SPE 526 module 1: behavior, environment, and
learning Questions And Answers With Complete
Solutions
a therapist cries every time after he get reprimanded by his boss, and his boss
always tries to comfort him after he cries
All answers may be correct
If reprimand had been previously paired with another unconditioned stimulus,
crying could also be a conditioned response
Crying every time after reprimand may be a result of selection by consequences in
this scenario
Crying may initially be an unconditioned response that the therapist was born
with - ANSWER All answers may be correct
picture shows a bunch of pens:
stimuli that do not have a common formal dimension
cannot determine the correct option
,stimuli that may share the same behavioral function
stimuli that are not part of the same stimulus class - ANSWER stimuli that may
share the same behavioral function
what describes a specific response of the behavior - eating food?
putting all chips in mouth
putting food in mouth and repeatedly chewing
swallowing food in mouth
starting to eat the fried chicken one minute after it was presented - ANSWER
swallowing food in mouth
best example of conditioned response?
vomiting after eating too much.
closing eyes when seeing a bright computer screen at night.
shivering when next to the freezer in the supermarket.
, raised heart beat when hearing "you won a million dollars!" - ANSWER hint: CR
is a learned response
raised heart beat when hearing "you won a million dollars!"
Tom is very naughty in school. Whenever his teacher asks him a question, he
laughs without answering the question. As soon as his teacher reprimands him for
laughing, Tom laughs again. This usually ends with his teacher giving up asking
questions. Select the most accurate option below based on this scenario.
HINT: Take a look at the sequence of the events:
Teacher's question -> Tom's first laugh -> teacher's reprimand -> Tom's second
laugh -> Teacher stops asking question.
The two laughs in the scenario likely belong to the same response class.
HINT: Is it possible that both laughs function the same (e.g., escape from
demand?)
The antecedent condition of Tom's first laugh is teacher's question, and the most
immediate consequence is reprimand.
All options are accurate assessments of the scenario.
The consequence for the second laugh is the removal of demand, the antecedent
condition of the second laugh consists of - ANSWER All options are accurate
assessments of the scenario.
learning Questions And Answers With Complete
Solutions
a therapist cries every time after he get reprimanded by his boss, and his boss
always tries to comfort him after he cries
All answers may be correct
If reprimand had been previously paired with another unconditioned stimulus,
crying could also be a conditioned response
Crying every time after reprimand may be a result of selection by consequences in
this scenario
Crying may initially be an unconditioned response that the therapist was born
with - ANSWER All answers may be correct
picture shows a bunch of pens:
stimuli that do not have a common formal dimension
cannot determine the correct option
,stimuli that may share the same behavioral function
stimuli that are not part of the same stimulus class - ANSWER stimuli that may
share the same behavioral function
what describes a specific response of the behavior - eating food?
putting all chips in mouth
putting food in mouth and repeatedly chewing
swallowing food in mouth
starting to eat the fried chicken one minute after it was presented - ANSWER
swallowing food in mouth
best example of conditioned response?
vomiting after eating too much.
closing eyes when seeing a bright computer screen at night.
shivering when next to the freezer in the supermarket.
, raised heart beat when hearing "you won a million dollars!" - ANSWER hint: CR
is a learned response
raised heart beat when hearing "you won a million dollars!"
Tom is very naughty in school. Whenever his teacher asks him a question, he
laughs without answering the question. As soon as his teacher reprimands him for
laughing, Tom laughs again. This usually ends with his teacher giving up asking
questions. Select the most accurate option below based on this scenario.
HINT: Take a look at the sequence of the events:
Teacher's question -> Tom's first laugh -> teacher's reprimand -> Tom's second
laugh -> Teacher stops asking question.
The two laughs in the scenario likely belong to the same response class.
HINT: Is it possible that both laughs function the same (e.g., escape from
demand?)
The antecedent condition of Tom's first laugh is teacher's question, and the most
immediate consequence is reprimand.
All options are accurate assessments of the scenario.
The consequence for the second laugh is the removal of demand, the antecedent
condition of the second laugh consists of - ANSWER All options are accurate
assessments of the scenario.