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Behavior modification



 
 
Behavior modification is the use of empirically demonstrated behavior change techniques to improve behavior, such as altering an individual's behaviors and reactions to stimuli through positive and negative reinforcement
Reinforcement

In operant conditioning, reinforcement occurs when an event following a response causes an increase in the probability of that response occurring in the future....
 of adaptive behavior and/or the reduction of maladaptive behavior through punishment
Punishment

Punishment is the practice of imposing something suffering on a person or animal, usually in response to disobedient or morally wrong behavior....
 and/or .

first use of the term behavior modification appears to have been by Edward Thorndike
Edward Thorndike

Edward Lee Thorndike was an United States Psychology who spent nearly his entire career at Teachers College, Columbia University. His work on animal psychology and the learning process led to the theory of connectionism and helped lay the scientific foundation for modern educational psychology....
 in 1911.






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Behavior modification is the use of empirically demonstrated behavior change techniques to improve behavior, such as altering an individual's behaviors and reactions to stimuli through positive and negative reinforcement
Reinforcement

In operant conditioning, reinforcement occurs when an event following a response causes an increase in the probability of that response occurring in the future....
 of adaptive behavior and/or the reduction of maladaptive behavior through punishment
Punishment

Punishment is the practice of imposing something suffering on a person or animal, usually in response to disobedient or morally wrong behavior....
 and/or .

Description

The first use of the term behavior modification appears to have been by Edward Thorndike
Edward Thorndike

Edward Lee Thorndike was an United States Psychology who spent nearly his entire career at Teachers College, Columbia University. His work on animal psychology and the learning process led to the theory of connectionism and helped lay the scientific foundation for modern educational psychology....
 in 1911. His article Provisional laws of acquired behavior or learning makes frequent use of the term "modifying behavior". Through early research in the 1940s and the 1950s the term was used by Joseph Wolpe
Joseph Wolpe

Joseph Wolpe was born in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1915, but became an American citizen later in his life. He is best known for developing what is now called systematic desensitization....
's research group. The experimental tradition in clinical psychology used it to refer to psychotherapeutic techniques derived from empirical research. It has since come to refer mainly to techniques for increasing adaptive behavior through reinforcement and decreasing maladaptive behavior through punishment (with emphasis on the former). Two related terms are behavior therapy and applied behavior analysis. Emphasizing the empirical roots of behavior modification, some authors consider it to be broader in scope and to subsume the other two categories of behavior change methods. Since techniques derived from behavioral psychology tend to be the most effective in altering behavior, most practitioners consider behavior modification along with behavior therapy and applied behavior analysis
Applied Behavior Analysis

Applied behavior analysis is the science of applying experimentally derived principles of behavior to improve socially significant behavior. ABA takes what we know about behavior and uses it to bring about positive change ....
 to be founded in behaviorism
Behaviorism

Behaviorism or Behaviourism,also called the learning perspective is a philosophy of psychology based on the proposition that all things which organisms do ? including acting, thinking and feeling?can and should be regarded as behaviors....
. While behavior modification encompasses applied behavior analysis and typically uses interventions based on the same behavioral principles, many behavior modifiers who are not applied behavior analysts tend to use packages of interventions and do not conduct functional assessments before intervening.

In recent years, the concept of punishment
Punishment

Punishment is the practice of imposing something suffering on a person or animal, usually in response to disobedient or morally wrong behavior....
 has had many critics, though these critiques tend not to apply to negative punishment (time-outs) and usually apply to the addition of some aversive event. The use of positive punishment by board-certified behavior analysts is restricted to extreme circumstances when all other forms of treatment have failed and when the behavior to be modified is a danger to the person or to others (see professional practice of behavior analysis
Professional practice of behavior analysis

The professional practice of behavior analysis is the fourth domain of behavior analysis. The other three are behaviorism, experimental analysis of behavior, and applied behavior analysis....
). In clinical settings positive punishment is usually restricted using a spray bottle filled with water as an aversive event. When mis-used, extreme punishment can lead to affective (emotional) disorders, as well as to the target of the punishment eventually focusing only on avoiding punishment (i.e., "not getting caught") rather than improving behavior. People have consequences for their actions both positive and negative. This should be taught early as it carries through adulthood.

Pear and Martin indicate that there are seven characteristics to behavior modification, They are:
  • There is a strong emphasis on defining problems in terms of behavior that can be measured in some way.


  • The treatment techniques are ways of altering an individual's current environment to help that individual function more fully.


  • The methods and rationales can be described precisely.


  • The techniques are often applied in everyday life.


  • The techniques are based largely on principles of learning - specifically operant conditioning
    Operant conditioning

    Operant conditioning is the use of consequences to modify the occurrence and form of behavior. Operant conditioning is distinguished from classical conditioning in that operant conditioning deals with the Behavior modification or operant behavior....
     and respondent conditioning


  • There is a strong emphasis on scientific demonstration that a particular technique was responsible for a particular behavior change.


  • There is a strong emphasis on accountability for everyone involved in a behavior modification program.

Techniques

Therapy and consultation cannot be effective unless the behaviors to be changed are understood within a specific context. The process of understanding behavior in context is called functional behavioral assessment. Therefore, a functional behavioral assessment is needed before performing behavior modification. One of the most simple yet effective methods of functional behavioral assessment is called the "ABC" approach, where observations are made on Antecedents, Behaviors, and Consequences. In other words, "What comes directly before the behavior?", "What does the behavior look like?", and "What comes directly after the behavior?" Once enough observations are made, the data are analyzed and patterns are identified. If there are consistent antecedents and/or consequences, then an intervention should target them in order to increase or decrease the target behavior. This method has formed the core of positive behavior support
Positive behavior support

Positive behavior support strives to use a system to understand what maintains an individual?schallenging behavior. Students? inappropriate behaviors are difficult to change because they are functional; they serve a purpose for the child....
 for children in school from both regular education and special education.

Behavior modifiers like to employ a variety of evidenced-based techniques. These techniques intervene at all levels of context. For example, given specific setting events for a behavior, a behavior modifier may develop a neutralizing routine to eliminate that setting. If a behavior pattern has a specific antecedent of trigger, then an antecedent control strategy can be developed to train new behavior in the presence of the trigger. If a problem behavior readily occurs because it achieves some function, then an alternative behavior can be instructed and trained to occur in the context of the trigger. If a behavior is particularly complex it may be task-analyzed and broken into its component parts to be taught through chaining. While all these methods are effective, when the behavior problem gets difficult or when all else fails many turn to contingency management
Contingency Management

Contingency management is a type of treatment used in the mental health or substance abuse fields. Patients are rewarded for their behavior; generally, adherence to or failure to adhere to program rules and regulations or their treatment plan....
 systems. Complex and comprehensive contingency management systems have been developed and represent effective ways to eliminate many problem behaviors (see applied behavior analysis
Applied Behavior Analysis

Applied behavior analysis is the science of applying experimentally derived principles of behavior to improve socially significant behavior. ABA takes what we know about behavior and uses it to bring about positive change ....
 and positive behavior support
Positive behavior support

Positive behavior support strives to use a system to understand what maintains an individual?schallenging behavior. Students? inappropriate behaviors are difficult to change because they are functional; they serve a purpose for the child....
). Collabortive goal setting
Goal setting

Goal Setting involves establishing specific, measurable and time targeted objectives. Goal-Setting Theory suggests that it's an effective tool for making progress by ensuring that participants in a group with a common goal are clearly aware of what is expected from them if an objective is to be achieved....
 with the client enhances treatment effects.

Some areas of effectiveness

Functional behavior assessment forms the core of applied behavior analysis
Applied Behavior Analysis

Applied behavior analysis is the science of applying experimentally derived principles of behavior to improve socially significant behavior. ABA takes what we know about behavior and uses it to bring about positive change ....
 and thus forms the core of behavior modification. Many techniques in this therapy are specific techniques aimed at specific issues. Interventions based on behavior analytic/modification principles have been extremely effective in developing evidence-based treatments.

In addition to the above, a growing list of researched-based interventions from the behavioral paradigm exists. With children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, one study showed that over a several year period, children in the behavior modification group had half the number of felony arrests as children in the medication group. These findings remain to be replicated but are considered encouraging for the use of behavior modification for children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Behavior modification programs form the core of many residential treatment facility programs. (In Wikipedia these link under Behavior Modification Facility
Behavior modification facility

A behavior modification facility is a residential educational and treatment institution enrolling adolescents who are perceived as displaying antisocial behavior, in an attempt to alter their conduct....
.) They have shown success in reducing recidivism for adolescents with conduct problems and adult offenders. One particular program that is of interest is 'teaching-family homes', which is based on a social learning model that emerged from radical behaviorism
Radical behaviorism

Radical behaviorism is a philosophy developed by B. F. Skinner that underlies the experimental analysis of behavior approach to psychology. The term 'radical behaviorism' applies to a particular school that emerged during the reign of behaviorism....
. These particular homes use a family style approach to residential treatment, which has been carefully replicated over 700 times.. Recent efforts have seen a push for the inclusion of more behavior modification programs in residential re-entry programs in the U.S. to aid prisoners in re-adjusting after release.

One area that has repeatedly shown effectiveness has been the work of behaviorists working in the area of community reinforcement for addictions. Another area of research that has been strongly supported has been behavioral activation for depression.

One way of giving positive reinforcement in behavior modification is in providing compliments, approval
Approval rating

In the United States, presidential job approval ratings were introduced by George Gallup in the late 1930s to gauge public support for the president during his presidency....
, encouragement, and affirmation; a ratio of five compliments for every one complaint is generally seen as being effective in altering behavior in a desired manner and even producing a stable marriage.

Of notable interest is that the right behavioral intervention can have profound system effects. For example, Forgatch and DeGarmo (2007) found that with mothers who were recently divorced, a standard round of parent management training (a program based on social learning principles that teaches rewarding good behavior and punishing bad behavior combined with communication skills) could help elevate the divorced mother out of poverty. In addition, parent management training programs sometimes referred to as behavioral parent training programs have shown relative cost effectiveness for their efforts for the treatment of conduct disorder. Thus, such intervention can have profound effects on socializing the child in a relatively cost effective fashion and help elevate the parent from poverty. This level of effect is often looked for and valued by those who practice behavioral engineering
Behavioral engineering

Behavioral engineering is intended to identify issues associated with the interface of technology and the human operators in a system and to generate recommended design practices that consider the strengths and limitations of the human operators....
 and results of this type have caused the Association for Behavior Analysis International to take a position that those receiving treatment have a right to effective treatment[https://apps.abainternational.org/ABA/statements/treatment.asp ABA:I] and a right to effective education.[https://apps.abainternational.org/ABA/statements/education.asp ABA:I]

Criticism

Behavior modification is critiqued in person-centered psychotherapeutic approaches such as Rogerian Counseling
Carl Rogers

Carl Rogers was an influential American psychologist and among the founders of the Humanistic psychology to psychology. Rogers is widely considered to be one of the founding fathers of psychotherapy research and was honored for his pioneering research with the Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions by the American Psychological Ass...
 and Re-evaluation Counseling
Re-evaluation Counseling

Re-evaluation Counseling, or RC is the best-known and largest organization for Co-Counseling. RC today spans over 40 countries and offers many individuals an inexpensive or largely free form of counseling and personal healing/growth....
. The argument is that these methods involve connecting with the human qualities of the person to promote healing and that behaviorism is denigrating to the human spirit. Skinner argued against this position in Beyond Freedom and Dignity
Beyond Freedom and Dignity

Beyond Freedom and Dignity is a book written by United States psychologist B. F. Skinner and first published in 1971. The book argues that entrenched belief in free will and the moral autonomy of the individual hinders the prospect of using scientific methods to modify behavior for the purpose of building a happier and better organize...
 by arguing that unrestricted reinforcement is what led to the "feeling of freedom" and thus removal of aversive events would allow people to "feel freer" Further criticism extends to the presumption that behavior increases only when it is reinforced. This premise is at odds with research conducted by Albert Bandura
Albert Bandura

Albert Bandura is a psychologist specializing in social cognitive theory and self-efficacy. He is most famous for his social learning theory....
 at Stanford University. His findings indicate that violent behavior is imitated, without being reinforced, in studies conducted with children watching films showing various individuals 'beating the daylights out of Bobo'. Bandura believes that human personality and learning is the result of the interaction between environment, behavior and psychological process. There is evidence, however, that imitation is a class of behavior that can be learned just like anything else. Children have been shown to imitate behavior that they have never displayed before and are never reinforced for, after being taught to imitate in general.

Several people have criticized the level of training required to perform behavior modification procedures, especially those which are restrictive or use aversives
Aversives

In psychology, aversives are suffering Stimulus which induce changes in behavior through punishment ; by applying an aversive immediately following a behavior, the likelihood of the behavior occurring in the future is reduced....
, aversion therapy
Aversion therapy

Aversion therapy is a form of psychiatry, mental health or psychology treatment in which the patient is exposed to a stimulation while simultaneously being subjected to some form of discomfort....
 or punishment
Punishment

Punishment is the practice of imposing something suffering on a person or animal, usually in response to disobedient or morally wrong behavior....
 protocols. Some desire to limit such restrictive procedures only to licensed psychologist or licensed counselors. Still others desire to create an independent practice of behavior analysis through licensure to offer consumers choices between proven techniques and unproven ones (see Professional practice of behavior analysis
Professional practice of behavior analysis

The professional practice of behavior analysis is the fourth domain of behavior analysis. The other three are behaviorism, experimental analysis of behavior, and applied behavior analysis....
). Level of training and consumer protection remain of critical importance in applied behavior analysis
Applied Behavior Analysis

Applied behavior analysis is the science of applying experimentally derived principles of behavior to improve socially significant behavior. ABA takes what we know about behavior and uses it to bring about positive change ....
 and behavior modification.

While behavior analysis continues to grow as a science by including more environmental factors and behaviorism
Behaviorism

Behaviorism or Behaviourism,also called the learning perspective is a philosophy of psychology based on the proposition that all things which organisms do ? including acting, thinking and feeling?can and should be regarded as behaviors....
 grows as a philosophy, some continue to criticize it for being reductionist.

See also

  • Applied Behavioural Analysis
  • Behavior Therapy
  • Behavior management
    Behavior management

    Behavior management is similar to behavior modification. It is a less intensive version of behavior modification. In behavior modification the focus is on changing behavior, while in behavior management the focus is on maintaining order....
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • John B. Watson
    John B. Watson

    John Broadus Watson was an United States psychology who established the List of psychological schools of behaviorism, after doing research on animal behavior....
  • Ivan Pavlov
    Ivan Pavlov

    For other uses, see Pavlov.Ivan Petrovich Pavlov was a Russian Empire, and later Soviet, physiologist, psychologist, and physician. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1904 for research pertaining to the digestive system....
  • B. F. Skinner
    B. F. Skinner

    Burrhus Frederic Skinner was an influential American psychologist, author, inventor, advocate for social reform,and poet. He was the Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology at Harvard University from 1958 until his retirement in 1974....
  • Behavior modification facility
    Behavior modification facility

    A behavior modification facility is a residential educational and treatment institution enrolling adolescents who are perceived as displaying antisocial behavior, in an attempt to alter their conduct....
  • Sociology
    Sociology

    Sociology is a branch of the social sciences that uses systematic methods of Empiricism and critical theory to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, sometimes with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare....
  • Conditioning
    Conditioning

    Conditioning may refer to:* In probability theory, the use of conditional probabilities, expectations and distributions; see conditioning * In mathematics, the property of a matrix as "well-conditioned" or "ill-conditioned"; see condition number...
  • Covert conditioning
    Covert conditioning

    Covert conditioning is an approach to mental health treatment that uses the principles of behavior modification, which emerged from the applied behavior analysis literature to assist people in making improvements in their behavior or inner experience....
  • Classical conditioning
    Classical conditioning

    Classical Conditioning is a form of associative learning that was first demonstrated by Ivan Pavlov . The typical procedure for inducing classical conditioning involves presentations of a neutral stimulus along with a stimulus of some significance....
  • Operant conditioning
    Operant conditioning

    Operant conditioning is the use of consequences to modify the occurrence and form of behavior. Operant conditioning is distinguished from classical conditioning in that operant conditioning deals with the Behavior modification or operant behavior....
  • Beyond Freedom and Dignity
    Beyond Freedom and Dignity

    Beyond Freedom and Dignity is a book written by United States psychologist B. F. Skinner and first published in 1971. The book argues that entrenched belief in free will and the moral autonomy of the individual hinders the prospect of using scientific methods to modify behavior for the purpose of building a happier and better organize...
  • Life coaching
  • A Clockwork Orange
    A Clockwork Orange

    A Clockwork Orange is a dystopian novel novel by Anthony Burgess.The title is taken from an old Cockney expression, "as queer as a clockwork orange", and alludes to the prevention of the main character's exercise of his free will through the use of a classical conditioning technique....


External links

  • - Behavior modification in the Classroom
  • - Changing Our Perspective Can Help Our Child To Behave
  • - Behavior modification charts for home and school
  • - Children with learning disabilities