Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
A comprehensive set of questions and answers covering key concepts and procedures related to the registered behavior technician (rbt) exam. It includes true/false questions, multiple-choice questions, and short-answer questions, along with detailed explanations for each answer. The document also covers essential topics such as data collection methods, behavior analysis principles, and ethical considerations for rbts. This resource is valuable for individuals preparing for the rbt exam and seeking to enhance their understanding of applied behavior analysis.
Typology: Exams
1 / 26
True/False: As an RBT if you feel your BCBA's interventions are not effective you should share your opinions with the parents and suggest a different plan. - ANSWER>>False A mother comes to your during your home session and starts to gossip about how poorly another therapist is doing on her child's case. How should you react? - ANSWER>>Politely tell the mother that if she has concerns, she needs to address those concerns with the BCBA, then continue working. What should you do if a client's mother invites you out to the bar after your session? - ANSWER>>Politely decline True/False: It is okay to babysit for your clients as a side job. - ANSWER>>False True/False: If a client is engaging in dangerous behaviors, an RBT can use whatever means that are at their disposal to control the behavior. - ANSWER>>False The roles and responsibilities of the RBT include which of the following? - ANSWER>>All of the above (deliver discrete trial instruction and incidental teaching, record data, and implement behavior interventions plans as written as a BCBA) True/False: An RBT can practice independently of a BCBA - ANSWER>>False Rate is... - ANSWER>>the total count per a unit of time Duration is... - ANSWER>>the time from when the behavior begins to when it ends. Latency is... - ANSWER>>the time between the presentation of a stimulus and the occurrence of a behavior
Which of the following is a continuous recording method? - ANSWER>>All of the above (duration, rate/frequency, and latency) calculate frequency/rate per hour and minute for a behavior that occurred 120 times over a 2 hour observation - ANSWER>>60 per hour, 1 per minute partial-interval recording is... - ANSWER>>When the behavior must occur at least once during the interval to be recorded Whole-interval recording is.... - ANSWER>>when the behavior must occur for the entire interval to be recorded. Momentary time sampling is.... - ANSWER>>when the behavior must be occurring at the end of the interval to be recorded. Inter-response time is... - ANSWER>>The time between the end of one instance of the behavior and the beginning of the next occurrence of behavior. which recording method would you expect to use when a target behavior is set to increase? - ANSWER>>whole-interval recording Which recording method would you expect to use when a target behavior is set to decrease? - ANSWER>>Partial-interval recording true or false? Partial interval recording has the tendency to under-estimate the frequency of a target behavior while whole interval recording has the tendency to over-estimate the frequency of the target behavior? - ANSWER>>False Which of the following are examples of "permanent products" that can be used to collect data using permanent product recording procedures. - ANSWER>>Number of broken windows and folded shirts True/False: permanent product recording is one of the lease cumbersome data recording methods - ANSWER>>True
Choose the best operational definition for a tantrum - ANSWER>>Any instance of the client crying and hitting himself in the head with a closed fist which makes a sound that can be heard within five feet. Instance must last longer than 30 seconds and are separated by 30 seconds of non-occurrence. Define behavior: - ANSWER>>The activity of living organisms; human behavior includes everything that people do. define environment: - ANSWER>>the conglomerate of real circumstances in which the organism or references part of the organism exists; behavior cannot occur in the absence of environment. List the four functions of behavior: - ANSWER>>Social positive (attention/access), Social negative (escaping), Automatic Positive (sensory stimulation), Automatic Negative (pain attenuation) A client gets out of his seat every time a demand is placed. When he gets out of his seat his teacher says, "Oh you need a break", and does not follow through with her demand. This client's out of seat behavior most likely serves what function? - ANSWER>>Social negative (escape) A client frequently spits. You notice that he spits during work times, when he is on a break, when he is playing with his favorite toys, during meal times, when you or someone else is directly engaged with him, and even when he is by himself. One day mom brings the client back from the dentist where he had to get 6 cavities filled. After this dentist appointment the spitting stopped. What function does spitting most likely serve? - ANSWER>>Automatic negative (pain attenuation) Every time his mother removes items from him, a client engages in a tantrum. Mom tries to ignore him but after around five minutes mom gives him back the item she removed and the tantrum immediately stops. What function is most likely maintaining the tantrums? - ANSWER>>Social Positive (attention/access) A client hits other students in his class during work and break times. Each time he hits another students the teacher immediately provides a verbal reprimand. What function does his hitting most like serve? - ANSWER>>Social Positive (attention/access)
You work with a client who drops legos on the floor for hours if left alone. The client does this even if others are playing with him, when no demands are being placed, and when given free access to a number of preferred toys. What is the function of the lego dropping behavior? - ANSWER>>Automatic Positive (sensory stimulation) What is an antecedent? - ANSWER>>A stimulus that occurs before the behavior What is a consequence? - ANSWER>>A stimulus that occurs after the behavior Why do we conduct assessments? - ANSWER>>All of the above (to discover behavioral deficits, to discover behavior excesses, to identify environment variables) True/False: A functional assessment is a set of procedures used to identify the cause of a problem behavior or socially inappropriate behavior. - ANSWER>>True A functional analysis is... - ANSWER>>The deliberate manipulation of variables to evoke a target behavior to determine the function of the behavior. A Functional Behavior Assessment is... - ANSWER>>all of the above (a set of interviews conducted to identify the function of a behavior, observations of the problem behavior as it is occurring in the natural setting, and functional analysis) What does the ABC stand for in ABC recording? - ANSWER>>Antecedent, Behavior, Consequence A reinforcer is... - ANSWER>>A stimulus that increases or maintains the frequency of a behavior A punisher is... - ANSWER>>A stimulus that decreases the future frequency of a behavior. Provide one example of a primary reinforcer - ANSWER>>food, water, warmth. Provide one example of a secondary reinforcer - ANSWER>>bell, token, praise. The manipulation if Motivating Operations is a(n)... - ANSWER>>Antecedent intervention True/False: an Establishing Operation increases the value of a particular reinforcer - ANSWER>>True
True/False: An Abolishing Operation decreases the value of a particular reinforcer - ANSWER>>True What is the main purpose of pairing yourself with reinforcement: - ANSWER>>to make you reinforcing to the client What is differential reinforcement? - ANSWER>>reinforcing a desired behavior while discontinuing the reinforcement for an undesired behavior. Which of the following is not a Differential Reinforcement procedure? - ANSWER>>Differential reinforcement of appropriate behaviors. Which of the following is an incompatible behavior for hand flipping? - ANSWER>>Squeezing hands together. Define Extinction: - ANSWER>>Discontinuation of a reinforcement of a previously reinforced behavior; the primary effect is a decrease in the frequency of behavior until it reaches a prereinforced level or ultimately ceases to occur. True/False: Extinction is most effective when used as a stand-alone procedure? - ANSWER>>False. You are working with a client who engages in verbal aggression. The BCBA on the case has determined that the verbal aggression is maintain by escape from demands. The BCBA asks you to use extinction as a part of the intervention plan. Briefly describe what this procedure would look like. - ANSWER>>Not allowing the client to escape from demands when he/she engages in verbal aggression and providing no reaction or response to the verbal aggression. You are working with a client who engages in tantrums that are maintained by access to tangibles. The BCBA instructs you to implement extinction. Briefly describe what this procedure would look like for this case. - ANSWER>>Not providing tangibles when the client engages in tantrum behaviors and providing no reaction or response to the tantrum behavior. True/False: There are times as an RBT you will have to implement emergency/crisis strategies. -
ANSWER>>True Which of the following is an example of an emergency/crisis management strategy. - ANSWER>>All of the above (Relocate people, Remove unnecessary demands, and rearrange the environment) You are unsure that an emergency/crisis management procedure is appropriate for a particular behavior. Who should you consult with? - ANSWER>>BCBA What constitute an emergency? - ANSWER>>All of the above (Self-injury, injury to others, destruction of property) An Acquisition program is a program designed to... - ANSWER>>Teach a new skill the individual does not have. Acquisition programs can teach with of the following skills - ANSWER>>all of the above (daily living skills, communication skills, recreational/leisure skills) True/False: Another name for conditioned reinforcement is primary reinforcement. - ANSWER>>False Examples of unconditioned reinforcers include which of the following? Circle all that apply. - ANSWER>>Skittles, Juice, sleeping List three examples of conditioned reinforcers. - ANSWER>>Tokens, social praise, toys. What is a reinforcement schedule? - ANSWER>>A protocol that states the frequency of which reinforcement will be delivered. When would you provide reinforcement if a client was on a continuous schedule of reinforcement? - ANSWER>>Reinforcement is delivered for each occurrence of the target behavior. True/False: Intermittent reinforcement is most often used for maintaining previously learned behaviors. - ANSWER>>True
What are the four schedules of intermittent reinforcement? - ANSWER>>Fixed-ratio, fixed interval, variable-ratio, variable-interval When using a ratio schedule of reinforcement, reinforcement is delivered when? - ANSWER>>Reinforcement is delivered after a certain number of responses. When using an interval schedule of reinforcement, reinforcement is delivered when? - ANSWER>>Reinforcement is delivered for the first response after a certain amount of time since the last response. True/False: Discrete Trial Training (DTT) is a method of teaching in simplified and structured steps
Some advantages of NET are which of the following. - ANSWER>>Use of a client's MO to guide language instruction, Reduce the amount of problem behavior, the verbal instructions are much more instructions are much more characteristic of typical verbal interactions, and the training conditions are closer to how a client may be taught in the future. Provide an example of incidental teaching... - ANSWER>>Providing structured learning opportunities in the natural environment by using the clients interests and natural motivation, such as withholding reinforcing items until a client requests them appropriately. True/False: Sometimes when using NET procedures you may have to contrive a situation to work on a skill. - ANSWER>>True True/False: Task analysis is the process of breaking a skill into smaller, more manageable steps in order to teach the skill. Task analysis is an effective way to plan the teaching of skills that require several steps to be performed. - ANSWER>>True. Task analysis can be used to teach which of the following types of skills. - ANSWER>>All of the above (self-help skills, life skills, academic skills) Provide an example of a behavior that is most likely be taught using a task analysis. - ANSWER>>hand washing, brushing teeth, completing chores. When using backward chaining the RBT does which of the following? - ANSWER>>Will prompt the client through the steps and then expect the client to do the last step independently. Each time a step is mastered the client is expected to complete the acquisition step and all mastered steps. When using forward chaining the RBT does with of the following? - ANSWER>>Will ask the client to complete the first step independently then prompt him/her through the remainder of the steps. Once a step is mastered the client is expected to complete all mastered and the one acquisition step independently.
When using total task presentation the RBT does which of the following? - ANSWER>>Will present the task and will allow the opportunity for the client to complete each step independently in order each time the task is presented, prompting when necessary. True/False: Discrimination training is a process of reinforcing or punishing a response is the presence of one stimulus and extinguishing it in the presence of other stimuli. - ANSWER>>True. Which of the following is considered an error? - ANSWER>>All of the above (repeating the correct answer more than once, no response, selecting the wrong item) True/False: The stimulus delta (S-Delta) is defined as a stimulus in the presence of which a particular response will be reinforced. - ANSWER>>False. True/False: The discriminative stimulus (Sd) is defined as a stimulus in the presence of which a particular response will not be reinforced. - ANSWER>>False Define Stimulus control: - ANSWER>>A situation in which the frequency, latency, duration, or amplitude of behavior is altered by the presence or absence of an antecedent stimulus. True/False: Stimulus fading involved introducing or altering a new element, such as color, intensity, or size to the target stimulus, which is gradually faded by reducing its intensity or components. - ANSWER>>True True/False: Stimulus fading can often be used to desensitize a client to aversive stimuli. - ANSWER>>True Provide an example of stimulus fading: - ANSWER>> Stimulus fading can be used in what context(s)? - ANSWER>>All of the above (academic skills, adaptive skills, behavior reduction) Which is a correct prompting hierarchy for prompt fading? - ANSWER>>Full physical, partial physical, model, gesture
Which is a correct prompting hierarchy for prompt fading? - ANSWER>>Full verbal, partial verbal, gestural, visual. True/False: Failing to fade prompts can lead to a client being prompt dependent? - ANSWER>>True. The goal of instruction is to produce behavior change outside the training context... - ANSWER>>All of the above (overtime, accross persons, setting, and stimuli, and spread to related behaviors.) If a client can perform a skill in a different context then it was taught, that skill has... - ANSWER>>Generalized List one strategy for promoting maintenance - ANSWER>>Performing a skill after a portion or all has been terminated. List one strategy for promoting generalization. - ANSWER>>Introduce natural contingencies. read the following scenario. "Alex successfully uses the toilet at the clinic, then he begins using the toilet at home." True/False: The skill of using the toilet has generalized? - ANSWER>>True Parent training is a key part of any ABA program because of which of the following? - ANSWER>>Parents have more interactions with their client than anyone else so being trained is a key component to the client being successful AND Skills are not fully learned until they generalize to caregivers. True/False: Parents should be surveyed frequently with regards to problem behavior, new skills, and potential reinforcers. - ANSWER>>True True/false: As an RBT you provide parent training at any point to parents even about how to manage your client's siblings - ANSWER>>False True/False: As an RBT you should report variables that might affect the client - ANSWER>>True
What are some variables worth reporting that may affect the client? - ANSWER>>health/illness life changes (move, new school) any new behaviors true/False: You should aways maintain an open and comfortable relationship with your Supervisor
Sd- Discriminative Stimulus - ANSWER>>Instruction given to client only when client is attending without maladaptive behaviors in a clear, simple manner without interruption, only one time, in a neutral tone without using clients name. Intermittent Reinforcement: - ANSWER>>some, but not all, occurrences of behavior are being reinforced consisting of Ratio- certain number of responses Interval- first response after a certain amount of time since last reinforcement Fixed- number of responses of time remains the same Variable- number of responses or amount of time is random (ex. average) FR, FI, VR, VI Continuous Measurement Procedures: - ANSWER>>records every possible behavioral occurrence Frequency- recording each instance of behavior Duration- number of seconds each instance of behavior occurs Latency- elapsed time from onset of stimulus to initiation of response. Inter-Response Time (IRT)- elapsed time between two successive responses. Extinction- - ANSWER>>reinforcement of a previously reinforced behavior is discontinued resulting in a decrease in the frequency of behavior. Extinction Burst- - ANSWER>>a predictable, temporary increase in the rate and intensity of a behavior when an extinction procedure is first used. Spontaneous Recovery- - ANSWER>>A behavior reappears after it has decreased or stopped entirely during extinction procedures Systematic Desensitization- - ANSWER>>Involves gradually providing a client with longer and longer exposures and closer approximations to feared sounds, environments, items, and/or activities while encouraging relaxation. Positive reinforcement- - ANSWER>>behavior increasing when something reinforcing is added.
Negative Reinforcement- - ANSWER>>behavior increasing when something aversive is removed or reduced Differential Reinforcement- - ANSWER>>reinforcing a desired replacement behavior with withholding or masking reinforcement for an undesirable stereotypic behavior Replacement Behaviors - ANSWER>>appropriate behaviors chosen to replace maladaptive behaviors that require equal or less effort, serve the same function, and provide the same or greater reinforcement than the maladaptive behavior. 5 steps of the discrete trial - ANSWER>>Mass Trial Distracter Trial Random Rotation Expanded Trial Generalization/Maintenance Mass Trial - ANSWER>>Presenting a target alone repetitively (3-10 trials) Distracter Trial - ANSWER>>Presenting a target along with distracter(s) stimuli Random Rotation - ANSWER>>presenting one target along with one previously mastered target Expanded Trial - ANSWER>>presenting one target along with 2 more previously mastered targets Generalization/Maintenance - ANSWER>>a target is repetitively answered correctly across time in various settings and with various materials, stimuli, and people. Non-Contingent Reinforcement - ANSWER>>providing access to preferred items/activities, automatic reinforcement, and/or breaks from demands throughout the day in the absence of maladaptive behaviors. Automatic Reinforcement Interventions: - ANSWER>>providing a client with automatic reinforcement or teaching a client to provide him/herself with automatic reinforcement appropriately by providing breaks or a time to engage in these activities.
Behavior Reduction Interventions - ANSWER>>Antecedent Based and Consequence Based Interventions designed to reduce maladaptive/problem behaviors. Prompting Hierarchy - ANSWER>>Most to least intrusive Physical, Verbal, Gestural Model, Visual, Positional, material. Social reinforcement - ANSWER>>reinforcement requiring mediation from another person Automatic Reinforcement - ANSWER>>reinforcement not requiring mediation from another person Sensory extinction - ANSWER>>masking or removing the sensory consequence of a behavior Deprivation - ANSWER>>increasing the effectiveness of a reinforcer by withholding access to a reinforcer for a specified period of time prior to a session Satiation - ANSWER>>reducing the effectiveness of a reinforcer by presenting the person with vast amounts of the reinforcer prior to a session. Automatic Negative Reinforcement - ANSWER>>Something taken away without need for another person Social Negative Reinforcement - ANSWER>>taking something away Automatic Positive Reinforcement - ANSWER>>something added without the need of another person Social Positive Reinforcement - ANSWER>>adding something
Continuous reinforcers - ANSWER>>reinforcement is provided for each occurrence of behavior. Partial Interval Recording - ANSWER>>whether a behavior occurred at any time during an interval of time Whole Interval Recording - ANSWER>>observing a client at regular intervals and recording if the behavior occurred during the entire time. Non-Contingent Access - ANSWER>>Providing a client with frequent non-contingent access to stimulation matching a sensory function of a stereotypic behavior as a form of antecedent satiation. Behavior interrupting - ANSWER>>interrupting maladaptive, or stereotypic behaviors with appropriate and incompatible behavior. Role of an RBT - ANSWER>>- deliver discrete trial instruction and incidental teaching
recording Partial Interval Recording - ANSWER>>when a behavior must occur at least once during an interval to be recorded Looking for behavior decrease using which kind of recording? - ANSWER>>partial interval recording Inter-response time recording - ANSWER>>time between the end of one instance of the behavior and the beginning of the next occurrence of behavior Momentary Time Sampling - ANSWER>>records whether the target behavior is occurring at the moment that each time interval ends Reinforcer - ANSWER>>any stimulus or event that functions to increase the likelihood of the behavior that led to it primary reinforcer example - ANSWER>>any reinforcer that is naturally reinforcing by meeting a basic biological need, such as food, water, warmth secondary reinforcer example - ANSWER>>any reinforcer that becomes reinforcing after being paired with a primary reinforcer, such as praise, tokens, or gold stars positive reinforcement - ANSWER>>the reinforcement of a response by the addition or experiencing of a pleasurable stimulus differential reinforcement - ANSWER>>reinforcing a desired replacement behavior with withholding or masking reinforcement for an undesirable stereotypic behavior negative reinforcement - ANSWER>>the reinforcement of a response by the removal, escape from, or avoidance of an unpleasant stimulus
social reinforcement - ANSWER>>when a behavior produces a reinforcing consequence through the actions of another person such as praise, attention, approval, and /or affection from others Social Positive Reinforcement - ANSWER>>adding something Social Negative Reinforcement - ANSWER>>taking away Punisher - ANSWER>>any stimulus or event that functions to decrease the likelihood of the behavior that led to it Stimulus - ANSWER>>a signal to which an organism responds ABC recording - ANSWER>>The preferred method to use for behavioral assessment to determine which behavior to target for change is: ABC stands for - ANSWER>>- Antecedent
Consequences Behavior - ANSWER>>the activity of living organisms; human behavior includes everything that people do. Antecedent - ANSWER>>a stimulus that occurs before the behavior Consequence - ANSWER>>a stimulus that occurs after the behavior 4 schedules of reinforcement - ANSWER>>1. fixed ratio
automatic negative - ANSWER>>behavior that occurs to remove sensation *removing hand to stop pian Target Behavior - ANSWER>>the specific behavior you are interested in changing. It is the focus of assessment, analysis, and intervention What kind of reinforcement? Giving a client a cookie for cleaning up toys is adding a cookie and increases the probability that the client will clean up toys in the future in hopes of receiving a cookie. As well as giving a client a hug for saying thank you, or giving a client screen time for doing math work. - ANSWER>>Positive reinforcement What kind of reinforcement? Trend - ANSWER>>range level - ANSWER>>draw line through closets points Variability - ANSWER>>look for stable patterns Most common graph used is BACB - ANSWER>>Line graph Continuos Measurement - ANSWER>>frequency, rate, duration, latency, IRT Discontinuous measurements - ANSWER>>momentary time sample, whole interval, partial Putting on your seatbelt in the car to stop the seatbelt warning noise in your car OR when a client cries when he sees math homework so the homework is removed and the crying stops, but in the future the crying continues when the client sees homework. - ANSWER>>Negative reinforcement
interval Permanent Product - ANSWER>>anything you can see after the behavior occurred
operational definition - ANSWER>>very specific definition Interobserver Agreement (IOA) - ANSWER>>The degree to which two or more independent observers report the same observed values after measuring the same events *80% agreement maintenance - ANSWER>>Testing skills from time to time to ensure mastery *random rotation Random Rotation - ANSWER>>Presenting any random SD within a set of mastered items Generalization - ANSWER>>using one skill to apply to different settings, time, or people Naturalistic teaching (incidental teaching) - ANSWER>>taking skills on a table and applying it in the real world
completing the chain. When the learner shows competence in performing the final step in the chain, the trainer performs all but the last two behaviors in the chain, the learner emits the final two steps to complete the chain, and reinforcement is delivered. This sequence is continued until the learner completes the entire chain independently. Total Task Chaining - ANSWER>>Teaching behavior chain steps all at once and then prompting when necessary stimulus generalization - ANSWER>>behavior that is evoked when encountering similar stimuli
Most to least prompting - ANSWER>>using the most amount of prompting at the start, and moving towards lesser prompts as needed *often associated with errorless learning; most successful to get desired response Least to most prompting - ANSWER>>using the least number of prompts and only moving to more prompts as necessary *remember as the do-over method Graduated Guidance prompting - ANSWER>>- Used with physical prompts
Direct/Descriptive Assessment - ANSWER>>observing behavior in the natural environment and not manipulating Functional/experimental analysis - ANSWER>>- arranging antecedents and consequences so that their separate effect on a problem behavior can be observed and the function of the behavior can be determined Ecobehavioral assessment - ANSWER>>Attempts to not only identify antecedents and consequences that are contiguous to behavior but analyzes patterns of responses that may suggest how they will react *remember aisle example Behavior Reduction Plan - ANSWER>>- Operational definition
better spontaneous recovery - ANSWER>>when the learner repeats the target behavior after mastering replacement behavior but then repeats the target - to see if it works, but it doesn't because you're consistent. maladaptive behavior - ANSWER>>behavior that makes it difficult to adapt to the environment and meet the demands of day-to-day life; behaviors that are not appropriate (cookie example) Types of Differential Reinforcement - ANSWER>>-DRI (differential reinforcement of incompatible behavior)