I
want to be...a zookeeper! (I don’t, but bear with me.) Imagine I did though,
and imagine I have a naughty monkey to contend with on my daily rounds; he has
begun to fling his food at me which results in lots of giggling and clapping
from children. How do I – as the chief zookeeper – stop monkey doing this? The
answer could be Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA)!
Rather
than trying to identify what has caused this change in behaviour, ABA is
concerned with altering the environment in order to change the frequency of a
behaviour, i.e. reduce the frequency with which monkey throws his food at me.
To do this, ABA suggests the following behavioural assessment:
1) Define
the target behaviour so you know what behaviour you are trying to change
2) Identify
functional relations between the target behaviour and its precursors and
consequences
3) Identify
an effective intervention for changing this behaviour by selecting appropriate
reinforcers or punishments
These
processes are based on Skinner’s work on learning behaviour (1938), and
Thorndike’s (1927) ‘Law of Effect’ which states that the likelihood of a
behaviour occurring in a given situation depends on the consequences that have
followed the setup previously. Hence, ABA aims to alter the frequency of a behaviour
in a situation by changing the consequences of the action, (Iwata, 1987). So, I
should be able to eliminate the target behaviour by removing the reinforcers –
the clapping children. In a classroom of children where there is one child who’s
behaviour is reinforced by the others laughing, it would be very difficult to
remove the reinforcement completely (because you can’t shut the problem child away).
With monkey, it is possible that I could take him out of public view for a
while so that when he throws food at me, there is no one to clap and reward him
for this behaviour. In summary, preventing the consequences that maintain the
behaviour should weaken it until it becomes extinct, (Hanley, Iwata &
McCord, 2003).
With
this knowledge – and assuming all animals are as receptive to punishment and
reward as children – I could have the most well behaved zoo animals ever!
Katherine Baylis
References
Hanley,
G. P., Iwata, B. A., & McCord, B. E. (2003). Functional analysis of problem
behavior: A review. Journal of Applied
Behavior, 36, 147-185.
Iwata,
B. A. (1987). Negative reinforcement in applied behavior analysis: An emerging
technology. Journal of Applied Behavior
Analysis, 20, 361-378.
Skinner,
B. F. (1938). The Behavior of Organisms:
An Experimental Anaylsis. New York: Appleton-Century.
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