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10 Cards in this Set

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  • Back
Application of Aversive Activities
A positive punishment procedure in which, contingent on the undesirable behavior, the client is required to engage in an aversive activity (a low-probability behavior) to decrease the future probability of the undesirable behavior.
Application of Aversive Stimulation
A positive punishment procedure in which an aversive stimulus is delivered contingent on the occurrence of the undesirable behavior to decrease the future probability of the undesirable behavior
Contingent Exercise
A positive punishment procedure involving the application of aversive activities. Contingent on the problem behavior, the person is required to engage in some form of physical exercise.
Guided Compliance
A positive punishment procedure used with a person who displays non-compliant behavior. when you make a request and the person refuses to comply, you physically prompt the person to engage in the behavior. The physical prompt is removed as the person complies with the request on his or her own. ______ __________ prevents escape from the requested behavior, and thus also serves as an extinction procedure when the non-compliant behavior is negatively reinforced by escape from the requested activity
Informed Consent
The process in which the client is informed of the behavior modification procedure to be used and agrees in writing to undergo the procedure. Necessary for the use of positive punishment procedures
Overcorrection
A positive punishment procedure in which, contingent on the problem behavior a person is required to engage in effortful activity for a brief period. Positive practice and restitution are two types of ______________.
Physical Restraint
A type of positive punishment procedure in which, contingent on the occurrence of the problem behavior, the change agent holds immobile the part of the client's body that is involved in the problem behavior so that the client cannot continue to engage in the behavior
Positive Practice
A type of ocercorrection procedure in which, contingent on the problem behavior, the client is required to engage in correct forms of relevant behavior until the behavior has been repeated a number of times
Response Blocking
A procedure in which the change agent physically blocks a problem behavior so that the client cannot complete the response. It is often used in conjunction with brief restraint.
Restitution
A type of overcorrection procedure in which, contingent on the occurrence of the problem behavior, the client is required to correct the environmental effect of the problem behavior and to bring the environment to a condition better than that which existed before the problem behavior.