100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

CCBC-KA Study Prep Questions and Answers 2025 Update with complete solution

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
37
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
25-01-2025
Written in
2024/2025

What is a functional analysis? - ️️Is done to test a hypothesis. Systematic manipulation of environmental contingencies. Is not always safe to do. What are setting events? - ️️Conditions in the environment that are related to the behaviour appearing. Can be internal (health) or external factors. What are observable behaviours? Give an example. - ️️Behaviours that you can see. Things a "dead dog" can't do and not labels. Example:jumping What is a contingency statement? - ️️Describes the realtionship between antecedents, behaviour and consequences. If....than..... What is a functional assessment? - ️️Is hypothesis generating. Evaluates history, health, age, breed, nutrition, motivating factors, antecedents etc. What stimulates behaviour, what maintains behaviour, what can we do? How do you collect a baseline data of behaviour? - ️️Observe and collect data over a set period of time while not interfering. Four Stages of Learning are? - ️️1)acquisition 2)fluency 3)generalization 4)maintenance Define lure - ️️To bait or draw in using food or object Define shaping - ️️Series of steps to build a target behaviour

Show more Read less
Institution
CCBC-KA
Course
CCBC-KA











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
CCBC-KA
Course
CCBC-KA

Document information

Uploaded on
January 25, 2025
Number of pages
37
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

CCBC-KA Study Prep
What is a functional analysis? - ✔️✔️Is done to test a hypothesis.
Systematic manipulation of environmental contingencies.
Is not always safe to do.

What are setting events? - ✔️✔️Conditions in the environment that are related to the
behaviour appearing.
Can be internal (health) or external factors.

What are observable behaviours? Give an example. - ✔️✔️Behaviours that you can
see. Things a "dead dog" can't do and not labels. Example:jumping


What is a contingency statement? - ✔️✔️Describes the realtionship between
antecedents, behaviour and consequences. If....than.....

What is a functional assessment? - ✔️✔️Is hypothesis generating.
Evaluates history, health, age, breed, nutrition, motivating factors, antecedents etc.
What stimulates behaviour, what maintains behaviour, what can we do?

How do you collect a baseline data of behaviour? - ✔️✔️Observe and collect data over
a set period of time while not interfering.

Four Stages of Learning are? - ✔️✔️1)acquisition 2)fluency 3)generalization
4)maintenance

Define lure - ✔️✔️To bait or draw in using food or object

Define shaping - ✔️✔️Series of steps to build a target behaviour

Define chain(ing) - ✔️✔️serial skill broken down into sub routines which can be seen
as links of a chain

Define mark - ✔️✔️To signify a behaviour as correct

Define capture - ✔️✔️Reward a natural occurring behaviour as correct

Define mold(ing) - ✔️✔️Coercing physically into a desired behaviour/position

Define fade - ✔️✔️Gradual removal of a lure or prompt

,Define prompt - ✔️✔️Antecedent strategy used to evoke a behaviour

Define flooding - ✔️✔️Over whelming exposure to a trigger without them being able to
use fight or flight

Define positive reinforcement and give an example - ✔️✔️Adds a pleasant stimulus to
increase a behaviour.
Treat after a sit

Define negative reinforcement - ✔️✔️Removes aversive stimulus to increase a
behaviour.
Holding a dogs mouth closed until they stop barking. Includes escape and avoidance

Define positive punishment and give an example. - ✔️✔️Adds aversive stimulus to
decrease a behaviour. Leash correction.

Define negative punishment and give an example - ✔️✔️Removes a pleasant stimulus
to decrease a behaviour. Taking a toy away when they play rough.

Escape and active avoidance are apart of what operant learning? - ✔️✔️Negative
reinforcement

what is escape learning and give an example - ✔️✔️Dog is able to escape the aversive
stimulus. Escaping and shock collar stops

What is avoidance learning and give an example. - ✔️✔️Dog avoids the onset of the
aversive stimulus. Not doing a behaviour to prevent a shock from occurring.

Define extinction - ✔️✔️Lack/absence of a reinforcement following a behaviour which
leads to a decrease/disappearing of the behaviour

What is an extinction burst? - ✔️✔️A sudden increase in the rate of behavior during the
early stages of extinction.

Define spontaneous recovery - ✔️✔️the reappearance of an extinguished target
behaviour after it's been extinguished

Define counter conditioning and desensitization - ✔️✔️Training an animal to display a
behaviour that is different than their current one and the process of exposure starting at
low intensity

Define fixed ratio schedule - ✔️✔️reinforcement after a specified number of responses
ex: a treat after every 3rd sit

,Define variable ratio schedule - ✔️✔️Reinforcement after a varying number of
responses.
Ex: treat after 3rd sit, 7th sit etc

Define fixed interval schedule - ✔️✔️Reinforcement after a specific amount of time has
elapsed
ex: Treat after 10 seconds

Define variable interval schedule - ✔️✔️Reinforcement after varying time intervals
ex: treat after 3 seconds, 5 seconds etc

Define deprivation to modify behaviour - ✔️✔️Withholding something to increase the
desire of it.
Ex-withholding food to increase the desire for it later

What is an instinct drift? - ✔️✔️Specie specific appetitive and exploratory behaviours
that spontaneously occur.

What is contrafreeloading? - ✔️✔️When given a choice between provided food and
food that requires effort, the animal chooses the food that takes effort

What is an unconditioned stimulus and give an example - ✔️✔️a stimulus that elicits a
automatic response without the necessity of prior training
Ex:food

What is an unconditioned response and give an example - ✔️✔️a reflexive reaction
that is reliably produced by an unconditioned stimulus
Ex: drooling after seeing food

What are reflexes? - ✔️✔️Unconditioned stimuli and responses

What is a neutral stimulus and give an example - ✔️✔️a stimulus that elicits no
response before conditioning other than focusing attention
Ex: bell or clicker

What is a conditioned stimulus and give an example - ✔️✔️A previously neutral
stimulus that eventually elicits a learned response through training
Ex: bell=food

What is a conditioned response and give an example - ✔️✔️a learned response to a
previously neutral stimulus
Ex:bell=drool

, What is a conditioned reflex? - ✔️✔️Conditioned stimulus and response referred to as
a whole.

What is a conditioned reinforcer/punisher and give an example - ✔️✔️Previously
neutral stimulus paired with a primary reinforcer or punisher and squires
reinforcement/punishment properties.
Ex:yes or ah ah

What is stimulus generalization and response generalization? - ✔️✔️When information
derived from one situation is applied to others that are not exactly the same

Define discriminative stimulus and give an example - ✔️✔️a stimulus that elicits a
response because the behaviour was reliably reinforced. Signals that a contingency is
in effect.
Ex:cues like sit or hand signals

List 4 differences between classical conditioning (respondent) and operant conditioning
(instrumental) - ✔️✔️1)CC is elicited by a stimulus event -vs- OP being emitted without
a stimulus
2)CC is reflexive-vs- OP being goal oriented
3)CC response strength is dependent on the eliciting stimulus-vs- OP is dependent on
the established contingency
4)CC doesn't give the dog control -vs- OP does

What are motivational operations and give an example - ✔️✔️An antecedent, activity,
event etc that strengthen or weakens an outcome.

What are abolishing operations? - ✔️✔️Apart of motivational operations.
Activities/events that reduce the effectiveness of a reward and decrease the occurrence
of responses previously reinforced
Ex:satiation

What are establishing operations? - ✔️✔️Apart of motivational operations.
Activities/events that increase the effectiveness of a reward and increase the
occurrence of responses previously used.

What is antecedent control and give an example - ✔️✔️Manipulation of motivational
states conducive to learning
Ex:Motivational operations, discriminative stimuli, conditioned stimuli

Define differential reinforcement of incompatible behaviour and give an example -
✔️✔️Reinforcing behaviours that are physically incompatible with the problem
behaviour.
Ex:dog only receives reinforcement when they are sitting to greet people vs problem
behaviour being jumping or standing

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
ACADEMICMATERIALS City University New York
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
562
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
186
Documents
10590
Last sold
3 days ago

4.1

95 reviews

5
53
4
11
3
21
2
3
1
7

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions