motivated students to want to succeed even more for the EST. Finally, results indicated that unwavering, generative administrative support was helpful in supporting the teacher’s exemplary instruction.

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