RBT
🇬🇧
In English
In English
Practice Known Questions
Stay up to date with your due questions
Complete 5 questions to enable practice
Exams
Exam: Test your skills
Test your skills in exam mode
Learn New Questions
Manual Mode [BETA]
The course owner has not enabled manual mode
Specific modes
Learn with flashcards
Complete the sentence
multiple choiceMultiple choice mode
SpeakingAnswer with voice
TypingTyping only mode
RBT - Leaderboard
RBT - Details
Levels:
Questions:
100 questions
🇬🇧 | 🇬🇧 |
ABA | Applied Behavioral Analysis |
Applied | Social validity |
What does a behavior have to be | Observable and measurable |
Analysis | Control over behavior by changing the environment |
Operant conditioning | Behaviors followed by something desirable |
Extinction burst | When a client's reaction to a new behavior intensifies after implementing a new behavior |
Punishment | Consequence that is delivered |
Reinforcement | Any consequence that maintains or increases the behavior |
Manding | Requesting |
ABC describes | Why the behavior is occuring |
Antecedent | Environment before the behavior |
ABC consequence | Environment after the behavior |
Operational Definition | What counts as a behavior and what does not |
2 ways to collect data | Continuous and discontinuous |
Continuous~ | More accurate |
Discontinuous~ | Estimation |
3 forms of continuous data | Frequency, rate, duration |
Frequency | A count on how many times a behavior occurs |
Rate | How many times a behavior occurs divided by the observation time |
Duration | When a behavior occurs for a series of time |
Behavior occurs the entire interval | Whole interval recording |
A behavior occurs at any point in the interval | Partial interval recording |
Record time of all the amounts of the behavior within the interval | Total duration interval |
Increase | Does whole interval recording increase or decrease a behavior |
Decrease | Does partial interval recording increase of decrease a behavior |
Attention, Access to preferred items, Escape or Avoidance, Automatic Reinforcement | 4 functions of behavior |
What reinforcement is motivating them | 1st step in changing a behavior |
Automatic | The hardest function to change |
What does it mean to sanitize the enviroment | Get things they want out of reach |
Rapport building | Pairing |
Types of preference assesments | Free operant, single stimulus, paired stimulus, multiple stimulus, interview |
Free operant | Observing client in a natural environment- less accurate |
Single stimulus | Present one object and observe how long their interest lasts |
Paired stimulus | Select 4-6 items, present 2 at a time |
Multiple stimulus | 3 or more items and have them choose |
2 types of multiple stimulus preference assesments | Replacement and non-replacement |
Interview preference | List of preferred items |
The indirect assessment | Interview |
Conditioned reinforcement | Secondary- praise, toys, tokens |
Unconditioned reinforcement | Primary- food, drinks, sleep |
Positive means | Something is given |
Negative means | Something is removed |
Shared control | Balance of control with your client |
MO- motivation operation | Environmental variable |
Deprevation | Makes more reinforcing |
Sensiation | Less reinforcing |
Continuous reinforcement | Reinforcing all the time |
Inter mitten reinforcement | Reinforcing some of the time |
Fixed | Exactly, new skill, ratio |
Variable | Approximately, keeps child motivated, intervals |
Validity | Measuring what we intend to measure |
Reliability | Getting the same results |
Data collection options | Interval recording, whole recording, partial recording, momentary time sampling |
Interval recording | Not as accurate, estimate, every 10 seconds |
Whole recording | Lasts the entire interval, underestimates, increases behavior |
Partial recording | Any part of the interval, overestimates, decreases behavior |
Momentary time sampling | If it is happening at the end of the behavior, over or under estimates |
Premack principle | If and then statements |
Non-contingent reinforcement | Given for free |
Demand fading | Slowly giving demands throughout the session |
Behavior momentum | Warm them up with easier instructions |
One of the first goals | Instructional control |
SD | Discriminitive stimulus |
Differential reinforcement | Giving reinforcement for the best answer the client can give |
DTT | Discrete trial- more structured- basic compliance |
PRT | Pivotal response training |
NET | Natural environment teaching |
3 types of modalities | DTT, PRT, NET |
5 parts of a discrete trial | SD- gain attention, do not overuse name, neutral tone Prompt- immediately after SD, not always required Response- correct or incorrect, no-response Consequence- immediately after the response, try again, with hold reinforcement Intertrial interval- brief pause before next SD |
Prompt Hierarchies (most to least intrusive) | Full physical, Partial physical, Gestural or model (non-verbal), Echoic and verbal |
Stimulus approximity | One object is closer than the others |
Mass trial | Same SD over and over again, namely for new trials. |
Random rotation | Random SD's mixed with mastered targets and receptive targets |
Expressive prompt | What is your name |
Shaping | Successive approximations are reinforced until reaching the entire goal |
Maintenance goals | Goals that have already been mastered |
Aquistion phase | Teaching new goals phase |
Generalization | NET teaching, a client can take a skill and apply it in daily life |
Task analysis | Broken down into structures |
Total task chaining | Completing all tasks |
Steps in de-escalation room | Remain in control, mats, remain in doorway, make sure face and chest are protected, do not push back, do not use if you are blocking others in. |
4 functions of behavior | Attention avoidance and escape access to items automatic |
PBS | Positive guidance and sharing |
What to do in an access behavior | Avoid arguments, give choices, explain |
What to do in an avoidance behavior | Allow breaks, bring them back to task, provide reinforcment |
What to do in an attention behavior | Limit eye contact, neutral tone, watch body language |
What to do in an automatic behavior | Look for cause, provide replacement behavior |
Parts of a BIP | - what the target -what the OD is- definition of behvior -Hypothesis -replacement behaviors -context -method of data collection -emergency behaviors |
Antecedent | Offer another minute |
Teaching | Replacement behaviors |
Consequence | Praise |
Emergency | Clearing the environment keeping safe |