preview

Applied Behavior Analysis: B. F. Skinner

Good Essays

B. F. Skinner Working in the field of applied behavior analysis B. F. Skinner might be one of the first names that come to mind; along with John Watson who is known as the father of behaviorism, and Pavlov who studied the classical conditioning of dogs which led to the further exploration by Watson. Skinner's work was based on Thorndike's work with cats and his development of the law of effect which says that any behavior followed by a pleasant consequence is more likely to be repeated, whereas a behavior followed by an unpleasant consequence is less likely to reoccur (Miltenberger, 2012). Thorndike led the way for Skinner to introduce reinforcing and extinguishing behaviors and a means with which to do so. Although we are focusing on Skinner's …show more content…

Skinner believed that all human behavior is caused by outside influences and there is no evidence of free will; we are a product of our environment and to cite any other reason is simply a distraction from the true cause of the behavior (Friedman & Schustack, 2012). Despite the fact that he acknowledges we all have emotions, thoughts, and internal processes, he claims these do not cause behavior but are caused by the environment and are irrelevant. Skinner's theory leaves no room for personality because, according to his theory, personality is made up of behavior which is supported by the environment and therefore could be obtained by any living creature (Friedman & Schustack, 2012). His theory fails to recognize cognitive or hereditary influences as potential factors in learning; placing deficiencies or increased skills directly on learned behavior through reinforcement (Friedman & Schustack, 2012). Bandura's cognitive social learning theory shows how behaviors can be learned without the use of reinforcement via observation which is not easily explained utilizing other behavioral theories and does not support Skinners theories as they require active cognition (Friedman & Schustack, 2012). Further, he believed the principles of learning could …show more content…

In order to increase the desired behavior, we need to make compliance more reinforcing and non-compliance less reinforcing or punishing (Miltenberger, 2012); this can be done through the use of punishers in the way of removal of desired objects or the addition of non-desired items such as a parent overseeing her homework until she is on task, paired with reinforcing desired behaviors on a continuous rate of reinforcement and moving slowly to a variable interval rate of reinforcement as she becomes more successful (Miltenberger, 2012). After working with Trinity's parents utilizing a system of reinforcement for the desired behavior of compliance and punishment via removal of favored objects and added supervision, Trinity's compliance with demands has increase from a baseline of 20% to 80% since initiation of

Get Access