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A comprehensive set of 167 practice questions and answers for the registered behavior technician (rbt) exam. It covers a wide range of topics related to aba principles, procedures, and ethical considerations. Designed to help aspiring rbts prepare for the exam by providing a thorough understanding of key concepts and practical applications.
Typology: Exams
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Dealing with Stakeholders - Answer: The RBT should only communicate with stakeholders as authorized by the supervisor. Any specific questions should be deferred to the BCBA or BCaBA. If you do communicate you must be objective, use behavioral language, avoid speculation, stick to topic appropriate for an RBT. Assist Training Stakeholders - Answer: RBT can assist with training stakeholders by giving them instruction, modeling, rehearsal, and feedback with regard to behavioral skills training. Report Other Variables - Answer: illness, relocation or change in medication. Components of a Written Behavior Plan - Answer: 1. Identify, describe, create a goal for a behavior in observable terms.
Communicate effectively with all team members. Professional Boundaries - Answer: Avoid dual relationships, conflicts of interest, social media contacts. Always take notes. Client Dignity - Answer: Be respectful and thoughtful about the client's needs and wants. Never do or say anything to cause embarrassment to the client. Do not do something in front of your client that you would not do if working with a typical developing child. How to Prepare for Data Collection - Answer: 1. Read data from last session
Unconditioned Response - Answer: A behavior that occurs naturally due to a given stimulus. i.e. Dogs salivating in the presence of food; yelping upon being bitten by an insect. Conditioned Stimulus - Answer: A previously neutral stimulus that, after repeated association with an unconditioned stimulus, elicits the response produced by the unconditioned stimulus itself. Conditioned Response - Answer: A behavior that does not come naturally, but must be learned by the individual by pairing a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus. Unconditioned Reinforcers - Answer: (AKA primary reinforcers) Stimuli that do not require learning. (i.e. food, water, warmth, sleep, sexual stimulation) Conditioned Reinforcers - Answer: (AKA secondary reinforcers) Neutral stimuli that have been paired with unconditioned reinforcers, or other conditioned reinforcers and through repeated pairing become reinforcers themselves. (i.e. stickers, sound, people) Generalized Conditioned Reinforcers - Answer: Stimuli that have been paired with a variety of unconditioned and conditioned reinforcers. (i.e. praise, attention, money, tokens) Operant Behavior - Answer: Behavior that is controlled or influenced by consequences. Behavior whose future frequency is determined by a history of consequences. Operant Conditioning - Answer: A type of learning where behavior is controlled by consequences. Behavior followed by pleasant consequences tends to be repeated. Behavior followed by unpleasant consequences tends not to be repeated.
Mand Training - Answer: (AKA request training) Training by asking for what you want. Reinforcers - Answer: Pleasant events that follow a behavior that make behavior more likely to occur in the future. Reinforcers strengthen behavior. Punishers - Answer: Unpleasant events that follow a behavior and decrease the likelihood that a behavior will happen again in the future. 4 - Part Contingency of Operant Learning - Answer: 1. MO - Motivating Operation
Partial Interval Recording - Answer: Did the behavior occur at least once during the short observation interval? Overestimates the behavior. Example: presence or absence of thumb-sucking within a series of time intervals. Whole Interval Recording - Answer: Did the behavior occur for the whole interval that you are looking for it? Underestimates the behavior. Example: the total time devoted to remaining on task. Momentary Time Sampling - Answer: Look up at the client immediately at pre-designated points and record whether the behavior occurred at that precise moment. Example: presence or absence of client's stereotypic behavior (stimming). Response Latency - Answer: The amount of time after a specific stimulus has been given before the target behavior occurs. Permanent Product Recording Procedures - Answer: A type of measurement used when the behavior you are assessing results in a lasting product or outcome. Example: number of written assignments completed; Anecdotal Data - Answer: A method of descriptively recording the behavior emitted by the learner, the response of others, and information about the environment. Trial by Trial Data - Answer: For each trial record target and whether response was:
Graphing - Answer: Graphing is a method of representing data in a visual way so that we can se patterns and direction over time.
Can consist of:
Immediate increase in frequency in responding. Spontaneous Recovery - Answer: After a period of time the behavior may come back temporarily during extinction. Rewards - Answer: Something that we THINK will might act as a reinforcer. Rewards are the THING, reinforcement is the ACTION. (i.e. If giving a child a cooke after they clean their room does not increase the chances of them cleaning their room again in the future then the cookie was just a reward and NOT a reinforcer) Positive Reinforcement - Answer: Pleasant or favorable event that follows a behavior - it is ADDED to the situation and increases the likelihood or probability that the behavior will occur in the future. Negative Reinforcement - Answer: REMOVAl of an aversive event that follows a behavior ("relief") and increases the likelihood that the behavior will continue in the future. (i.e. cleaning your room and your mom stops nagging; hitting snooze on an alarm and the beeping stops; putting on your seatbelt and the dinging stops) Secondary Reinforcement - Answer: (AKA Conditioned Reinforcement) Occurs when neutral stimuli have been paired with unconditioned reinforcers or other conditioned reinforcers repeatedly thus making the neutral stimuli become conditioned reinforcers. Conditioned Punisher - Answer: Stimuli or events that function as punishers only after being paired with unconditioned punishers. Form of positive punishment in which every time an undesired behavior occurs the actor loses a reinforcer.
Unconditioned Punisher - Answer: A stimulus change that can decrease the future frequency of any behavior that precedes it without prior pairing with any other form of punishment. (i.e. shock, physical pain, loud noises, painful stimulation that can cause tissue damage, light, sound, temperature) Preference Assessment - Answer: Aims to identify an individual's favorite things so that they can be used as rewards or potential "reinforcers" for desired behavior. CSDA
Single Item Preference Assessment - Answer: Single Item/Single Stimulus Objects and activities are presented to the individual one by one. Data are recorded on how long the person engages with each item or activity. Forced Choice Preference Assessment - Answer: Simultaneous presentation of two items or activities and individual is asked to choose one. Most frequently selected item will likely be the most potent reinforcer. Multiple Stimuli With Replacement - Answer: Item chosen by the learner remains in the array and all other items that were not selected are replaced with new ones. Multiple Stimuli Without Replacement - Answer: Chosen item is removed from the array, the order or replacement of the remaining items is rearranged, and the next trial begins with a reduced number of items in the array. Premack Principle - Answer: Make access to a high probability behavior contingent on performing a low probability behavior. The opportunity to engage in more probable behaviors (or activities) will reinforce less probable behavior. Grandma's Rule: If you want to go out to play, you have to eat your vegetables first. Satiation - Answer: Repeatedly presenting a stimulus for the purpose of reducing its attractiveness by reaching a satiation level. Rule Governed Behavior - Answer: Behavior either verbal or nonverbal under the control of verbal antecedents. (i.e. "If I study 2 hours every day, I will get an A on the exam next month")
Response Blocking - Answer: The source of reinforcement is blocked. A procedure in which the therapist physically intervenes as soon as the learning begins to emit a problem behavior to prevent the completion of the target behavior. Random Rotation - Answer: The random presentation of mastered items, free from pattern (as if flipping a coin repeatedly). Block Trials - Answer: Repeatedly asking for an item for a designated number of trials, and then moving to another item for the same number of trials. Mass Trials - Answer: Repeatedly presenting the same SD (discriminative stimulus) and R (response) pair for several trials in a row. Continuous Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: Providing reinforcement each time the behavior/response occurs. Intermittent Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: Reinforcement is delivered after only SOME of the desired responses occur. Fixed Ratio Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: Reinforcement should be delivered after a constant or "fixed" number of responses. Variable Ratio Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: Reinforcement is provided after an unpredictable (variable) number of responses. This schedule is the most resistant to extinction. Fixed Interval Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: The first correct response is rewarded only after a specified amount of time has elapsed.
Variable Interval Reinforcement Schedule - Answer: Where a response is rewarded after an unpredictable (variable) amount of time has elapsed. Positive Punishment - Answer: Presentation of an unpleasant or aversive stimulus immediately following behavior that results in a decrease of that behavior in the future. Negative Punishment - Answer: The termination or removal of a stimulus immediately following behavior that results in a decrease of that behavior in the future. (i.e. taking away a toy when a child talks back; time out from positive reinforcement for yelling) Response Cost - Answer: A type of punishment also known as Negative Reinforcement. Loss of a specific amount of reinforcement. Time out from Positive Reinforcement - Answer: The withdrawal of the opportunity to earn positive reinforcement, or the loss of access to positive reinforcers for a specific amount of time. A form of Negative Punishment Contingent Exercise - Answer: Perform a response that is not topographically related to the problem behavior. (i.e. touch toes 20 times contingent on biting self) Overcorrection - Answer: Effortful behavior that is directly or logically related to the problem behavior. Time-Out - Answer: Brief removal of all social positive reinforcement. Positive Behavior Support - Answer: A function-based approach to eliminate challenging behaviors and replace them with socially appropriate behaviors.
(i.e. every 5 minutes without hitting, individual receives a sticker) Differential Reinforcement of Low Rates of Responding - Answer: Entails reinforcing for reductions in the frequency of the undesired behavior. Often used when individual is engaging in a behavior too frequently. Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behaviors - Answer: DRA - Focus on increasing a desirable alternative behavior that directly or indirectly interferes with the performance of the undesired target behavior. (i.e. reinforce knitting or giving a self manicure instead of biting nails; reinforce appropriate language instead of punishing swearing at others) Differential Reinforcement of Incompatible Behaviors - Answer: DRI - Similar to DRA but you choose and alternative behavior to reinforce that, if performed, would be incompatible with the undesired target behavior. (i.e. playing nicely vs. fighting; on task behavior vs. off task behavior; in seat vs. out of seat; deep breathing vs. yelling) Discrete Trial Training - Answer: DTT - Structured instructional methodology used to teach new behaviors Designed to maximize a learner's potential by presenting information in a three-part teaching unit. Based on Antecedent - Behavior - Consequence format. A - B - C (Stimulus - Response - Consequence) Main objective is to teach children how to learn from their natural environment and make learning reinforcing.
Errorless Learning - Answer: Teaching procedures that are designed in such a way that the learning does not have to - and does not - make mistakes as she or he learns new information or procedures. DTT is Errorless Learning. Skinnner: "Errors are not necessary for learning to occur." Discriminative Stimulus (SD) - Answer: Used in DTT: Environmental cue or instruction that signals that reinforcement is available for a target behavior. Response (R) - Answer: Used in DTT: The behavior in which an individual engages. 4 types of response:
Transfer of Stimulus Control - Answer: Process by which prompts are removed once the target behavior is occurring in the presence of the SD. Prompt Fading - Answer: The gradual elimination of a stimulus prompt as the behavior continues to occur in the presence of the SD. Stimulus Fading - Answer: Exaggerate some physical dimension of the relevant stimulus to help the individual respond correctly. Prompt is within the stimulus itself. Can be used for color or size determination. Discrimination Training - Answer: Procedure to teach between two targets. Trial training using phases. (i.e. phases 1 - 6 Mass Trials of target, Block Trials, and Random Rotation) Shaping - Answer: A process by which one systematically and differentially reinforces successive approximations to a terminal behavior. Chaining - Answer: A specific sequence of discrete responses, each associated with a particular stimulus condition. When components are linked together, they form a chain that produces a terminal outcome. Task Analysis - Answer: Involves breaking a complex skill into smaller, teachable units, the product of which is a series of sequentially ordered steps or tasks. Forward Chaining - Answer: Training begins the link with the first behavior in the sequence. Training only occurs on the steps currently mastered and current step (no training on steps after that).
Backward Chaining - Answer: Training begins the link with the last behavior in the sequence. Trainer performs all but the last step until the learner masters the last step. Then trainer performs all but the lasts two steps until learner masters the last two steps and so on. Backward Chaining with Leaps Ahead - Answer: Follow same procedure as backward chaining but not every step in the task analysis is trained. Natural Environment Training (NET) - Answer: Is loosely structured, and uses or contrives a leaner's motivation and activities and not an exclusively teacher-selected set of materials, as the basis for the lesson. Often used to teach child to mand or request. Verbal Behavior - Answer: Behavior that is reinforced through the mediation of another person's behavior. Involves a social interaction between speakers and listeners. Listener reinforces the speaker. Mand, Tact, Echoic, Intraverbal, Textual, Transcription - Answer: 6 Elementary Verbal Operants Mand - Answer: Short for demand, command or reprimand. A type of verbal operant in which a speaker asks for (or states, demands, implies, etc.) what he needs or wants. Only type of verbal operant that directly benefits the speaker b/c the mand allows the speaker to receive reinforcers. Tact - Answer: Short for contact. A type of verbal operant in which speaker names things and actions that the speaker had direct contact with through any of the sense modes.
Echoic - Answer: A type of verbal operant that occurs when a speaker repeats the verbal behavior of another speaker. Occurs in response to other verbal behavior. Listener is "echoing" what they hear. Intraverbal - Answer: A type of verbal operant in which a speaker differentially responds to the verbal behavior of others.
(i.e. responds to different SD's for same behavior like "sit here", "sit down", "have a seat") Response Generalization - Answer: The changes in behaviors or responses other than those that have been trained or developed. (i.e. you teach a child to put away toys following the SD "clean up" and the child also begins to throw away garbage and put books on the shelf) Maintenance - Answer: Refers to maintaining responses over time. So something leaned at time 1 would also be evident at times 2, 3 and 4. Implement Generalization and Maintenance Procedures - Answer: Start by slowly fading prompts and using natural reinforcement contingencies; use multiple settings, people and stimuli; train loosely and use random rotation; use variable reinforcement schedules; teach self management and reinforce generally when it happens. Contingency Contract - Answer: A document that specifies a contingent relationship between:
Contingent on an occurrence of the target behavior the learner is required to repeat a correct form of the behavior, or a behavior incompatible with the problem, a specified number of times. Planned Ignoring - Answer: Social reinforcers - usually attention, physical contact or verbal interaction - are removed for a brief period. Validity - Answer: Refers to the extent to which target behaviors are appropriate, intervention procedures are acceptable, and important significant changes in target and collateral behaviors are produced. Rate - Answer: Used in calculating data. Frequency with the addition of a time component. Also a form of Event Recording. Registered Behavior Technician - Answer: A paraprofessional who practices under the close, ongoing supervision of a BCBA or a BCaBA. The RBT is primarily responsible for the direct implementation of skill-acquisition and behavior- reduction plans developed by the supervisor. The RBT may also collect data and conduct certain types of assessments (i.e. stimulus preference assessments) The RBT does not design intervention or assessment plans. It is the responsibility of the designated RBT supervisor to determine which tasks an RBT may perform as a function of his or her training, experience, and competence. Total Task Chaining - Answer: The chaining procedure which teaches each step of the chain during each training session. Professional and Ethical Compliance Code - Answer: - Maintaining confidentiality