Principles of Behavior Modification Albert Bandura
Principles of Behavior Modification Albert Bandura
Principles of Behavior Modification Albert Bandura
Behavior
Modification
Albert Bandura
to Ginny, Mary, and Carol
Copyright © 1969
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 4
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Causal Processes
Interpretation of Causal Processes
Symptom Substitution
Summary
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 5
Responsiveness
Vicarious Extinction
Summary
4. Positive Control
Theoretical Interpretations of Reinforcement
Processes
Summary
5. Aversive Control
Presentation of Negative Reinforcers
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 6
Removal of Positive Reinforcers
Summary
6. Extinction
Interpretations of the Extinction Process
Summary
Summary
8. Aversive Counterconditioning
Development of Conditioned Aversion and
Avoidance
Sexual Deviance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 7
Modification of Symbolic Activities
Alcoholism
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 8
Development of Self-Regulatory Functions
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 9
Preface
This book presents basic psychological
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 10
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 11
enthusiastically promoted, and it is not until after
the methods have been applied for some time by a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 12
be advanced by inventive research on socially
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 13
Foundation Symposium: The Role of Learning and
Psychotherapy (Bandura, 1968). Chapter 3
publications.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 14
the theoretical issues discussed in this book.
book.
Albert Bandura
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 15
Stanford, California April 1969
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 16
1
Causal Processes
The development of principles and procedures
of behavioral change is largely determined by the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 17
behavior.
as corrective treatments.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 18
Although psychological methods gradually
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 19
social-learning experiences rather than as
different course.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 20
conditions supposedly controlling behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 21
interpretive process. Indeed, direct modification of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 22
expressions will depend upon whether certain
social judges or the person himself disapproves of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 23
by, among other factors, the normative standards
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 24
responses to given situations constitutes one
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 25
social behavior. Members of social groups who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 26
because they adhere to culturally disapproved
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 27
consequently, labeled symptoms of an underlying
itself.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 28
apt to view these eccentricities as pathological
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 29
provide compelling evidence of development of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 30
physically aggressive behavior is more forceful
processes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 31
interpreted as symptoms of emotional disorder,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 32
psychopathology if exceedingly high standards
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 33
manifestations of emotional disease than if his
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 34
The influential role of social reinforcement in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 35
gonna do. Like, ‘Man, we’ll go out there and
kill this cat.’ I say, ‘Yeah.’ They kept on
talkin’. I said, ‘Man, I just gotta go with you.’
Myself, I don’t want to go, but when they
start talkin’ about what they gonna do, I say,
‘So, he isn’t gonna take over my rep. I ain’t
gonna let him be known more than me.’ And
I go ahead [p. vii].”
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 36
a club member to be valid, was valued at 10
virtuosity.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 37
to be brought up under atypical contingencies of
social reinforcement, events which are ordinarily
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 38
persisting behavior of this kind suddenly cease to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 39
understandable and, therefore, less likely to be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 40
Fiedler (1958) have shown, persons often label
themselves as emotionally disturbed, whereas
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 41
of value and social judgment arise also in the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 42
these reasons, so-called symptomatic behavior can
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 43
troublesome behavior. From the focusing of
attention on inner agents and forces, many fanciful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 44
preferred psychodynamic agents rather than those
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 45
genesis of behavioral deviations further precludes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 46
developed, maintained, and subsequently
patient’s behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 47
In recent years there has been a fundamental
forces.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 48
behavior as a quasi disease or as a by-product of
explanatory models.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 49
phobia for horses. Freud (1955) interpreted the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 50
horse must have been his father; and it was
this that had enabled him to regard Fritzl as
a substitute for his father when the accident
happened at Gmunden.…In the end his father
went into the lumf symbolism, and
recognized that there was an analogy
between a heavily loaded cart and a body
loaded with faeces, between the way in
which a cart drives out through a gateway
and the way in which faeces leave the body,
and so on…[p. 126-127],
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 51
had been frightened at seeing horses being beaten
at a merry-go-round; he was warned to avoid
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 52
characteristics were derived from the
circumstance that the anxiety originally had
no reference at all to horses but was
transposed on to them secondarily [italics
added] and had now become fixed upon
those elements of the horse complex which
showed themselves well adapted for certain
transferences [p. 51].
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 53
accident. There were three important elements in
this stimulus complex—large horse, heavily
Father: Why?
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 54
post-office van. I’m most afraid too when a
bus comes along.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 55
Father: Are you afraid of buses because there are so
many people inside?
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 56
the remarkable variety of heterogeneous
environmental stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 57
that people possess generalized and stable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 58
that can be predicted from a restricted sampling of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 59
punished aggression directed toward themselves,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 60
demands. In the case of social response systems,
consistency.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 61
the person being evaluated. This practice rests on
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 62
dispositions is attributed by Mischel (1968) to the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 63
reinterpreting discrepant evidence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 64
explanation that is completely circular and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 65
complexes, collective unconscious) could not be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 66
social variables as influential determinants of
deviant response patterns. Secondly, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 67
eccentricities as manifestations of disease initially
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 68
aimed at altering the course of future behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 69
institutional dependency produce further
environmental demands.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 70
a few sessions (Bandura, Blanchard, & Ritter,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 71
interests. Consequently persons often find it
nonconformists’ deviance.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 72
diagnosing them as mentally deranged and
the case.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 73
temptation to brand any dissidence as
in dissenting members.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 74
psychiatric grounds he advocates frank
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 75
organism that is impelled from within but is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 76
certain actions in given situations. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 77
implicated, particularly during the acquisition
phase, in obsessive-compulsive reactions,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 78
responses are more difficult to condition than
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 79
attacks with an auditory stimulus, many of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 80
to provoke asthmatic attacks which were
allergen itself.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 81
pictorial form. In some cases, of course, more
evocative stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 82
stimuli (Moore, 1965; Walton, 1960) would be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 83
Higher-Order Conditioning. Many of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 84
has been formed, a person responds only in the
absence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 85
tear up my evening dresses and urinate on
my clothes. He’d smash furniture and run
around biting the walls until the house was
destruction from one end to the other. He
knew that I liked to dress him in nice clothes,
so he used to rip the buttons off his shirts,
and used to go in his pants’ [Moser, 1965, p.
96].
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 86
element go unreinforced. It should be noted here
means.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 87
respiratory changes apart from the social effects
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 88
constant variation in the nature and patterning of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 89
behavior would enjoy a tragically brief life-span.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 90
children by altering their teachers’ attentional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 91
solitariness by paying a great deal of attention to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 92
Figure 1-1. Percentage of time a withdrawn boy spent in
social interaction before treatment began, during
periods when social behavior toward peers was
positively reinforced, and during periods when
teachers gave attention for solitary play. Harris, Wolf, &
Baer, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 93
behavior was in fact maintained by its social
consequences. In this third stage, for example, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 94
previous isolation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 95
schedule), and later the reinforcement is
completely withdrawn, they are likely to increase
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 96
In naturalistic situations where temporal
rewards.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 97
schedule a person must complete a specified
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 98
also on variable schedules. The effects of variable-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 99
of all the variations in scheduling procedures
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 100
including deviant ones. Moreover, when efforts
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 101
available after a given period of time has elapsed,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 102
of these types of schedules. Finally, it should be
of this book.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 103
relative efficacy of vicarious and direct
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 104
Response consequences experienced by another
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 105
would enhance imitative aggressiveness in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 106
observer not only acquires knowledge of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 107
convey the same amount of information about the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 108
types of situations in which the behavior is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 109
observers previously established emotional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 110
through any one or more of the five processes
outlined.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 111
similar responding, but if their behavior is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 112
themselves for getting lost in culs-de-sac. By
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 113
miserly and indulgent training on rate of self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 114
performing a task in which he adopts either a high
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 115
modeling cues (Bandura, Grusec, & Menlove, 1967;
1965a).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 116
observed models adhere to stringent performance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 117
parents who expect their children to exceed the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 118
independent of external reinforcement and the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 119
administered when stringent performance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 120
experiment in the following manner: Children
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 121
noncontingent basis. A fourth group worked
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 122
Figure 1-2. Behavioral productivity of children under
conditions in which their responses were self-
reinforced or externally reinforced, or in which they
were rewarded noncontingently or not at all. Bandura
& Perloff, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 123
required the least effort, while approximately half
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 124
with ample opportunities to optimize their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 125
produces two sets of consequences—a self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 126
for, supplement, or override the effects of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 127
generated consequences. In its more extreme
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 128
to ensure that they do not transgress. Similarly,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 129
“The objection to inner states is not that they do
35].”
practice.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 130
The relative neglect of experiential phenomena
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 131
arguments, however, never cite the innumerable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 132
utterance T was consistently followed by shock
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 133
press whichever cognitive event they were about
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 134
simply avoids the issues of internal stimulus
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 135
constitute either important phenomena in their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 136
and chocolate soufflé). Performance under these
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 137
a symbolically labeled attribute.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 138
rewarding or punishing consequences on the basis
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 139
stimuli administered during the acquisition
observational learning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 140
vary in their capacity to evoke vivid imagery. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 141
conditioned to arousal-correlated stimuli. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 142
activity (Black, 1967), thus precluding any
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 143
endowed with controlling properties through
interoceptive conditioning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 144
In the night I awoke under the most dreadful
impressions, I heard a voice addressing me,
and I was made to imagine that my
disobedience to the faith, in taking the
medicine overnight, had not only offended
the Lord, but had rendered the work of my
salvation extremely difficult, by its effect
upon my spirits and humours. I heard that I
could only be saved now by being changed
into a spiritual body…A spirit came upon me
and prepared to guide me in my actions. I
was lying on my back, and the spirit seemed
to light on my pillow by my right ear, and to
command my body. I was placed in a
fatiguing attitude, resting on my feet, my
knees drawn up and on my head, and made
to swing my body from side to side without
ceasing. In the meantime, I heard voices
without and within me, and sounds as of the
clanking of iron, and the breathing of great
forge bellows, and the force of flames. I
understood that I was only saved by the
mercy of Jesus, from seeing, as well as
hearing, hell around me, and that if I were
not obedient to His spirit, I should inevitably
awake in hell before the morning. After some
time I had a little rest, and then, actuated by
the same spirit, I took a like position on the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 145
floor, where I remained, until I understood
that the work of the Lord was perfected, and
that now my salvation was secured; at the
same time the guidance of the spirit left me,
and I became in doubt what next I was to do.
I understood that this provoked the Lord, as
if I was affecting ignorance when I knew
what I was to do, and, after some hesitation, I
heard the command, to “Take your position
on the floor again then,” but I had no
guidance or no perfect guidance to do so, and
could not resume it. I was told, however, that
my salvation depended upon my maintaining
that position as well as I could until the
morning; and oh! great was my joy when I
perceived the first brightness of the dawn,
which I could scarcely believe had arrived so
early [pp. 28-29],
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 146
acceptance of medicine, an act that was later
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 147
remonstrating, he followed me into my room
and stood before the door. I insisted on going
out; he, on preventing me. I warned him of
the danger he incurred in opposing the will
of the Holy Spirit, I prayed him to let me
pass, or otherwise an evil would befall him,
for that I was a prophet of the Lord. He was
not a whit shaken by my address, so, after
again and again adjuring him, by the desire
of the Spirit whose word I heard, I seized one
of his arms, desiring to wither it; my words
were idle, no effect followed, and I was
ashamed and astonished.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 148
the man’s arm with the wrong hand…[p. 33],
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 149
telling him it was necessary for my salvation;
he left me and went down stairs. I then tried
to perform what I had begun; but now I
found, either that I could not so jerk myself
round on my head, or that my fear of
breaking my neck was really too strong for
my faith. In that case I then certainly
mocked, for my efforts were not sincere.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 150
predominantly by external stimulus events or
partly by mediating symbolic events. In
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 151
actions, the mediating rules or principles serve to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 152
processes are typically accompanied by some
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 153
more or less fixed property that impinges upon
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 154
whereas others who, for one reason or another,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 155
contingencies that maintain one’s behavior. In
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 156
being ruled by an imposing environment, play an
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 157
interaction sequence is terminated. The reciprocal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 158
provided in Levy’s (1943) classic study of
childhood overdependency:
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 159
demands [p. 163],
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 160
upon whether one views such behavior in terms of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 161
important to him, or in the social system itself.
Symptom Substitution
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 162
consequences are intended more to dissuade
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 163
because it fails to specify precisely what
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 164
unnoticed until even worse behavior was
eliminated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 165
patterns; however, these theories differ, often
radically, in what they regard these “causes” to be,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 166
child that gives her love and she gives him in
return her devotion, (2) a phallic symbol, (3)
the sceptre of an omnipotent queen…this is a
magical procedure in which the patient
carries out her wishes, expressed in a way
that is far beyond our solid, rational and
conventional way of thinking and acting [p.
3],
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 167
study, never reappeared.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 168
differ from one situation to another and may vary
widely in their frequency of occurrence relative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 169
modes of behavior will ensue. This is particularly
of external restraints.
response.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 170
Response substitution is also likely to occur
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 171
defensive responses are either punished or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 172
wheel-turning no longer released the door, but the
defensive behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 173
treatment strategies, which will be fully reviewed
psychological functioning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 174
varying degrees of success, by interpretive
methods.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 175
relatively little benefit from conventional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 176
consult psychotherapists and are accepted for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 177
1951; Eysenck, 1952; Frank et al., 1957; Kirtner &
CRITERIA OF CHANGE
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 178
therapists do not underrate the therapeutic value
of their methods.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 179
level of social functioning. Since the behavioral
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 180
of other verbal contents. Although this approach
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 181
personality changes a psychotherapist may choose
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 182
selected by the client (Pascal & Zax, 1956).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 183
treatment proves to be 100 percent effective
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 184
nontreated cases can thus be regarded as
therapeutically induced. There are relatively few
measurement of outcomes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 185
unchanged, benefit somewhat, attain considerable
therapy.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 186
therapists, whereas matched controls received no
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 187
responsiveness or from nontreated controls in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 188
the traditional practices not only survived
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 189
particular approach before undertaking intricate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 190
and whether the changes are maintained over
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 191
psychological methods it is important to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 192
with given treatment approaches.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 193
psychotherapy by psychiatrists and psychiatric
social workers, group discussions with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 194
view of Poser’s findings, it would be essential to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 195
responsiveness, exhibit a relative inability to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 196
improvement in psychotherapy. Thus the type of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 197
Leary & Harvey, 1956), the magnitude of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 198
reliable or potent—therapeutic elements for the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 199
periodically share their problems, and those who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 200
implemented over a long period if desired
changes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 201
advocates of such procedures must be concerned
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 202
they inevitably model various attitudes, values,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 203
psychological attention. Major progress will be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 204
Although major emphasis will be given to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 205
typically interact in subtle and complex ways in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 206
within a person’s capabilities. Unfortunately,
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 207
from accepted social and ethical norms are
imposed demands.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 208
groups, at different times, or in different
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 209
both deviant and prosocial behaviors are acquired
regulatory systems.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 210
A second behavioral control system involves
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 211
organized; tentative hypotheses about the
responsiveness.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 212
succeeding chapters of this book the social-
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 213
of symptoms: Fact or fiction. Behaviour Research
and Therapy, 1965, 3, 1-7.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 214
psychology. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston,
1968. pp. 293-344.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 215
Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1963, 67, 601-
607.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 216
Bergin, A. E. Some implications of psychotherapy
research for therapeutic practice. Journal of
Abnormal Psychology, 1966, 71, 235-246.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 217
Buehler, R. E., Patterson, G. R., & Furniss, J. M. The
reinforcement of behavior in institutional
settings. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1966,
4, 157-167.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 218
DiCara, L. V. & Miller, N. E. Instrumental learning of
vasomotor responses by rats: Learning to
respond differentially in the two ears. Science,
1968, 159, 1485-1486.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 219
Translated by James Strachey. Vol. 10. London:
Hogarth, 1955.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 220
1953, 7, 16-23.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 221
theory. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1968. pp. 254-
290.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 222
Knight, R. O. Evaluation of the results of
psychoanalytic therapy. American Journal of
Psychiatry. 1941, 98, 434-446.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 223
Neurological Psychiatry, 1958, 79, 305-316.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 224
therapist influences on quitting psychotherapy.
Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1963, 27, 10-17.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 225
Medicine, 1951, 12, 83-105.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 226
dynamics. New York: Ronald Press, 1950.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 227
Abnormal Psychology, 1967, 72, 536-542.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 228
Wisconsin Press, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 229
Sidman, M. Tactics of scientific research. New York:
Basic Books, 1960.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 230
Hoeber-Harper, 1961.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 231
Wolf, M., Risley, T., & Mees, H. Application of operant
conditioning procedures to the behaviour
problems of an autistic child. Behaviour Research
and Therapy, 1964, 1, 305-312.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 232
2
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 233
of specifying the phenomena he wishes to modify;
a travel agent does not select a route for a client
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 234
experiences. Indeed, conceptualizing psychological
practice.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 235
hypothetical construct and not an entity within the
client. One can neither observe nor modify
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 236
ego-strength behaviors has been reduced in the
personality theorizing.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 237
any real existence. They are merely words,
and words do not exist in the eye of the
observer nor in the people observed. A man
can not be said to have either a type or a
trait, but he can be said to fit either a type or
a trait. At present the fit will be inexact, for
dimensions of personality have not yet been
quantified well enough to permit of accurate
measurement. In the case of height, the
measurement can be precise, and little
confusion results from saying that a man has
a certain height. Observation and concept
are so closely related that the phrase is not
ordinarily understood to mean more than it
says, namely, that the extent of a given
datum of observation in one direction fits a
certain section of an ideal dimension of
distance. But if an attempt is made to fit
some mode of human conduct to the trait of
courage, the looseness of correspondence
between behavior and concepts leads to
mischievous reification. The concept parts
company with behavior, picks up undefined
notions in its flight from reality, and finally
acquires an independent real existence in its
own right, so that when it is said that a man
has courage, he will be thought of as the
fortunate owner of something considerably
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 238
more significant than a certain pattern of
behavior [Pratt, 1939, p. 115].
inferred.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 239
psychological tests would be constructed to
measure zoognick strength on the basis of which
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 240
zoognicks as that shown by adherents of libidinal
behavior rechristened.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 241
acceptance of self-consciousness, enhancement of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 242
After the intended goals have been specified in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 243
cases eliminating alienating social behaviors may
be required if self-evaluation is to be altered; and
guidance.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 244
is the goal for the treatment of an excessively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 245
analysis of complicated objectives that cannot be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 246
have failed, and when they need further
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 247
experiences necessary for their attainment. A
comprehensive statement of objectives should,
of behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 248
events in the context of strong competing positive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 249
because the response elements that compose
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 250
If, on the other hand, people are required to
practices.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 251
In view of the importance of defining the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 252
consequently that the specific methods employed
are of secondary importance. In a “therapeutic”
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 253
employ the same methods? Clearly the answer is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 254
factors would apply equally, it is unrealistic to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 255
instructors in promoting learning. The assumption
thwarting situations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 256
learning procedures which are referred to as
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 257
(1968) and others that abundant social
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 258
recipients. Chapter 4 includes a large body of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 259
effects upon recipients rather than by the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 260
setting. Alexander (1956), among others,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 261
extratherapeutic relationships for effecting
unnecessary.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 262
that a benign, noncontingent attitude toward
clients will produce beneficial personality
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 263
appeared with stolen goods, behaved
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 264
performing appendectomies and therefore
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 265
treatment approach, which they apply with minor
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 266
and resolve Oedipal conflicts; Adlerians will
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 267
framework, diverse methods for modifying
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 268
unspecified in order to avoid acknowledging the
value judgments and social influences involved in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 269
this connection that conditions that are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 270
Winder et al., 1962), it is surprising that many
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 271
clearly reveals that, far from being individuated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 272
propitious relabeling to minimize the ethical
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 273
institutions may voluntarily enter into treatment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 274
to select associates who share similar value
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 275
prestigious model (Bandura & Huston, 1961;
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 276
construed as continuing pathological influences
directed!
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 277
leitmotif in this discourse appears to be one of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 278
participant acknowledges that the choice of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 279
virtually no aspect of the client’s life—his social,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 280
rather than as expressions of esoteric unconscious
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 281
principles do not dictate the manner in which they
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 282
financial hardships to achieve desired changes,
than in fantasizing about their potential powers.
processes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 283
manages the contingencies or they get managed by
and they will have their effect [p. 16].” The process
of behavior change, therefore, involves
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 284
each of which presents somewhat different ethical
determination.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 285
options of action. Ethical issues arise only if a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 286
privileges that further increase their autonomy. By
social functioning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 287
actions are judged to be socially detrimental and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 288
no limits on their own behavior and having society
orientation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 289
that strongly wedded to deviant behavior; but
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 290
his skin color, his religion, his ethnic background,
or to enhance them.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 291
When freedom is discussed in the abstract it is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 292
regression of causes. Some degree of freedom is
controlling environment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 293
behavior from available alternatives is itself the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 294
environmental contingencies that reciprocally
capabilities.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 295
social behavior. The failure to specify objectives in
behavioral terms also stems in part from the view
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 296
interpersonal relationships.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 297
successful treatment of so-called complex
disorders when they are conceptualized, not as
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 298
intellectual, linguistic, social, and motoric areas of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 299
global all-purpose treatments of limited efficacy
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 300
most successfully. Some theorists hold that
behavior is essentially a byproduct of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 301
learning perspective, phenomenological and other
interview procedures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 302
series of graded problems that grew progressively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 303
changes. Bandura, Blanchard, and Ritter (1969)
markedly.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 304
(Hastorf, 1965). The positive social feedback
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 305
changes. Therefore, development of insight
constitutes one of the primary objectives of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 306
insights. According to Rogers (1951), for example,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 307
on a continuum ranging from superficial
Speisman, 1959).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 308
function as powerful instigators of behavior, or
indiscriminate responding.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 309
as Marmor (1962) has pointed out, schools of
rivals:
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 310
Moreover, the problem is even more
complicated than this; for, depending upon
the point of view of the analyst, the patients
of each school seem to bring up precisely the
kind of phenomenological data which
confirm the theories and interpretations of
their analysts! Thus each theory tends to be
self-validating. Freudians elicit material
about the Oedipus Complex and castration
anxiety, Adlerians about masculine strivings
and feelings of inferiority, Horneyites about
idealized images, Sullivanians about
disturbed interpersonal relationships, etc.
The fact is that in so complex a transaction as
the psychoanalytic therapeutic process, the
impact of the patient and the therapist upon
each other, and particularly that of the latter
upon the former, is an unusually profound
one. What the analyst shows interest in, the
kinds of questions he asks, the kind of data
he chooses to react to or to ignore, and the
interpretations he makes, all exert a subtle
but significant suggestive impact upon the
patient to bring forth certain kinds of data in
preference to others [Marmor, 1962, p. 289].
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 311
psychotherapeutically derived insights finds some
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 312
In the preceding section it was suggested that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 313
psychology can be applied to the understanding of
how therapists induce, alter, and control their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 314
by virtue of their advanced training and expertise,
in the therapist.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 315
objectives are to be realized. The therapist often
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 316
Bass, 1961) have abundantly documented that
(Rosenthal, 1963).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 317
In attitude change research the opinions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 318
recommended by Rosen (1953) and Klein (1960)?
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 319
reason why Rosen, who exercises considerable
of incongruity of interpretations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 320
experiment room, which was furnished with,
of Sigmund Freud.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 321
than they judged themselves to be. Later the
observation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 322
Figure 2-1. Mean change in self-appraisal considered most
acceptable by subjects as a function of credibility of the
communicator and degree of discrepancy of the
interpretation from subjects’ view of themselves.
Bergin, 1962.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 323
Although the generality of the self-evaluative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 324
conditions of reinforcement. Results of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 325
Behaviorism—or to any other theoretical system
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 326
theorists (Alexander, 1963) have considered
sought aid.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 327
determinants of interpersonal responses is of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 328
applied until an adequate conception of mental
health and the nature of the “good life” is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 329
Indeed, as noted in the introductory chapter,
choices.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 330
behavior is being modified, and verbal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 331
produce incremental changes in the critical
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 332
social actions of persons without their awareness.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 333
in shadowy ambiguity is sometimes recommended
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 334
cannot be discussed meaningfully without
specifying the scope of decision-making behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 335
domain, the ethical questions that are frequently
pseudo issues.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 336
alternative courses of action and their probable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 337
procedures without his concurrence based on a
outcomes uncertain.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 338
conduct with aloof objectivity an exhaustive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 339
might well be more receptive to the therapist’s
influence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 340
work with chronic schizophrenics that such
individuals can successfully participate in the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 341
REDEFINITION OF CLIENT’S OBJECTIVES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 342
the therapist pursues objectives that are often
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 343
approaches that a therapist who leads his clients
SEQUENTIAL DECISION-MAKING
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 344
program can be easily reoriented toward new
objectives and appropriate learning experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 345
1963) provide considerable evidence that deviant
patterns of reinforcement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 346
relationship with the client, are best suited to
implement treatment procedures. In traditional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 347
similar ones administered in psychiatric
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 348
the client, if given appropriate training, can serve
as the most powerful agents of change. Their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 349
The parents are then given a detailed description
parents.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 350
extended history, mainly negative. Its paltry
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 351
without external direction.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 352
for parents to carry out the necessary programs
parents.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 353
Their illustrative case involved a four-year-old
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 354
Figure 2-2. Number of 10-second intervals in which the boy
displayed objectionable behavior during each one-hour
session. Hawkins et al., 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 355
next phase the mother was asked to resume her
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 356
them to future developmental problems in a
variety of circumstances.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 357
individuals are called upon to function as their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 358
supervisory staff instructs change agents on how
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 359
The efforts of change agents are reinforced and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 360
remedial instructors, Wolf, Giles, and Hall (1968)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 361
achievement of behavioral changes on an
individual basis. It is generally acknowledged that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 362
incentives, must be created if constructive modes
sanctioned.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 363
scale in cross-cultural ventures in which one
society strives to introduce new patterns of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 364
some of which may be dysfunctional in the foreign
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 365
choices, for ascertaining collective preferences,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 366
considerations, slide rule decrees, and political
behavioral patterns.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 367
The notion of planned social change is likely to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 368
individualists often attack the very social
freedom of self-expression.
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 369
defining the intended goals in terms of
hypothetical internal states. When the aims
clients’ needs.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 370
degree of success until they are analyzed into
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 371
Much more serious from an ethical standpoint is
functioning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 372
effects. Control over value choices at the societal
group objectives.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 373
support a humanistic morality.
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 374
Bandura, A. Social-learning theory of identificatory
processes. In D. A. Goslin (Ed.), Handbook of
socialization theory and research. Chicago: Rand
McNally, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 375
Consulting Psychology, 1960, 24, 1-8.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 376
Berg, C. Deep analysis. New York: Norton, 1947.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 377
Dabbs, J. M., Jr., & Leventhal, H. Effects of varying the
recommendations in a fear-arousing
communication. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 1966, 4, 525-531.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 378
Frank, G. H., & Sweetland, A. A study of the process of
psychotherapy: The verbal interaction. Journal of
Consulting Psychology, 1962, 26, 135-138.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 379
Applied Behavior Analysis, 1968, 1, 73-76.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 380
Stratton, 1945.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 381
children to failure. University of Iowa Studies in
Child Welfare, 1938, 14, 27-82.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 382
1958, 13, 229-242.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 383
113-120.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 384
Houghton Mifflin, 1951.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 385
365.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 386
responses, and aspects of psychotherapy. Journal
of Consulting Psychology, 1962, 26, 129-134.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 387
3
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 388
responses can be conditioned observationally by
witnessing the affective reactions of others
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 389
under a variety of terms. Among those in common
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 390
other hand, reserves the term “identification” for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 391
responses not only are gratuitous but also cause
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 392
processes involved in the acquisition of matching
imitation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 393
what is learned, of the models from whom the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 394
modeling effect experimentally, it is necessary for a
model to exhibit novel responses which the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 395
merely as discriminative stimuli for the observer
in facilitating the occurrence of previously learned
responses in the same general class. This response
facilitation effect can be distinguished from
disinhibition and modeling by the fact that no new
responses are acquired; disinhibitory processes
are not involved because the behavior in question
is socially sanctioned and, therefore, has rarely, if
ever, incurred punishment. A simple example of
social facilitation is provided in situations where a
person gazes intently into a display window and
passersby respond in a similar manner. In the
following sections the variables and mediating
processes governing these diverse modeling
phenomena will be discussed at length. The ways
in which modeling influences can be successfully
used to effect individual and broader social
changes will also be reviewed.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 396
Theoretical Conceptions of
Observational Learning
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 397
between modeling stimuli and the imitator’s
matching response was considered to be a
novel for the child, the latter will copy it. Piaget
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 398
matching social stimuli with which they have been
contiguously associated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 399
vocal repertoire.
REINFORCEMENT THEORIES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 400
The experiments conducted by Miller and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 401
accepted as demonstrations of imitative learning,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 402
indispensable aspect of the learning process.
social models.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 403
The Skinnerian analysis of modeling
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 404
matching-to-sample paradigm used to study
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 405
Under naturalistic conditions the behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 406
mouthing, and novel verbalizations) were
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 407
when reinforcement of the other three modeling
also reappeared.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 408
Using similar reinforcement procedures with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 409
Figure 3-1. Percentage of reinforced and nonreinforced
modeled responses reproduced by a child during
periods when rewards were made contingent upon the
occurrence of matching responses or upon the passage
of a given period of time (DRO). Baer, Peterson, &
Sherman, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 410
their previously high level by reintroduction of
38).
reproduced.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 411
were in fact the governing mechanism, matching
responses would not undergo abrupt and marked
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 412
were present in the room. During sessions when
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 413
be distinguished and are therefore likely to be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 414
In contrast, a discrimination hypothesis would
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 415
fact, automatically produce self-reinforcing effects,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 416
Important treatment implications follow from
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 417
into the treatment program.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 418
the situation in which the observationally learned
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 419
observational learning entails symbolic coding and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 420
matching responses, and age of the subjects, have
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 421
observed a filmed model who exhibited a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 422
treatment (Figure 3-2).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 423
Figure 3-2. Mean number of different matching responses
reproduced by children as a function of response
consequences to the model and positive incentives.
Bandura, 1965b.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 424
analysis advocated by proponents of the
Skinnerian approach might further advance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 425
prerequisite for observational learning can be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 426
Mowrer’s (1960) sensory feedback theory of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 427
closely as possible the model’s positively valenced
behavior.
sensory feedback.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 428
observer witness the model experience rewarding
outcomes. These same studies, however, contain
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 429
fed. It should be noted, however, that neither the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 430
through which cognitive templates are acquired,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 431
proprioceptive feedback. Results of
feedback.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 432
Mowrer (1960) has conjectured that the initial
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 433
contact sports such as boxing, people will easily
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 434
the acquisition of matching behavior when
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 435
potent reinforcing consequences capable of
CONTIGUITY-MEDIATIONAL THEORIES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 436
theoretical analyses of observational learning
(Bandura, 1962, 1965a; Sheffield, 1961) assign a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 437
acquires the capacity to evoke images (i.e.,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 438
The second representational system, which
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 439
covert verbal self- directions.
competing symbolization.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 440
of symbolic coding operations in the acquisition
and retention of modeled responses is furnished
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 441
Figure 3-3. Percentage of modeled responses reproduced by
control subjects and those who coded the modeled
behavior as either images, concrete verbal descriptions,
or summary labels for memory representation. Gerst,
1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 442
concise labeling to be the best coding system for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 443
governing the broader phenomena. The main
ATTENTIONAL PROCESSES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 444
recognize, or differentiate the distinctive features
of the model’s responses. To produce learning,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 445
characteristics, persons eventually learn to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 446
are correlated with differential probabilities of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 447
conditions of modeling stimulation, some persons
display higher levels of response acquisition than
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 448
are also apt to be most attentive to modeling cues.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 449
enhanced and focused through arrangement of
appropriate incentive conditions. Persons who are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 450
influence the acquisition process, do so principally
modeling cues.
response matching.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 451
Finally, the rate and level of observational
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 452
modified observationally.
RETENTION PROCESSES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 453
function involved in observational learning, but
one that has been virtually ignored in theories of
permissible.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 454
whether memory traces are established in an
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 455
particularly if the rehearsal is interposed after
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 456
emphasis in Maccoby’s (1959) account of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 457
probable responses to these approaches. On the
or punishing power.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 458
example, for a novice to establish a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 459
elements that he has failed to learn and thus to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 460
translating action sequences into abbreviated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 461
highly erroneous modeling responses. In one
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 462
imaginal and verbal contents to guide overt
performances. It is assumed that reinstatement of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 463
Behavior patterns of high-order complexity are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 464
baby (Lovaas, 1966b). As will be illustrated later,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 465
from observing an accomplished voice instructor;
nevertheless, skilled vocal reproduction is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 466
may rarely be activated into overt performance if
negative sanctions or unfavorable incentive
utilitarian value.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 467
observational learning constitutes a complex
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 468
desired final behavior are selectively reinforced. It
process.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 469
to master complex occupational and social tasks. If
shaping process.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 470
or even one that has some remote resemblance to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 471
employed to evoke new patterns of behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 472
reinforced models learned the entire role behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 473
positively reinforced whenever they expressed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 474
Figure 3-4. Mean percentage of objective moral judgment
responses produced by subjective children who were
either reinforced for objective judgments or exposed to
reinforced models who exemplified an objective
evaluative orientation. Plotted from the data of
Bandura & McDonald, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 475
shaped in each new member through a gradual
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 476
manuals. If the relevant responses are specified
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 477
instructing a person who has had no prior contact
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 478
one can create a novel and exceedingly complex
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 479
disappointing results from a few animals tested
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 480
time in training rhesus monkeys by trial-and-error
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 481
stimuli in the situation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 482
families (Hayes & Hayes, 1952; Kellogg & Kellogg,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 483
extended complex sequences of behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 484
(Bandura & Kupers, 1964; Bandura & Whalen,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 485
specific modeled responses.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 486
combinations of elements from the different
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 487
described above the modeling stimuli convey
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 488
role in the development of most social behaviors,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 489
relations between words cannot be learned unless
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 490
acquired, language learning is considerably more
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 491
sentences, was ineffective in increasing the use of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 492
rewarded for passive constructions. In the case of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 493
modeled by adults (Slobin, 1968).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 494
manifest little or no functional speech; they lack
social skills that are conducive to reciprocally
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 495
situational demands, as evidenced by their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 496
Although physiological variables are probably
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 497
process primarily involves developing children’s
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 498
children generally show defective reception of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 499
means. First, the therapist establishes close
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 500
to name the color of a yellow crayon, to which she
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 501
which result in stressful failure experiences,
behavioral reproduction.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 502
produces a vocal response within a certain time
young children.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 503
Figure 3-5. Rate of verbal imitation by a previously mute
autistic child during the first 26 days of training. The
words and sounds are printed in lower case letters on
the days they were introduced and trained, and in
capital letters on the days they were mastered. Lovaas,
Berberich, Perloff, & Schaeffer, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 504
to master the first word, but subsequent imitative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 505
tactics have become nonfunctional, or some other
factors.
outcomes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 506
507
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 3-6. Percentage of modeled responses correctly and incorrectly reproduced by an autistic child during periods
when rewards were made contingent upon matching perfectly the adult’s speech (response
contingent) or the elapsing of a certain amount of time (time contingent). Lovaas, 1967.
When children are able to imitate new words
they are taught a labeling vocabulary so that they
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 508
children until they learn to make the appropriate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 509
the child is rewarded for performing the motor
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 510
and conceptual behaviors (Lovaas, Berberich,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 511
and to seek and exchange information about their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 512
major reinforcing events.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 513
strongly developed, stimulus control of children’s
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 514
particularly in early stages of training, indicates
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 515
necessary attentiveness, children are seated in a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 516
increasingly complex linguistic skills. Humphery
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 517
deficits which must be overcome if they are to
behaviors.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 518
deviant response patterns are either nonrewarded
or punished. Selective reinforcement is often a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 519
psychodynamic theories and energy models of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 520
principles would concentrate, from the outset,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 521
in a fight over the possession of a wagon; during
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 522
(Figure 3-7). One cannot determine from these
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 523
Figure 3-7. Amount of cooperative and domineering
behavior exhibited by hyperaggressive children before
and after receiving symbolic modeling treatment.
Drawn from the data of Chittenden, 1942.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 524
be adapted for modifying aggressive behavior in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 525
particularly to behavior that is ordinarily
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 526
changes in the play behavior of control groups of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 527
likely to foster positive social experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 528
symbolic modeling showed a substantial increase
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 529
Figure 3-8. Amount of social interaction shown by
withdrawn children in the symbolic modeling and
control conditions before and after the experimental
sessions. The dotted line represents the amount of
social interaction displayed by a group of nonisolate
children whose behavior was observed at the pretest
phase of the study. O’Connor, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 530
everyday lives. Since, in modeling approaches, a
person observes and practices alternative ways of
facilitated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 531
representing brief experimentation with, rather
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 532
the client not only benefits from the therapist’s
modeled.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 533
Although there is every reason to expect from
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 534
reduce the possibility that his initial attempts at
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 535
be followed in implementing modeling principles
virtually nonexistent.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 536
program in which clients are provided with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 537
the most effective means of inducing stable
effects.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 538
treatment approaches that advocate a behavioral
incognito in which therapists’ feelings, personal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 539
the therapist himself consistently models self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 540
Pentony (1966). It cannot be determined from
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 541
verbalizations. Marlatt, Jacobsen, Johnson, &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 542
colleagues (Truax & Carkhuff, 1967) demonstrated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 543
behaviors directly.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 544
attitudes toward members of unpopular minority
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 545
close temporal pairing of these affective states
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 546
The findings showed that scenes of danger,
conflict, or tragedy elicited the greatest emotional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 547
puberty ritual of an Australian tribe in which a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 548
observer responds emotionally to a performer’s
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 549
because the vocal cue may serve merely as a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 550
example, when individuals become fearful upon
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 551
Miller and his colleagues (Miller, Banks, &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 552
in anticipation of shock were highly effective in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 553
had been extinguished to a zero level.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 554
for observers, affective social cues alone gradually
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 555
animals were administered brief shocks after
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 556
between the two groups.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 557
person felt during the treatment. These findings
situations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 558
consequences to individuals similar to himself
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 559
encounter identical outcomes. It would be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 560
reported by Kriazhev (1934), who conditioned
one animal in each of seven pairs of dogs to stimuli
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 561
example, one group of observers was informed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 562
conditioning than observers in the other three
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 563
arousal is, indeed, a significant determinant of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 564
Figure 3-9. Mean percentage of GSRs exhibited by subjects
during the acquisition phase, in which the tone and
model’s pain cues occurred in close temporal
association, and during tests in which the formerly
neutral tone was presented alone to assess its
conditioned aversive properties. The five treatment
conditions represent increasing degrees of affective
arousal. Bandura & Rosenthal, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 565
decreasing function is obtained when, in addition
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 566
cues: “When I noticed how painful the shock was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 567
deliberate use of avoidant and stimulus
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 568
a tape recorder) whenever a model monkey
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 569
setting for creating aversion to alcohol in chronic
Vicarious Extinction
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 570
noted in the previous discussion of causal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 571
stimulus with aversive stimulation. In the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 572
responses by having them observe their peers
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 573
withdrawing or looking away) designed to reduce
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 574
introduced and neutralized. Stimulus graduation is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 575
because the parents themselves suffer
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 576
four treatment conditions. One group participated
in eight brief sessions during which they observed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 577
effects of exposure to the threatening object itself,
conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 578
Evidence that deviant behavior can be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 579
Figure 3-10. Mean dog-approach scores achieved by children
in each of the treatment conditions on the three
different periods of assessment. Bandura, Grusec, &
Menlove, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 580
control conditions, who did not differ from each
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 581
emotional responsiveness to a restricted set of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 582
behavior. In this project, however, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 583
in each of the three conditions in the pre-test,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 584
Figure 3-11. Median dog-approach scores achieved by
children who received either single-model or multiple-
model treatments, or who participated in a control
condition. Bandura & Menlove, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 585
fears.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 586
Figure 3-12. A girl who was apprehensive about dogs
engaging in fearless interactions with dogs after
exposure to the series of films in which a peer model
displays progressively threatening interactions with
dogs. Bandura & Menlove 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 587
than live demonstrations of essentially the same
behavior. Although the single-model treatment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 588
behavior in children and adults through brief
variables.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 589
In many instances weak fears are undoubtedly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 590
simultaneously bidding the child, who is clinging
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 591
modeling and desensitization treatment
activities.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 592
participants were administered a behavioral test
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 593
children, adolescents, and adults engaging in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 594
---
,....-!, -i M ' " " ; . A
• . ;._ 'J ' ' • '
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 595
threatening scene repeatedly in this manner until
thoroughly extinguished.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 596
more difficult responses. Whenever subjects are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 597
anxieties about contact with the snake’s head area
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 598
relaxation was successively paired with imaginal
completed.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 599
method.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 600
each task subjects rated the intensity of their fear
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 601
Figure 3-14. Mean number of snake-approach responses
performed by subjects before and after receiving
different treatments. Bandura, Blanchard, & Ritter,
1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 602
approach responses, their magnitude of fear
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 603
Analysis of the fear inventory scores disclosed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 604
second entails positive reinforcement of a sense of
events
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 605
However, subjects who paired modeling with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 606
Figure 3-15. Mean number of snake-approach responses
performed by subjects before and after (post-test)
receiving different treatments. Control subjects were
subsequently administered symbolic modeling
treatment without relaxation. All subjects in the
desensitization, symbolic modeling, and treated control
conditions who failed to perform the terminal
approach behavior were then given the live modeling
and guided participation treatment (post- live). The
snake-approach behavior of subjects in all four groups
was measured again in a follow-up study conducted
one month later. Bandura, Blanchard, & Ritter, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 607
A one-month follow-up assessment revealed
fainthearted friends.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 608
snakes. Groups of children participated in two 35-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 609
Within the participant modeling treatment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 610
exposed to both modeling and informational
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 611
Figure 3-16. Percentage of change in approach behavior,
fearfulness, and attitudes displayed by subjects who
received different components of the modeling-guided
participation treatment. Blanchard, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 612
performing the behavior required at each step in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 613
which in turn was superior to brief demonstration
alone.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 614
Figure 3-17. Mean level of fear arousal evoked by the
modeling stimuli initially and by each subsequent
exposure to the same filmed scenes in subjects
receiving symbolic modeling with relaxation and
symbolic modeling alone. The data are averaged across
scenes at each exposure and plotted for the first six
exposures only since subjects rarely required more
than six presentations to neutralize any given scene.
Bandura, Blanchard, & Ritter, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 615
received symbolic modeling alone, but on
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 616
behavior. Direct contact with threats that are no
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 617
further extension to other types of anxiety
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 618
suppressive effects of adverse outcomes. When
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 619
aggression in girls, whose inhibitions regarding
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 620
tempted with the prohibited objects. In a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 621
devalued behavior. Observation of self-
her transgressions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 622
responses. The reduction of inhibitions through
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 623
prohibition situations. In one study, Freed,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 624
behavior than others who witnessed a model
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 625
shirt. The differential reduction in restraints noted
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 626
transgressive behavior is so markedly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 627
displays punishable behavior, absence of
anticipated adverse consequences increases
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 628
behavior may therefore be determined to a large
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 629
means. The main reason for this difference is that
behavior which is customarily subject to negative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 630
reinforcement. Considering that exposure to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 631
1952), performing altruistic acts (Blake,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 632
similar responses. After a period of exposure to
Dollard, 1941).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 633
patterns are supposedly instinctively aroused.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 634
given activity, the corresponding responses on the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 635
cases modeling cues primarily serve an orienting
phenomena.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 636
experiment (Bandura, 1962), for example, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 637
include observer characteristics, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 638
models who are ineffectual, uninformed, and who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 639
alteration of focal modeling influences. Lippitt and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 640
effecting changes in relatively circumscribed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 641
understandably apprehensive about forsaking
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 642
and diffusion of new modes of behavior is created
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 643
in the belief system is a vital prerequisite to
existing beliefs.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 644
facilitate modeling, those exemplifying advocated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 645
behavior and advantageous outcomes can be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 646
reinforcement supports for unaccustomed
practices.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 647
person’s rewarding outcomes are determined by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 648
the existing leadership, social agencies generally
their self-interests.
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 649
behavior are acquired and existing response
patterns are extensively modified through
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 650
sensory registration due to inadequate attention
reinforcement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 651
conditioning, exposure to a model’s emotional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 652
Studies of vicarious extinction reveal that this
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 653
learned responses.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 654
or laudatory social reactions, and from vicarious
experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 655
which models will have greatest response-
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 656
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1942.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 657
contingencies on the acquisition of imitative
responses. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 1965, 1, 589-595. (b)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 658
Bandura, A., & Harris, M. B. Modification of syntactic
style. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology,
1966, 4, 341-352.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 659
of Personality and Social Psychology, 1966, 3, 54-
62.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 660
Barnwell, A. K. Potency of modeling cues in imitation
and vicarious reinforcement situations.
Dissertation Abstracts, 1966, 26, 7444.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 661
Beyer, N. L., & May, J. G., Jr. The effects of race and
socioeconomic status on imitative behavior in
children using white male and female models.
Unpublished manuscript, Florida State
University, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 662
contact in the extinction of phobic behavior.
Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Stanford
University, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 663
1959, 57, 351-361. (b)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 664
Technical Report No. CS85. Stanford University,
1967
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 665
Crooks, J. L. Observational learning of fear in
monkeys. Unpublished manuscript, University of
Pennsylvania, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 666
Psychological Review, 1959, 66, 183-201.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 667
University, 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 668
1951, 4,115-142.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 669
chimpanzee. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1952, 45, 450-459.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 670
values in Peru: a case study. In R. N. Adams (Ed.),
Social change in Latin America today. New York:
Harper, 1960. pp. 63-107.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 671
Jersild, A. T., & Holmes, F. B. Methods of overcoming
children’s fears. Journal of Psychology, 1935, 1,75-
104.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 672
Nostrand, 1963. pp. 82-90.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 673
Krumboltz, J. D., Varenhorst, B. B., & Thoresen, C. E.
Nonverbal factors in the effectiveness of models
in counseling. Journal of Counseling Psychology,
1967, 14,412-418.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 674
Lefkowitz, M. M., Blake, R. R., & Mouton, J. S. Status
factors in pedestrian violation of traffic signals,
Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1955,
51, 704-706.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 675
Lovaas, O. I., Berberich, J. P., Kassorla, I. C., Klynn, G. A.,
& Meisel, J. Establishment of a texting and
labelling vocabulary in schizophrenic children.
Unpublished manuscript, University of California,
Los Angeles, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 676
Maccoby, E. E. Role-taking in childhood and its
consequences for social learning. Child
Development, 1959, 30, 239-252.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 677
instruction. Washington, D. C.: National Academy
of Sciences—National Research Council, 1961.
pp. 411-415.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 678
interview. Paper read at the Western
Psychological Association meeting, San Diego,
April 1968. (b)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 679
Mausner, B. The effect of prior reinforcement on the
interaction of observer pairs. Journal of Abnormal
and Social Psychology, 1954, 49, 65-68. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 680
of Studies on Alcohol, 1960, 21, 424-431.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 681
Psychology, 1967, 7, 2.31-239.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 682
Mowrer, O. H. The new group therapy. Princeton, N. J.:
Van Nostrand, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 683
the efficacy of punishment training for inducing
response inhibition. Monographs of the Society for
Research in Child Development, 1967, 32 (1, Serial
No. 109).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 684
Piaget, J. Play, dreams, and imitation in childhood. New
York: Norton, 1952.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 685
phobias using vicarious and contact
desensitization procedures. Behaviour Research
and Therapy, 6, 1-6.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 686
the model and the learning of imitation and
nonimitation. Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1962, 63, 183-190.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 687
audience persuasion. Human Relations, 1952, 5,
397-406.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 688
reinstate verbal behavior in mute psychotics.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1965, 70, 155-
164.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 689
69, 202-219.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 690
Taub, E., Bacon, R. C., & Berman, A. J. Acquisition of a
trace-conditioned avoidance response after
deafferentation of the responding limb. Journal of
Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1965,
59, 275-279.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 691
Prentice-Hall, 1968. pp. 2-36.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 692
Psychology, 1940, 56, 311-322.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 693
4
Positive Control
In the modification of psychological conditions
that reflect primarily behavioral deficits, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 694
outcomes that are customarily produced by given
of positive reinforcement.
Theoretical Interpretations of
Reinforcement Processes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 695
various theoretical approaches differ in the extent
DRIVE-REDUCTION HYPOTHESIS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 696
stimulus-reduction theory, any stimulation,
regardless of whether it is based upon a need, can
effects.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 697
being delivered directly into their stomachs
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 698
basis of evidence that prefeeding hungry animals
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 699
the manner and context in which it is presented.
influence responsiveness.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 700
SENSORY-STIMULATION HYPOTHESIS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 701
approach, attending, and manipulative responses
automatically produced.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 702
exploratory drives that are presumed to be
elicited by external, novel stimuli and reduced by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 703
might conclude, therefore, that the effective
stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 704
its sensory feedback in a manner consistent with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 705
prolonged deprivation of sensory input results in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 706
colony in the outside environment, whereas the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 707
drive. Unless drives and responses are
PREPOTENT-RESPONSE HYPOTHESIS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 708
than the reinforcing stimulus. In these
investigations the reinforcement values of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 709
whereas subjects that would rather eat than run
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 710
in animals for which ICS is more rewarding than
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 711
convincingly demonstrates that reinforcement is a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 712
limiting conditions because most stimuli do not
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 713
delivered directly into the stomach or blood
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 714
exceedingly diverse events, which have no
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 715
be drive-reducing, sensory, or in the form of
prepotent activities. Two different explanations
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 716
investigations provide substantial support for the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 717
highly influential in regulating performance.
reinforcing outcomes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 718
arousing, focusing, and sustaining attentiveness to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 719
directly into the stomach or intravenously. In
enhancing effects.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 720
reliable procedure for eliciting or inducing the
contingent reinforcement.
INCENTIVE SYSTEM
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 721
rationale for failures that primarily result from
reliance upon weak methods of behavioral control.
presumably actuates.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 722
Given that performance is extensively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 723
consisting of candy treats, trinkets, and tokens
sessions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 724
participation, and reading achievements rapidly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 725
reinforcement. When boys were merely praised
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 726
The incentive question poses greatest
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 727
preferences often vary considerably among
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 728
encouragement, positive attention, and affection.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 729
self-stimulatory behavior and appeared oblivious
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 730
stimulus retained its reinforcing potency over an
disapproved.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 731
A stimulus that has been associated on
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 732
performance; and finally, since individuals can
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 733
appropriate temporal contingencies. Rewarding
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 734
which bears on questions of the durability of
chapter.
ARRANGEMENT OF CONTINGENCIES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 735
change agents wish to promote; long delays often
intervene between the occurrence of the desired
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 736
to all of the rewarding resources that the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 737
The necessity for arranging appropriate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 738
treatment except for the arrangement of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 739
these conditions, a rehabilitative program can be
treatments.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 740
immediately reinforced. Since one typically has
whatsoever of promoting.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 741
consequences increases the difficulty of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 742
maintain a high performance level, although he
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 743
signs of progress often supplement, and may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 744
behavior is extremely low, if the criterion for
reinforcement is initially set too high, most, if not
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 745
by King, Armitage, & Tilton (1960) designed to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 746
therapy, or received no treatment. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 747
operant conditioning that the above procedure,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 748
established as a result of inadequate incentive
(Krasner, 1958).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 749
modeling for producing complex responses, one
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 750
severely retarded children who were totally
step.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 751
objects (Lovaas, 1966), for example, if a child fails
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 752
behave appropriately unless continually paid to do
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 753
& Walters, 1959; Sears, Maccoby, & Levin, 1957)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 754
span would be drastically curtailed. Selection of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 755
that a change program represents a continuum of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 756
not reinforceable with other types of events and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 757
limited significance unless the response patterns
endure long after the specially created
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 758
behavior has been sufficiently strengthened, or by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 759
existing sources of positive reinforcement. Once
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 760
enjoyment from play activities with peers, adult
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 761
adult social reinforcement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 762
immediate primary reinforcers which were
gradually reduced and eventually discontinued as
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 763
In order to acquire proficiency in complex
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 764
artificial contingency may be withdrawn. Many
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 765
response feedback becomes a source of personal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 766
achievement and creates either self-rewarding or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 767
behavioral repertoires through reinforcement
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 768
ingenuity and sensitive responsiveness to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 769
established modes of behavior. In view of the
SPECIFICATION OF REINFORCEMENT
CONTINGENCIES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 770
functional analysis of behavior. Laboratory
experimentation designed to explore the extent to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 771
that awareness of response-reinforcement
schizophrenics.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 772
patients to pick up cutlery at the serving center,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 773
Figure 4-1. Percentage of patients who picked up cutlery
during the baseline period, during the reinforcement
phase in which appropriate responses were promptly
rewarded, and during a period when instructions were
combined with reinforcement. Ayllon & Azrin, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 774
occasionally picked up cutlery never figured out
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 775
Figure 4-2. Percentage of patients who displayed the
appropriate responses during baseline, instruction, and
combined reinforcement-instruction phases of the
study. Ayllon & Azrin, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 776
counter whenever they picked up the cutlery and
responses.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 777
procedures and their efficacy in modifying a wide
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 778
phenomena and their controlling conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 779
performance changes. There are no difficulties in
evaluating findings when large successive changes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 780
been developed to evaluate whether the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 781
The degree of influence required to create an
(1967).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 782
fact, shown that behavior can be modified more
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 783
the implicit assumptions that repetitive control
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 784
unresponsive to other methods of change.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 785
frequency with which patients exhibited specific
patterns of behavior, and to arrange in naturalistic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 786
vocational competencies in chronic psychiatric
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 787
deviant behavior. Among the disorders
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 788
course, to modify behavior under contrived
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 789
self-evaluative consequences that arbitrary
treatment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 790
some of which are discussed in sections that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 791
typically arises under conditions of low levels of
agents.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 792
reinforcement of deviant behavior, and with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 793
peer contingency procedure in which both the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 794
social reinforcement in the entire social system,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 795
relegated to institutional back wards. Such
children have been toilet-trained (Giles & Wolf,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 796
competencies within the limits of their ability.
SYMBOLIC LEARNING
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 797
cues, the development of reading responses
constitutes a demanding associative form-
reading acquisition.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 798
reinforced for imitating single vowels or words
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 799
correctly, he is immediately reinforced with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 800
similarly depend upon the establishment of subtle
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 801
reading responses over an extended series of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 802
addition to accumulating a long and varied history
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 803
boy received token rewards which he saved for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 804
Figure 4-3. Reading test scores achieved after 8/2 years of
regular classroom instructions and after 4K months
during which reading responses were positively
reinforced. Staats & Butterfield, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 805
had produced generalized educational and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 806
progressively reduced. However, several
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 807
approaches in the educational process, it should
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 808
intellectual deficits despite numerous years
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 809
participation of the student forces careful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 810
particularly important in clinical and remedial
deficits.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 811
are often at a loss in deciding what types of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 812
teaching methods while also substantially
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 813
instruction to even more complex forms of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 814
under optimal learning conditions to homes,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 815
information about discriminative processes to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 816
involving strongly prompted responses, which
maintained.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 817
through external management of reinforcement
contingencies. Recent years have witnessed a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 818
choose for themselves must be specified in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 819
adherence to corrective practices.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 820
students who recorded their daily productivity
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 821
degree of self-control can thus be achieved by
for them.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 822
refrain from eating in non-dining settings,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 823
intentioned practices are likely to be short-lived.
reinforcing function.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 824
to make them contingent on the performance of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 825
to gain control over sexual perversions, chronic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 826
not lose weight and of those who lose weight, most
will regain it [p. 79].” Unlike approaches that focus
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 827
Figure 4-4. Weight losses achieved by eight women using
self-control procedures. Stuart, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 828
encouraging preliminary findings indicate that
VERBAL CONDITIONING
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 829
concerning psychotherapeutic interaction
processes. The overall results of innumerable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 830
such factors as the characteristics of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 831
reinforcing interventions are analogous to those
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 832
treatment for extended periods, and that the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 833
some transfer to different situations (Ullmann,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 834
agents and modifying treatment conditions so that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 835
occasions, of course, when change agents are faced
purposes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 836
learning. However, more detailed analyses of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 837
reinforcement. In many cases change agents are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 838
Wessen, 1964), each of which documents the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 839
deprived of most of their personal possessions,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 840
the customary incentives for sustaining complex
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 841
determination, hospital residency provides more
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 842
programs for school dropouts and low achievers
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 843
satisfactory work performance, etc.) are
community.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 844
(e.g., choice of bedroom, choice of eating group,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 845
vocational activity itself, in the second phase of the
reinstated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 846
(Figure 4-5). When informed that the people with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 847
Figure 4-5. Mean number of hours patients worked per day
when positive reinforcement was varied between
preferred and nonpreferred jobs. Ayllon & Azrin, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 848
assignments. These marked changes in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 849
including complex duties as dietitians, secretarial
assistants, waitresses, and sales clerks in the
high level.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 850
Figure 4-6. Total number of hours a group of 44
schizophrenic patients participated in rehabilitative
activities when rewards were conditional upon
successful completion of assignments and when the
same rewards were provided regardless of whether or
not the patients took part in the activities. Ayllon &
Azrin, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 851
resulted (Figure 4-7).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 852
Figure 4-7. Total number of hours spent each day by the
group of 44 patients performing “on-ward” activities
during periods when rewards were given upon
completion of work assignments, when positive
incentives were not used and the various activities and
privileges were freely available, and when the
reinforcement contingencies were reintroduced into
the social system. Ayllon & Azrin, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 853
replicative control through manipulation of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 854
an extended basis with deliberate therapeutic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 855
function more effectively, a token system involving
most phases of ward and hospital life was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 856
indeed, analogous to that occurring in the larger
outside community.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 857
sufficient token savings for a substantial
membership fee could, if vacancies existed, join a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 858
results of Ayllon & Azrin (1965), it was found that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 859
somewhat when the token rate was later reduced
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 860
privileged group, almost double the discharge rate
for the same ward the previous year. The overall
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 861
adaptive patterns of behavior. Favorable outcomes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 862
reasons given earlier, most of these patients are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 863
diagnosis, and length of hospitalization and
assigned randomly either to a conventional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 864
member, and for implementing the incentive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 865
rejected their recommendations. If warranted, the
making behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 866
resource persons. This social structure provided
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 867
The voluminous data from this ambitious, well-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 868
in the graded reward program showed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 869
Figure 4-8. Behavioral changes displayed by patients
receiving either conventional hospital treatment or a
program designed to establish problem-solving and
self-management competencies, (a), percentage of
observations during which patients manifested
pathological behavior; (b), percentage of observations
during which patients engaged in social interactions
involving three or more persons; (c), total time the two
groups of patients remained silent during weekly ward
meetings; (d), mean number of patients participating in
weekly ward meeting discussions. Fairweather, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 870
employed, met with friends more regularly, and
others.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 871
mutual social reinforcement provided that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 872
managerial responsibility for the troublesome
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 873
Figure 4-9. Number of infractions occurring under two types
of contingency systems: (1) In the manager condition
one of the boys purchased a managership which
assigned to him the responsibility for selecting
individuals to perform the tasks and for paying or
fining them according to the quality of their work. The
manager received or lost monetary points according to
the number of tasks completed. (2) In the fines
condition the staff imposed penalties on the entire
group for failure to perform the required tasks. The
numbers under the arrows indicate the number of
monetary points the group was fined. Phillips, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 874
staff monitoring of a group’s activities, particularly
factors.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 875
contingencies is developed and implemented by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 876
contingency structure produced much wrangling
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 877
structures existing in community life.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 878
patterns consistent with those in the larger
productive members.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 879
residence where behavioral requirements are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 880
commercial and residential, supplemented by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 881
period of two and three-fourths years, was
community.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 882
individuals can manage their daily affairs and lead
a worthwhile and constructive life. A forty-month
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 883
Figure 4-10. Percentage of time that patients in the lodge
and hospital programs spent in the community for 40
months of follow-up. The lodge program was
discontinued after 33 months. Fairweather et al., 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 884
Figure 4-11. Percentage of time that patients in the lodge
and hospital programs were employed full time for 40
months of follow-up. Fairweather et al., 1969.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 885
autonomous subcommunity in which marginal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 886
GROUP REINFORCEMENT SYSTEMS IN THE
MODIFICATION OF DELINQUENCY
larger community.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 887
for obtaining them. Regardless of whatever other
objectives may be selected in the rehabilitation of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 888
behaviors. Points earned for high achievement
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 889
to pay tuition for requested courses. They could
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 890
served the regular institutional food, and enjoyed
management fiat.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 891
conscientiously in their spare time, and gained
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 892
INTERDEPENDENT CONTINGENCY SYSTEMS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 893
members of a group. This objective can be
accomplished most effectively by instituting
increased.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 894
produce rewarding outcomes for themselves.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 895
type of contingency system in the allocation of
monetary rewards.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 896
and those cited earlier, are sufficiently interesting
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 897
performance of his unit rather than his individual
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 898
administering rewards and sanctions is turned
accomplishment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 899
Summary
theory of reinforcement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 900
patterns, and to alter deviant behavior which is
supported by its rewarding effects.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 901
The third requirement concerns methods
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 902
incidence is sufficiently increased, after which the
withdrawn.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 903
cues signifying performance achievements
is established.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 904
effective means of establishing and modifying
diverse classes of response. This is most
external control.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 905
reinforcement procedures demonstrating that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 906
efforts to reduce deleterious response patterns.
reviewed next.
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 907
1968, 73, 37-4.3.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 908
Analysis of Behavior, 1959, 2, 323-334.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 909
Bandura, A., & Walters, R. H. Adolescent aggression.
New York: Ronald Press, 1959.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 910
Brown, J. S. Comments on Professor Harlow’s paper.
In Current theory and research on motivation: A
symposium. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, 1953. pp. 49-55.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 911
Chambers, R. M. Effects of intravenous glucose
injections on learning, general activity, and
hunger drive. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1956, 49, 558-564.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 912
character and behavior disorders in a military
setting. Unpublished manuscript, Walter Reed
Army Institute of Research, Washington, D. C.,
1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 913
Fairweather, G. W., & Simon, R. A further follow-up
comparison of psychotherapeutic programs.
Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1963, 27, 186.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 914
1966, 14, 386-392.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 915
Hall, R. V., Lund, D., & Jackson, D. Effects of teacher
attention on study behavior. Journal of Applied
Behavior Analysis, 1968, 1, 1-12.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 916
Psychology, 1969, 74, 263-270.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 917
Disorders, 1960, 25, 8-12.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 918
pathology. Journal of Abnormal and Social
Psychology, 1960, 61, 276-286.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 919
Levin, G. R., & Simmons, J. J. Response to food and
praise by emotionally disturbed boys.
Psychological Reports, 1962, 11, 539-546.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 920
B. Acquisition of imitative speech by
schizophrenic children. Science, 1966, 151, 705—
707.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 921
and reintegration into school milieux of extreme
adolescent deviates. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 1968, 6, 371-383.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 922
profoundly retarded patients. American Journal of
Mental Deficiency, 1967, 71, 864-868.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 923
an adjustment class: A token reinforcement
program. Exceptional Children, 1967, 33, 637-
642.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 924
Redl, F., & Wineman, D. Children who hate: The
disorganization and breakdown of behavior
controls. Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press, 1951.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 925
unit at Austin State School. Mental Retardation,
1965, 3, 12-15.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 926
Sears, R. R., Maccoby, E. E., & Levin, H. Patterns of child
rearing. Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 927
Slack, C. W. Experimenter-subject psychotherapy: A
new method of introducing intensive office
treatment for unreachable cases. Mental Hygiene,
1960, 44, 238-256.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 928
therapy-technicians. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 1967, 5, 283-299.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 929
State Journal of Medicine, 1958, 58, 79-87.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 930
Eastern Psychological Association meeting,
Washington, April, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 931
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1968, 6, 51-64.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 932
5
Aversive Control
Negative consequences are widely used to
modify behavior, but such practices are generally
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 933
or suppressive effects, it also carries the
implication that no expressed response tendencies
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 934
competitiveness will eventually be abandoned
for expression.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 935
of negative consequences people learn to avoid or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 936
behavior without creating any special problems.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 937
auditory feedback, or verbal reprimands. In the
former case response costs may be instituted or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 938
obvious ethical reasons studies of the behavioral
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 939
does not eliminate them. Under some conditions,
however, punishment may produce enduring
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 940
performance will result in adverse consequences;
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 941
from countless studies demonstrating that
According to competing-response
interpretations (Guthrie, 1935), punishment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 942
response-inhibiting properties under conditions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 943
explanations (Dinsmoor, 1954) emphasize the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 944
punishment, reward, and extinction are
1964).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 945
prevented the occurrence of the original shock,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 946
“masochism.”
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 947
longer forthcoming, is clearly inappropriate if
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 948
been discontinued. In addition to emotional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 949
performances, or by other informative means.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 950
control resides in the punished behavior itself.
When punishing consequences are made
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 951
ongoing behavior. These studies reveal that both
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 952
A subsequent test for extinction revealed that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 953
when they pressed the lever in the presence of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 954
presentations of the same cues without regard to
response-bound.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 955
Moreover, Camp (1965), employing a wide range
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 956
same settings depending upon the person toward
other factors.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 957
chapter of this book. This view assumes that, on
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 958
a comprehensive monograph, Aronfreed (1968)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 959
response-produced cues.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 960
at the initiation of a transgression is expected to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 961
objects possessing the same relational properties
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 962
evidence that behavior is regulated by affective
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 963
much weaker than punishment alone. In the study
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 964
It is likewise difficult to ascertain whether
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 965
results have been attributed to insufficient
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 966
In addition to the methodological problems
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 967
Moreover, in order to assess what contribution, if
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 968
conditioning experiments—in which animals are
conditioning or extinction—conducted by
Solomon and his associates (Black, 1958; Black,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 969
response-correlated feedback mechanisms.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 970
participated in a series of sessions that consisted
of alternating periods of punished and unpunished
session.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 971
include observing partners in punishment
repeatedly punished.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 972
reviewed in Chapter 8, demonstrating that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 973
conditions where the basis for punishment is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 974
negative affects that actuate response inhibition.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 975
adequate excuse for his compliant behavior and,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 976
by being singled out for attention. Both threats
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 977
agents may no longer be present. Preference
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 978
was lowest among children who received the mild
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 979
validity, but it raises questions as to whether the
refuted empirically.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 980
consequences were actually administered
contingent upon occurrence of transgressive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 981
select responses that are highly resistant to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 982
accompany punishment are to some extent
preventable. Some of these common by-products,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 983
training (Desiderato, 1964; Hoffman & Fleshier,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 984
the formerly aversive stimuli. These cues not only
other sources.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 985
900 cps tone was never accompanied by shock.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 986
Figure 5-1. Generalization of response suppression exhibited
by subjects after discrimination training during which a
1000 cps tone was paired with shock but a 900 cps tone
was never accompanied by shock. A ratio of 1.0
indicates complete suppression. Plotted from data of
Hoffman & Fleshier, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 987
Figure 5-2. Effects of emotional stress on the generalization
of response suppression produced by prior
discrimination training. A ratio of 1.0 represents
complete suppression. Hoffman & Fleshier, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 988
It would follow from the above findings that a
ensured.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 989
been discussed at length in earlier sections, is the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 990
procedures based on the social presentation of
emotional conditioning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 991
situational discontinuities exist, the use of social
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 992
they also persisted longest on the effortful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 993
surprising in view of the short periods during
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 994
consummatory responses in subhuman species.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 995
frequently applied (Azrin, 1958; Powell & Azrin,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 996
behavior, will nevertheless drive the subject out of
check withdrawal.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 997
behavior through punishment increases their
cues.
change agents.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 998
aversive control one must also consider the
modeling function of punishing behavior. In many
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 999
with their demands through the use of power-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1000
training but also increase the probability that on
their actions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1001
consequences accelerated the extinction process.
Of considerably greater significance are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1002
who make frequent use of aversive controls would
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1003
be applied over a long period to reduce behavior
effectively in persons who, because of their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1004
in both groups, the animals that had learned a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1005
have few response options will be slow to
abandon behavior that results in negative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1006
between I went over jobs which I had pulled
off and mentally surveyed them to see how
they could be improved upon. Then I went
over my mistakes again, and learned how
they had occurred and let me down. So you
see there was always plenty for me to do
when I lay on that board with no occupation
but thinking. And plan future jobs. Oh yes, if
a survey could be taken it would be proved
that most of the big criminal jobs, and
thousands of small ones, are planned in gaol.
Planned to the last detail because there is not
sufficient alternative interest to occupy
prisoners’ minds [Hill, 1955, p. 39],
repeated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1007
likely to emerge when dominant response
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1008
behavior in question is punished and competing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1009
counterconditioning of a competing response in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1010
legend springing from tenderheartedness and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1011
It would appear from these diverse outcomes
unsubstantiated concerns.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1012
When aversive procedures are essential for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1013
intent of the agent, and whether the sanctions are
SPEECH DISORDERS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1014
employed by Goldiamond (1965a) in both
experimental production of stuttering behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1015
their parents, but observational studies of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1016
conditioned to the act of verbal communication.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1017
these findings that punishment might increase the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1018
appeared in more than one generation in only 2
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1019
respond with excessive concern to their children’s
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1020
stuttering generally produces negative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1021
of the word reinforces the preceding stuttering
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1022
obtained during periods of emotional stress
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1023
stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1024
students who had been stutterers eventually
persistence of stuttering.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1025
different days under two conditions in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1026
Figure 5-3. Frequency of stuttering through successive
readings in experimental and control conditions.
Sheehan, 1951.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1027
conditions, stuttering rate decreased slightly,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1028
eventually ended in word completions which, in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1029
produces an immediate unpleasant consequence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1030
others.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1031
punish their children’s fluent verbal patterns, but
value.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1032
completion of stuttering responses can serve to
therapeutic achievement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1033
In the first step of the procedure, stutterers are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1034
administers the negative feedback on the basis of
verbal behavior.
eliminated completely.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1035
A summary of the procedures and concomitant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1036
1037
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 5-4. Reduction in stuttering rate and establishment of fluent reading
in a chronic stutterer. Goldiamond, 1965a.
which ranged between 0.2 and 0.6 words per
and final day the client was reading 256 words per
minute without manifesting a single disfluency.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1038
1039
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 5-5. Elimination of disfluencies through stutter-produced delayed
feedback and development of rapid fluent reading. Goldiamond,
1965a.
increased and negative consequences withdrawn.
Goldiamond also reports concomitant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1040
demands of different situations. A review of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1041
communication rather than oral reading in
difficulty.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1042
exclusively operant approach. If all stutterers who
receive this form of treatment are able to converse
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1043
situations in which he was required to convey
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1044
of disfluencies, a treatment strategy combining
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1045
The maintaining conditions of self-injurious
self-injurious behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1046
It has been demonstrated (Bucher & Lovaas,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1047
more powerful consequences (Risley, 1968).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1048
several cases reported by Bucher & Lovaas (1968)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1049
Figure 5-6. Frequency of self-injurious behavior and amount
of avoidance and crying displayed by an autistic child
during pre-treatment sessions (1 through 15), and
when such behavior was punished by shock (P) or a
verbal reprimand “no” (N) during sessions 16, 17, 19,
and 21. The numerals below the session numbers
identify the therapist present during the session.
Bucher & Lovaas, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1050
procedures. The behavior, which he had exhibited
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1051
Figure 5-7. Daily average frequency of self-injurious
responses performed per minute on control days when
such responses were followed by no special
consequences, and on experimental days when self-
striking behavior produced brief withdrawal of
physical contact. Tate & Baroff, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1052
he continued to hit himself he would receive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1053
changes. Unlike the cases cited above, brief
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1054
injurious behavior of long standing, but they
MOTOR DYSFUNCTIONS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1055
cases, tremors and spasms of hand muscles were
elicited only by highly specific writing stimuli, but
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1056
insert a stylus into a series of progressively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1057
extended periods, and follow-up studies
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1058
regarding the types of individuals who achieve
contraindicated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1059
desensitization methods may prove successful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1060
similar decremental change in the untreated arm
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1061
about his work, and stressful interpersonal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1062
to marked hand tremors and attendant fatigue.
disability.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1063
these findings have suggestive value, more
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1064
swallowing difficulties.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1065
dramatic and stable decrements resulted from tic-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1066
equally or more effective than methods utilizing
response-contingent punishment.
SEXUAL DEVIATIONS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1067
attractiveness is prepared. In order to facilitate
transfer effects, whenever possible photographs of
his leg.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1068
On the assumption that variable training
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1069
client’s avoidance responses to pictures of males
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1070
in order to prevent any inadvertent reinforcement
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1071
Feldman & MacCulloch (1965) present
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1072
subsample of cases to determine if response
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1073
Feldman & MacCulloch attribute the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1074
fetishistic items. The authors report that after
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1075
automobiles, or certain facilities; they are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1076
rewards of peer attention are pitted against the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1077
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF PUNISHMENT BY
REINFORCEMENT WITHDRAWAL
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1078
(Baer, 1961; Nigro, 1966).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1079
The preceding studies demonstrate that brief
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1080
that are regularly associated with reinforcement
(Leitenberg, 1965).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1081
probably not have produced a chronic toe-sucker),
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1082
high rate. On the other hand, punishment by the
behavioral recovery.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1083
reinforcement withdrawal has certain advantages
over physically aversive procedures. As previously
in fact result.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1084
and seriously infringes on the well-being of others.
If combined with methods that foster constructive
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1085
disciplinary intervention may reinforce the
applied.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1086
cataractal lenses) might result in ultimate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1087
experience, with the result that the boy displayed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1088
proceed to wreck the furnishings in the room, he
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1089
10 minutes whenever he threw his glasses, or if
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1090
bedtime problems were handled by the
attendants. Subsequently the parents made
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1091
toward other children.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1092
reappeared during nine months of follow-up
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1093
modifying diverse behavioral disorders. Sloane,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1094
brief social withdrawal produced a marked
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1095
enduring changes in behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1096
those, for example, that Cohen (1968) successfully
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1097
this meeting, each participant’s role is specifically
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1098
the disciplinary interventions as natural,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1099
behavior, but no quantitative data are presented,
nor is there any specification of the conditions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1100
period during which he does not engage in
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1101
aversive events. Punishment is believed to achieve
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1102
associated with punishing experiences may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1103
differing circumstances, individuals infer the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1104
others. While findings of controlled studies are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1105
performed for some time even though it incurs
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1106
bar-press response, would undoubtedly abandon
reservations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1107
approval, possessions, or privileges is made
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1108
Aronfreed, J., & Reber, A. Internalized behavioral
suppression and the timing of social punishment.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1965,
1, 3-16.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1109
variable-interval reinforcement. Journal of the
Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1960, 3, 123-
142.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1110
Barrett, B. Reduction in rate of multiple tics by free
operant conditioning methods. Journal of Nervous
and Mental Diseases, 1962, 135, 187-195.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1111
of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1949, 14, 295-
302.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1112
in behavior modification. In M. R. Jones (Ed.),
Miami symposium on the prediction of behavior,
1967: Aversive stimulation. Coral Gables, Fla.:
University of Miami Press, 1968. pp. 77-145.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1113
Research in psychotherapy. Washington, D. C.:
American Psychological Association, 1968. pp.
21-53.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1114
Desiderato, O. Generalization of conditioned
suppression. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1964, 59, 434-437.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1115
Psychological Monographs, 1958, 72 (8, Whole
No. 461).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1116
Research in behavior modification. New York:
Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1965. pp. 106-156. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1117
Herrnstein, R. J. Behavioral consequences of removal
of a discriminative stimulus associated with
variable-interval reinforcement. Unpublished
doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, 1955.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1118
discrimination training. Journal of the
Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1964, 7, 233-
239.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1119
temporally spaced responding. Journal of the
Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1963, 6, 115-
122.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1120
Asilomar, Calif., 1957.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1121
Analysis of Behavior, 1967, 10, 439-449.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1122
Analysis of Behavior, 1966, 9, 53-62.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1123
autistic behaviors and generalization into the
home. In R. Ulrich, T. Stachnik, & J. Mabry (Eds.),
Control of human behavior. Glenview, 111.: Scott,
Foresman, 1966. pp. 193-198.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1124
Social Psychology, 1951, 46, 51-63.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1125
in the normal state. Psychological Review, 1962,
69, 202-219.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1126
toe-sucking in a young rhesus monkey by two
kinds of punishment. Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1964, 7, 323-325.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1127
Analysis of Behavior, 1962, 5, 201-208.
Wolf, M., Risley, T., Johnston, M., Harris, F., & Allen, E.
Application of operant conditioning procedures
to the behavior problems of an autistic child: A
follow-up and extension. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 1967, 5, 103-111.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1128
6
Extinction
When reinforcement for a learned response is
withheld, individuals will continue to exhibit that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1129
it is prevented from occurring in the presence of
threatening stimuli no adverse consequences are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1130
controlling variables, a number of different
reviewed next.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1131
typically at reduced strength, with the passage of
time, suggesting the dissipation of a transitory
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1132
It would follow from inhibition theory that any
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1133
cannot be adequately explained in terms of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1134
facilitated independently of skeletal responding by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1135
conditions. Though the terminal levels of learning
COMPETING-RESPONSE THEORY
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1136
strong enough to supersede the ongoing behavior.
These competing responses may be linked either
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1137
Guthrie (1935), include introducing the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1138
omission of aversive stimulation automatically
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1139
through the development of incompatible
responses. In the initial study (Page & Hall, 1953),
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1140
proceeded in the following manner: The initial
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1141
exposure to fear-arousing stimuli a dominant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1142
nonrewarded repetition of responses generates
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1143
nonrewarded behavior results from the
DISCRIMINATION THEORY
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1144
reduce the discriminability between prior
conditions of reinforcement and those of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1145
similar reasons that, even under the same degree
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1146
previously signified that appropriate performance
ongoing behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1147
expected to increase the complexity of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1148
learned to a variety of stimuli. It would therefore
learning.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1149
experiences in extinction is disclosed by studies
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1150
information to the observer about the altered
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1151
reason fractional anticipatory response
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1152
contingencies are restored.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1153
resistant to extinction than continuous
reinforcement is also disconfirmed when
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1154
Figure 6-1. Rate of extinction of GSRs as a function of
awareness and the schedule of reinforcement
employed during the acquisition phase. Bridger &
Mandel, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1155
1952; Wickens, Allen, & Hill, 1963) and
in responsiveness.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1156
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1157
that the agitation is groundless because pictorial
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1158
considerations of symbolic regulation of behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1159
an aversive state of cognitive dissonance is created
by the conflicting information of having expended
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1160
designed experiments with infrahuman subjects
expenditure of effort.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1161
subjects are provided with the same number of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1162
effortful responses (Longenecker, Krauskopf, &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1163
therefore, experience greater pressure to justify
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1164
the response, the frequency of reward, and the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1165
comprehensive explanation of extinction
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1166
intermittent reward with occasional punishment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1167
classroom settings. After the frequency with which
lowest level.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1168
Figure 6-2. Number of children standing in class during
baseline periods and when such behavior produced
verbal admonishments or incompatible responses were
positively reinforced. Madsen et al., 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1169
simply by discontinuing the reinforcing
a young boy. This child had been ill for the first 18
months of his life and had required considerable
attention and special care. During this period,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1170
parents to attend to him and thus unwittingly to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1171
tantrums, but other significant adults continue to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1172
Figure 6-3. Duration of crying in two extinction series in
which tantrum behavior was no longer socially
reinforced. Williams, 1959.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1173
whenever he deliberately spilled or threw food
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1174
psychotic talk, had been subjected to considerable
verbal abuse and beaten on several occasions by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1175
when, unknown to the ward personnel, a social
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1176
recipients, it is frequently more difficult to modify
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1177
of psychotic letters increased after the staff
psychotic verbalizations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1178
by ward personnel, spoon-fed, tube-fed, and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1179
It is interesting to note that delusional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1180
reinstatement of self-feeding are in accord with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1181
during the extinction period were not due to some
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1182
Figure 6-4. Reversals in the incidence of psychotic and
neutral verbal behavior as a result of variations in
social reinforcement of these two classes of
verbalizations. Ayllon & Haughton, 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1183
altering the reinforcement contingencies.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1184
1185
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 6-5. Frequency of somatic complaints during the baseline period and
while somatic verbalizations were successively rewarded with attention
and ignored. The temporary increase in somatic complaints shown by
the arrow in the fourth phase of the treatment coincides with a
visit by a relative. Ayllon & Haughton, 1964.
1186
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 6-6. Frequency of somatic complaints during the baseline period and while somatic
verbalizations were successively rewarded with attention and ignored. Ayllon &
Haughton, 1964.
compelling deviant behavior. In those familial
environments that likewise provide minimal social
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1187
advent of the dermatitis, however, the daughter
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1188
of inhibitory potential with nonreinforced
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1189
selected rate or magnitude occur. The animals are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1190
autonomic functioning than has been previously
assumed.
reinforcement procedures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1191
performances that have been maintained on a
continuous schedule of reinforcement. A temper
behavior emerge.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1192
similar situations. No special problems are created
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1193
complaints, drawing attention to collections of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1194
adult contacts that competed with peer-group
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1195
Figure 6-7. Amount of social behavior displayed by a child as
a result of variations in social reinforcement of adult
and peer interactions. Allen et al., 1964.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1196
In order to determine whether the differential
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1197
level of about 60 percent.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1198
Similar results were obtained with a combined
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1199
level and remained negligible thereafter. Etzel &
cheerful behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1200
events, a change agent can both facilitate and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1201
reactions are likely to occur only if aggression has
been nonrewarded or punished. Since aggression
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1202
it is expressed, and the targets that are selected for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1203
repertoires were taught only while individuals
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1204
previously reviewed study by Chittenden (1942),
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1205
behavior has been acquired. The behavior of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1206
been established. Sears, Maccoby, & Levin (1957)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1207
To assess the reinforcing function of infliction
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1208
Witnessing another person experience pain
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1209
naturalistic studies demonstrating that social
are so prevalent.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1210
contingencies in naturally occurring interactions,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1211
(Patterson, Littman, & Bricker, 1967) thus
change.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1212
that can be reduced only through some form of
aggressive behavior. From a social-learning
evidence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1213
anger or euphoria depending upon the type of
1969).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1214
effects may be more adequately interpreted in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1215
or if he should reinterpret the original provoking
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1216
dependent measures, are in general agreement
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1217
provide further suggestive evidence for the anger-
situations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1218
demonstrated in an experiment by Davitz (1952).
After first being observed in free interaction,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1219
factors in aggression is further shown by studies
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1220
frequently originate from observation of parental
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1221
frustration or stress reactions is well documented
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1222
aggressive behavior (Buss, 1966; Jegard &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1223
behavior can be most successfully achieved by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1224
behavior is actively promoted.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1225
Burton, & Yarrow (1967) report similar results in
children.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1226
they experience the discomfort of a burning house
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1227
works.” The reality of the phenomenon is most
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1228
extinction trials began one group of subjects was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1229
Figure 6-8. Extinction of heart-rate responses to a
conditioned stimulus in subjects who either were
uninformed that shock was discontinued, were told
there would be no further shocks, or were provided
with a motor response for avoiding shock. B-l
represents the baseline heart-rate response to the tone
before aversive conditioning. Redrawn from
Notterman, Schoenfeld, & Bersh, 1952.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1230
designed to evaluate separately the various factors
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1231
individual from reappraising the currently
extinction processes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1232
potential of subjectively threatening situations. In
some instances, for example, cessation of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1233
box, but this method also proved ineffective in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1234
permanently removed. Under this procedure,
events.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1235
producing new forms of defensive behavior that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1236
changes without achieving fear extinction. This is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1237
behavioral conditions. One case involved a 33-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1238
and any activity that could conceivably have
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1239
washing routines, but she was much less disturbed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1240
responses, and then gradually increasing their
threat value until the most fearsome situations
defensive behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1241
intensity of the CS was gradually raised in small
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1242
behavior. Once nonavoidant responses occur to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1243
eliminating behavioral inhibitions. After animals
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1244
flooding procedure wherein the training tone was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1245
1246
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 6-9. Reductions in response suppression achieved by subjects in each of the
five treatment conditions during ten extinction sessions. A value of
zero indicates complete suppression of the intermittently rewarded
lever-pressing response, whereas a ratio of 0.50 represents no
response inhibition. Poppen, 1968.
trials required to eliminate completely the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1247
sessions in which the student delivered
increasingly longer speeches to progressively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1248
which she had previously fled to a physician after
oration.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1249
happen. Therapists have found that the first
thing to do is to concentrate on reducing the
fears motivating avoidance (i.e., to analyze
resistances) rather than to try to increase the
motivation to approach the feared goal [p.
359].
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1250
in fact, also successfully employed by Herzberg
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1251
eliminating varied forms of avoidance behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1252
emotional arousal. This strategy has, in fact, been
forms.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1253
extinction procedures yielded variable results
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1254
To support this supposition, Walton & Mather
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1255
avoidance responses become “functionally
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1256
rather than causally linked events. When
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1257
greatest toward the stimuli that have been
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1258
obsessive concern about urination and defecation,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1259
She had waited with a young man, a stranger,
for half an hour at a bus stop and had
become engaged in a lengthy conversation.
This almost resulted in a date. On a second
occasion she renewed a childhood
acquaintanceship with a young man of her
age [p. 167].
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1260
a series of tasks graded according to their
contamination value and potency in evoking
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1261
extinction is described by Saul and his associates
(Saul, Rome, & Leuser, 1946), in the treatment of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1262
increased until full intensity was reached. As a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1263
noises, and even music to which they had been
formerly hypersensitive.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1264
change agent has planned an optimal sequence of
activities, his efforts will be of little avail unless
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1265
Finally, the skill with which extinction experiences
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1266
by clients with high probability of success.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1267
that performance feedback was also a powerful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1268
1269
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 6-10. Effect of social reinforcement and
nonreinforcement of performance improvements upon
the rate of progress of two agoraphobic clients. Agras,
Leitenberg, & Barlow, 1968.
the rewards associated with avoidance behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1270
EXTINCTION THROUGH PROLONGED OR MASSIVE
EXPOSURE TO AVERSIVE STIMULI
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1271
received 20 trials daily of five-second exposures to
the buzzer with a physical barrier erected to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1272
Figure 6-11. Rate of extinction and reconditioning of
avoidance behavior eliminated by different extinction
procedures. Polin, 1959.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1273
through physical restraints had no lasting value
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1274
extinction procedure actually employed. It is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1275
compartment was raised, six seconds later lights
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1276
responses to the most remote stimulus, 75 to the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1277
achieved by repeated elicitation of intense
emotional responses without the occurrence of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1278
lived in a septic tank need not fear the dirt found
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1279
of categories relating to aggression, sex, rejection,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1280
sources of anxiety. Clients may therefore be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1281
unconvincing because of the weak criterion
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1282
controls performed the same behavior. Essentially
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1283
third group of subjects read material concerning
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1284
objects, and to test for the generality and stability
method.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1285
Figure 6-12. Mean number of snake-approach responses
performed by subjects in each of five conditions before
treatment, immediately after treatment, and a month
later. Plotted from data of Mealiea, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1286
conditions in reducing avoidance behavior toward
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1287
least temporarily, a new basis of fearful self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1288
experiences are elicited in conjunction with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1289
traumatic situations (Yates, 1958). It is assumed
that tics probably occurred by chance in close
interpretation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1290
extinction long after noxious stimulation has been
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1291
Desensitization procedures have not been utilized
have.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1292
the client carried out the exercises at home (Jones,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1293
was more prominent, discontinued treatment
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1294
under conditions of low rather than high drive
states, Walton (1961; 1964) utilized massed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1295
effects achieved in the drug condition often fail to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1296
extended response evocation may produce
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1297
The studies reported above indicate that a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1298
play an influential role in the efficacy of massed-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1299
EXTINCTION IN INTERVIEW APPROACHES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1300
Dittes (1957a, b). In one investigation (1957b),
involving analyses of specific client-therapist
extinguished.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1301
The critical issues, therefore, that remain to be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1302
inhalational anesthetics to revivify past traumatic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1303
disarming two other soldiers, he burst through a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1304
month follow-up report, the client extended his
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1305
permanent or complete extinction of emotional
responses it is necessary to present the fear-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1306
episode is furnished by Lifshitz & Blair (1960).
beach with her father and waded too far out into
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1307
in Table 6-1, repeated nonreinforced evocation of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1308
heart rate
during
abreaction
Frontalis Moderate Moderate Slight Very Very
muscle slight slight
activity
during
abreaction
Cheek Fall Fall (toe No No No
temperature temp) change change change
during
abreaction
Bed Moderate Marked None None None
movement
during
abreaction
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1309
behavioral modifications.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1310
induction procedures, hypnotic, barbiturate, or
extinction.
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1311
solely as a result of observing changes in
conditions of reinforcement, and it is easily
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1312
phase, it is assumed that continued performance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1313
behavior is reduced through nonreward,
response tendencies.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1314
anticipated adverse consequences occur. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1315
situations have been completely neutralized. If the
avoidance responding.
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1316
Alexander, F. Psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. New
York: Norton, 1956.
Allen, K. E., Hart, B., Buell, J. S., Harris, F. R., & Wolf, M.
M. Effects of social reinforcement on isolate
behavior of a nursery school child. Child
Development, 1964, 35, 511-518.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1317
Analysis of Behavior, 1959, 2, 323-334.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1318
and Social Psychology, 1968, 8, 99-108.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1319
Berkowitz, L. Aggression: A social psychological
analysis. New York: McGraw Hill, 1962.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1320
nursery school class. Journal of Experimental
Child Psychology, 1965, 2, 103-107.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1321
and modifying assertive behavior in young
children. Monographs of the Society for Research
in Child Development, 1942 (1, Serial No. 31).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1322
Denny, M. R., & Weisman, R. G. Avoidance behavior as
a function of length of nonshock confinement.
Journal of Comparative and Physiological
Psychology, 1964, 58, 252-257.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1323
Edmonson, R. W., & Amsel, A. The effects of massing
and distribution of extinction trials on the
persistence of a fear-motivated instrumental
response. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1954, 47, 117-123.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1324
Feldman, R. B., & Werry, J. S. An unsuccessful attempt
to treat a tiqueur by massed practice. Behaviour
Research and Therapy, 1966, 4, 111-117.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1325
Treatment by a method derived from
experimental psychology. British Medical Journal,
1960, 2, 497-502.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1326
development on the extinction of GSR. Journal of
Experimental Psychology, 1963, 66, 292-299.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1327
in a therapeutic role. Journal of Experimental
Child Psychology, 4, 99-107.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1328
630-639.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1329
Kahn, M. The physiology of catharsis. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 1966, 3, 278-
286.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1330
Kennedy, W. A. School phobia: Rapid treatment of fifty
cases. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1965, 70,
285-289.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1331
“frustration” on children’s aggressive behavior.
Child Development, 1967, 38, 739-745.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1332
Lifshitz, K., & Blair, J. H., The polygraphic recording of
a repeated hypnotic abreaction with comments
on abreaction psychotherapy. Journal of Nervous
and Mental Disease, 1960, 130, 246-252.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1333
Madsen, C. H., Jr., Becker, W. C., Thomas, D. R., Koser,
L., & Plager, E. An analysis of the reinforcing
function of “sit down” commands. In R. K. Parker
(Ed.), Readings in educational psychology. Boston:
Allyn and Bacon, 1968. pp. 265-278.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1334
and Physiological Psychology, 1958, 51, 363-366.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1335
Psychology, 1956, 52, 71-76.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1336
behavior in children: A step toward a theory of
aggression. Monographs of the Society for
Research in Child Development, 1967, 32 (5, Serial
No. 113).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1337
Sears, R. R., Maccoby, E. E., & Levin, H. Patterns of child
rearing. Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1338
Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1953, 48, 291-
302.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1339
Walton, D. The application of learning theory to the
treatment of a case of neurodermatitis. In H. J.
Eysenck (Ed.), Behaviour therapy and the
neuroses. New York: Pergamon, 1960. pp. 272-
274. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1340
stammering and phobic symptoms. Behaviour
Research and Therapy, 1963, 1, 121-125. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1341
instruction on extinction of the conditioned GSR.
Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1963, 66,
235-240.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1342
of response. Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1966, 72,610-613.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1343
7
Desensitization through
Counterconditioning
Of the various methods of behavioral
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1344
The introductory chapter discussed the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1345
outcome presupposes that classically conditioned
effects exert mediating control over instrumental!)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1346
immobilized by curare to prevent instrumental
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1347
Winokur, 1967).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1348
They observed such transfer effects even when
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1349
autonomic arousal (usually designated as anxiety)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1350
coping with a potentially threatening situation,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1351
Laboratory investigations of the acquisition
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1352
underwent the surgical-drug procedures and the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1353
that was blocked or resected.
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1354
In a comprehensive review of the pertinent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1355
behavioral—are functionally separable. Although
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1356
learned. After avoidance responses habitually
occur with reinforcing consequences in the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1357
skeletally immobilized by curare to prevent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1358
presenting threatening stimulus events along with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1359
Figure 7-1. Mean number of nonreinforced trials required to
eliminate response suppression at each of the stimulus
values of the aversive hierarchy through extinction and
counterconditioning procedures. Poppen, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1360
graduated extinction and graduated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1361
states and inevitable changes in the stimulus
CONCEPTUALIZATION OF THE
COUNTERCONDITIONING PROCESS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1362
Based on careful analysis of the stimulus
determinants of emotional responsiveness, the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1363
stimuli is increased from session to session until
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1364
reduced by generalization of anxiety extinction
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1365
fatigue theory of extinction. In contrast to this
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1366
aversive stimuli onto positive events that mitigate
self-generated arousal.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1367
predominantly sympathetic responses of anxiety.
approach behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1368
Controlling Variables in Desensitization
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1369
misleading because the behavioral test used
were utilized.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1370
avoidance behavior can be objectively measured,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1371
expectations that participation in a treatment
program will result in favorable changes. Another
manner.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1372
practice. A second group participated in a pseudo-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1373
repeated exposure to threatening stimuli. Finally,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1374
pseudo-counterconditioning, exposure, and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1375
Control subjects and those who received the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1376
other studies (Wolpin & Raines, 1966) are
conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1377
reliably and permits greater experimental control
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1378
The above procedure was primarily designed
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1379
emotional arousal through the course of the
desensitization process.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1380
treatments over a period of two months according
measurements.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1381
Figure 7-2. Changes in reported asthmatic attacks, and two
physiological measures of respiratory function
associated with each of three treatment conditions.
Moore, 1965.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1382
Although the findings reported by Davison
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1383
was the procedure followed for the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1384
Figure 7-3. Differential responsiveness of moderate and
severe phobic subjects to counterconditioning and
extinction procedures. Schubot, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1385
facilitate extinction of avoidance responses of
moderate strength.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1386
covert extinction for the general issue of symbolic
conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1387
physiological responses of students to a film
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1388
responses. The authors conclude, on the basis of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1389
actually represents a variant form of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1390
interpretation is consistent with the view
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1391
deconditioning effects occur even when social and
expectancy influences are controlled, and that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1392
reduced with successive nonreinforced occurrence
emotional responses.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1393
Terrace (1966) has provided considerable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1394
therapeutic gain from programs that fostered
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1395
received the same items without relaxation
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1396
expressed earlier regarding anxiety responding
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1397
Findings of an experiment by Krapfl (1967) are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1398
groups (Figure 7-4). No significant differences
participation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1399
Figure 7-4. Mean number of approach responses performed
by subjects in each of four treatment conditions and in
two control conditions. Plotted from data of Krapfl,
1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1400
Brown (1964) found that repeated paired
presentations of a positive reinforcer with a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1401
aversive stimuli are presented briefly at irregular
intervals.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1402
In order to establish conditioned responses it
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1403
subjects do not recognize that the two stimuli are
explicated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1404
originally evoked by the unconditioned stimulus.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1405
rather than the direct coupling of stimuli with
responses to stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1406
The studies reviewed thus far investigated the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1407
responsiveness to stimulus presentations. For
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1408
much success in restoring severely inhibited
provided.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1409
contained pictures of the phobic stimuli presented
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1410
arouse relatively weak inhibitions that would be
manipulations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1411
variable could have been easily avoided by
measuring the degree of fear associated with each
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1412
groups did not differ significantly from each other
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1413
an open question whether the authors’ procedure
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1414
eliciting only halfhearted adherence to required
procedures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1415
by snake stimuli but adversely affected by shocks.
snake.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1416
cognitive labeling processes might serve as
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1417
approach behavior. When subjects who reported
behavioral requirement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1418
subjective threats, the cognitive approach
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1419
It should be remembered that cognitive claims
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1420
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1421
function.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1422
effects of symbolic desensitization do exert a
significant influence on behavioral functioning.
observations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1423
However, no consistent relationship was found
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1424
influenced more by central than by autonomic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1425
hierarchy of anxiety-provoking stimuli and then
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1426
of emotional responses to threatening events
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1427
ceased to be threatening in symbolic form, that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1428
In clinical practice symbolic desensitization is
treatment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1429
activities may further extinguish any residual
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1430
with changes produced by single procedures
COMPARATIVE EFFICACY OF
COUNTERCONDITIONING PROCEDURES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1431
specifically designed to compare outcomes of
desensitization with those obtained by other
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1432
subjects were informed, would be evaluating their
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1433
were administered a placebo with strong
procedures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1434
treatment approaches, administered each of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1435
1436
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 7-5. Percent of subjects in each of the four conditions who displayed decreases in anxiety as measured by
behavior ratings, self-reports of emotional disturbance, and measures of physiological arousal. Drawn
from data of Paul, 1966.
significantly less overt behavior indicative of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1437
by the desensitization procedure as having
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1438
anxiety or any evidence of substitute forms of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1439
semester prior to, and following, treatment were
obtained.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1440
manifested in actual social behavior as well—may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1441
academic performance are further corroborated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1442
who each exhibited a different type of phobic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1443
from personal interviews. The clients who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1444
close to a woman to pre-coital love-making in the
nude.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1445
number as their matched counterparts in the
desensitization groups.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1446
situational tests to provide a reliability check on
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1447
treatment successfully modified the phobic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1448
phobic behavior after a few months of
desensitization treatment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1449
nontreated controls. However, depending on the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1450
of treatment procedures the incidence of terminal
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1451
termination of treatment, with few exceptions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1452
outcome but are understood instead as differences
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1453
Much progress can be made in reducing fruitless
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1454
consequently impossible to identify which
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1455
and controlled individual studies involving well-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1456
functioning. However, in treatments involving the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1457
1965a; Lazarus, 1960; Rosenthal, 1967; Wolpe,
1962); fear of water (Bentler, 1962); storms
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1458
methods have been applied to the modification of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1459
Ullmann, 1967; Wolpe, 1958; Wolpe & Lazarus,
1966).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1460
of classical conditioning. Contrary to this view,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1461
example, encountered considerable difficulty in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1462
repeatedly subjected to punishing experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1463
often results in a spiraling process where fear and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1464
demands, and they may achieve considerable
improvement.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1465
oriented treatments, especially in their present
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1466
assessment approaches must be replaced by more
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1467
solely through systematic examination of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1468
required. When utilization of physical events is too
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1469
psychodynamic procedures are suitable to more
complex conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1470
by conditions created either deliberately or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1471
therapy” and “psychotherapy,” their continued use
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1472
exhibit a highly circumscribed phobic disorder
disorders.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1473
are not restricted, either on theoretical or practical
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1474
sexual encounters, apprehensions about
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1475
impulses [Cameron, 1963, p. 280]”; and countless
patterns.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1476
External phobic cues are therefore regarded as
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1477
that stimulus determinants are always inferable
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1478
provoking inadequacy and females who possess
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1479
chastity belt.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1480
was also instructed to practice relaxation and to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1481
females in public places such as parks, streets, and
exhibitionism.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1482
This conditioning was undoubtedly facilitated by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1483
responsiveness was restored after aggressive and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1484
readily adopted exclusively heterosexual patterns
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1485
sexually active throughout the test session, not a
response pattern.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1486
previously acquired physical contact anxieties
weakly inhibited.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1487
result in a corresponding enhancement of
heterosexual behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1488
administered program of desensitization in actual
interpersonal competencies.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1489
positive rewards deriving from homosexual
alliances (Henry, 1941; Hooker, 1961). If the
next chapter.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1490
anxiety. The desensitization was conducted along
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1491
to establishing new response orientations toward
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1492
extinguishing emotional responses to the primary
conditioned stimulus is more effective in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1493
stimulus continuum the change agent began the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1494
from the stimulus selected for extinction.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1495
authority figures whom he currently fears than to
his parents.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1496
client’s automobile as it approached a highway
intersection.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1497
varying the number of emotion-provoking elements
in the total stimulus complex. In Wolpe’s
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1498
in which men engaged in a mild argument to one
1958).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1499
punishment, a stimulus for anxiety. Thus, for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1500
cases the stimulus hierarchies are constructed by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1501
terminate fear-arousing stimuli without making
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1502
heavy reliance of Wolpe’s method upon symbolic
Shoben, 1963).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1503
valenced events generated strong GSR
situations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1504
another, to visualize threatening stimuli vividly, or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1505
fact, often recommended in popular books on
practiced socially.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1506
addition to stimulus-attenuating alterations,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1507
naturalistic conditions rather than to symbolic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1508
parks, zoos, outdoor walks, or the seaside); she
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1509
feathers, she was encouraged to perform a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1510
imagery, it is also difficult to employ symbolic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1511
recordings of wind noises progressing from mild
throughout treatment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1512
tape-recorded social interaction sequences.
SELF-ADMINISTERED DESENSITIZATION IN
NATURALISTIC SITUATIONS
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1513
can achieve some degree of self-directed
desensitization.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1514
desensitization alone.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1515
was instructed to retire from the situation or to
emotionally disturbing.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1516
exhibitionism in 26 sessions by training the client
to perform a set of relaxation responses
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1517
completely eliminated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1518
intercourse is made until sexual inhibitions have
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1519
otherwise the therapists seem to show little
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1520
of stimulus events can be significantly modified.
uncorrelated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1521
In most social situations people obviously
stress reducers.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1522
twice as frequently and remained there
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1523
most likely serve both as incentives for self-
reducers.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1524
generalization continuum. After emotional
Antagonistic Activities in
Counterconditioning
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1525
coats, cotton wool, fur rugs, and feathers. In
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1526
animal which previously had terrified him. Further
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1527
employing food are limited in applicability to
demonstrated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1528
reactivity, the research in this area has been
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1529
exercises elevates heart rate and lowers skin
of relaxation.
greater decrements.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1530
responsiveness. It has been further shown by
Grings & Uno (1968), by means of a “compound
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1531
recorded relaxation procedure was less effective
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1532
the effects that relaxation, or any other anxiety-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1533
sufficient degree of positive affect has been
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1534
Those who often mediate pleasant experiences
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1535
further support from a study by Kissel (1965)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1536
therapeutic relationship. Although this type of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1537
ambiguity may facilitate generalization of
to counterconditioning.
regulated by psychotherapists.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1538
Some of the procedures employed in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1539
sometime prior to the experimental session.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1540
the toy while she was held in her mother’s arms
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1541
fears of loud noises, heights, darkness, animals,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1542
considerably more sexually responsive but found
desensitization.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1543
changes induced during a drugged state may have
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1544
a monotonic increase in responsiveness.
abruptly withdrawn.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1545
extensively controlled by external stimuli, it seems
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1546
evaluations showed this to be the case,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1547
everyday life. On the contrary, persons are often
reconditioning.
Physiological Accompaniments of
Emotional Behavior
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1548
may be regarded as the major emotional condition
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1549
aversiveness. It is consequently difficult to
question.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1550
Schachter (1957) using analogous manipulations
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1551
stimuli rather than internal somatic cues. Among
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1552
were irretrievably lost.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1553
at the same time correctly informed of its physical
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1554
concerning its side effects so they had no adequate
confederate.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1555
receiving their injections all subjects viewed a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1556
palpitations and tremors. Students who received
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1557
physiological arousal can be experienced as
inducing situations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1558
of feeling states; given this, the person would need
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1559
by neutralizing the arousal potential of
threatening stimuli. The reconditioning process is
learned behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1560
and pharmacological agents that decrease
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1561
conditions for achieving desensitization cannot be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1562
stimuli having high threat value.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1563
symbolic stimuli to real-life situations disclose
some generalization decrement. Not only is the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1564
Symbolic desensitization might primarily serve
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1565
of desired approach behavior, and appropriate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1566
the multiform procedure combining graduated
following chapter.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1567
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1568
Counterconditioning and extinction of fear fail to
transfer from amobarbital to nondrug state.
Psychopharmacologia, 1965, 8, 150-156.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1569
the curarized dog. Science, 1967,155, 201-203.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1570
Cameron, N. Personality development and
psychopathology: A dynamic approach. Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1963.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1571
psychiatric patients. Lancet, 1963, 23,411-415.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1572
239-240.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1573
Ford, C. S., & Beach, F. A. Patterns of sexual behavior.
New York: Harper 1951.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1574
nightmare by behavior- modification procedures.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1967, 72, 188-
190.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1575
Guthrie, E. R. The psychology of learning. New York:
Harper, 1935.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1576
Homans, G. C. Social behavior: Its elementary forms.
New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1961.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1577
muscle tension and relaxation. Annals of Internal
Medicine, 1939, 12, 1194-1212.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1578
methods of producing experimental extinction.
Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1953, 45, 87-
90.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1579
Lacey, J. I. Individual differences in somatic response
patterns. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1950, 43, 338-350.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1580
Lazarus, A. A. Group therapy of phobic disorders by
systematic desensitization. Journal of Abnormal
and Social Psychology, 1961, 63, 504-510.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1581
reinforcement and therapeutic instructions to
systematic desensitization therapy. Journal of
Abnormal Psychology, 1969, 74, 113-118.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1582
study of behaviour therapy in phobia patients.
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1965, 111, 561-573.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1583
dissertation, University of Missouri, 1967.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1584
comparison of three extinction procedures
following heart rate conditioning. Journal of
Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1952, 47, 674-
677.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1585
Paul, G. L., & Shannon, D. T. Treatment of anxiety
through systematic desensitization in therapy
groups. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1966, 71,
124-135.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1586
1966, 4, 7-15.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1587
130.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1588
relaxation in systematic desensitization of phobic
behavior. Unpublished doctoral dissertation,
Stanford University, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1589
1956. pp. 212-305.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1590
counterphobic treatment of an irrational fear of
snakes. Dissertation Abstracts, 1966, 27, 973B.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1591
Walton, D., & Mather, M. D. The application of learning
principles to the treatment of obsessive-
compulsive states in the acute and chronic
phases of illness. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 1963, 1, 163-174. (b)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1592
and avoidance behavior. Behaviour Research and
Therapy, 1966, 4, 25-37.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1593
8
Aversive Counterconditioning
In the preceding chapter it was shown how
threatening events can be neutralized by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1594
to control such behavior by developing
conditioned aversion to the positively reinforcing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1595
outcomes are response correlated so as to inhibit
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1596
undergarments, the designation of the procedure
is somewhat arbitrary.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1597
established to strongly preferred stimuli (Garcia,
Kimeldorf, & Koelling, 1955; Masserman, 1943;
aversions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1598
in early childhood when he occasionally wore his
sister’s dresses. After puberty he experienced
treatment.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1599
apparel was highly stimulating. It was decided,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1600
as he reported feeling nauseous, a slide was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1601
place certain limitations on their utility and
applicability.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1602
the temporal issue, it has been shown (Fromer &
reduction of discomfort.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1603
effects for which they are being administered may,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1604
methods necessitates hospitalization and imposes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1605
During conditioning trials moderately severe
two.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1606
devised a portable electric stimulation apparatus
behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1607
administered. At later sessions, when the client
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1608
administer to himself a shock from a portable
appeared.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1609
until the formerly positive stimuli alone elicit
feelings of revulsion.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1610
sessions the client became nauseated by his male
contacts.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1611
to, and dated, women possessing notable feminine
attributes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1612
employed and the durability of resultant aversions
are likely to be influenced to a considerable extent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1613
will no longer be accompanied by painful
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1614
can be relatively long lasting.
arises.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1615
The manner in which counterconditioning is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1616
used as the conditioning agent although they
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1617
aversive treatment later revert to their deviant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1618
that permit self-administration of aversive stimuli
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1619
reinforcing system that could endure long after
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1620
result in behavior that is not only refractory to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1621
the modification of specific behavior disorders.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1622
which they will be presented.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1623
homosexual practices) are not included in the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1624
(Blakemore et al., 1963), rubberized mackintoshes
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1625
The direction and extent of generalization of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1626
program, and the more similar they are to real-life
evocative stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1627
modification of alcoholism (Lemere & Voegtlin,
Sexual Deviance
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1628
fully sanctioned and positively reinforced.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1629
sexual reinforcers are striking testimony of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1630
inappropriate stimuli and responses acquire
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1631
quantities of old shoes, hats, purses, bridal veils,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1632
physically and verbally seductive while appearing
nude before him. When the boy was six years old,
bedrooms.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1633
fostered in such a blatant fashion. In many
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1634
whenever the son stroked her dress or
1953).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1635
pleasurable experiences from masturbation. The
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1636
with close physical intimacy, or from
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1637
apprehension or frustration. Secondly,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1638
discovered that cross-sex dressing resulted in an
conditioning procedures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1639
There have been no controlled studies of the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1640
at the completion of therapy, and their stability
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1641
frame by frame or electronically with photocells. It
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1642
or anxiety arousal conditioned to sexual stimuli.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1643
and brevity of the treatment further limit the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1644
treatment was studied by recording changes in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1645
1646
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 8-1. Changes in the frequency and latency of erectile responses of a transvestite to
different feminine garments as they were included serially in aversive
counterconditioning. Marks & Gelder, 1967.
was highly aroused sexually by all of the items.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1647
corresponding elimination of deviant sexual
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1648
The pattern of attitudinal change
conditioning experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1649
experiences to observed changes. The clients’
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1650
1962; Raymond, 1956; Raymond & O’Keeffe, 1965;
Miller, 1965).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1651
homosexual behavior, and in the extent to which
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1652
can impede the development of aversions by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1653
interesting thesis that in some cases deviant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1654
conditioned sexual excitement to shoes except
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1655
entirely from women’s underwear which he
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1656
control over the behavior may be achieved by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1657
that the speed of aversive conditioning was
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1658
differential conditioning techniques has been
employed for this purpose. In one such approach,
method.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1659
of an aversion-relief method, Thorpe, Schmidt,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1660
determining the degree to which the positive
interest.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1661
through masturbatory conditioning with sadistic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1662
produced a change from predominantly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1663
It should be emphasized here that conditioning
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1664
The existence of desirable modes of sexual
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1665
generally achieves favorable outcomes with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1666
properties of the fetishistic stimuli were rapidly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1667
and masturbated him. “Since then he had made a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1668
It is apparent from follow-up reports that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1669
shiny, rubber mackintosh in Hyde Park one
fine summer’s evening [p. 202].
active socially.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1670
strongly inhibited because of heterosexual
anxieties. It is therefore important to distinguish
impotence.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1671
when changes in behavior cannot be readily
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1672
by the fact that “she is now pregnant and the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1673
deviant tendencies. It will be recalled from clinical
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1674
Perturbing fantasies containing sexual, aggressive,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1675
Figure 8-2. Percentage of first-trial responses repeated on
succeeding trials as a function of punishment. Eriksen
& Kuethe, 1956.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1676
in associations occurred whether or not subjects
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1677
its implications. During the second and third
diminution of anxiety.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1678
progressively. In approximately half the cases,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1679
successfully applied the symbolic conditioning
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1680
have assumed, however, that symbolic stimuli can
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1681
1964). These favorable outcomes contrast with
those of Koenig & Masters (1965), who compared
administered.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1682
results.
Alcoholism
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1683
determinants of alcoholism.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1684
excessive drinking is a futile pursuit. Just as
maintaining self-intoxication.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1685
gratifying “oral” or “passive-dependent” needs, but
remarkably little attention has been paid to the
positive reinforcer.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1686
Greenberg & Carpenter, 1957). A comparison of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1687
persistently engage in immediately reinforcing,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1688
Masserman & Yum (1946) in a study in which cats
that had learned to perform complex
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1689
punishment-induced avoidance behavior or
unaffected.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1690
have diverse effects because individuals differ in
appropriate behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1691
rapid extinction of fear-mediated responses
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1692
than those given a placebo in performing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1693
The self-selection method has been extensively
environmental conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1694
positive reinforcing value of alcohol, as inferred
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1695
voluntary intake of alcohol before, during, and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1696
consumption are apt to be more prolonged when
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1697
reduction in aversive arousal, may partly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1698
boredom.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1699
automatically and continuously reinforced. After
of self-intoxication.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1700
internal dynamics, becomes readily evident in the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1701
particular type of predisposing underlying
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1702
consider drinking to be emulative behavior,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1703
Cultural and subgroup mores are to a large
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1704
sanctioned if consumed in either intoxicating
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1705
frustrative or aversive conditions. Therefore,
alcoholism typically results from habituation after
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1706
1957).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1707
pathologies represent essentially pseudo-
everyday experiences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1708
It is entirely possible that the stress
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1709
distressing situation, evidently factors other than
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1710
and social-reinforcement mechanisms may
drinking.
CONDITIONED-AVERSION THERAPY
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1711
alcoholism was reported by Kantorovich (1934).
Twenty alcoholics participated in 5 to 18 sessions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1712
to the treatment of alcoholism. Except for minor
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1713
array of liquors including bourbon, scotch, gin,
of an emetine-pilocarpine-ephedrine mixture.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1714
than beer or wine and therefore serves to facilitate
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1715
other therapists have paid as close attention to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1716
aversion responses. Lemere & Voegtlin (1940), for
example, report several cases in which aversion
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1717
alcoholic beverages.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1718
stimulus which would have sufficiently strong
aversion-producing properties without
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1719
with verbal induction methods under hypnosis,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1720
who are well acquainted with the client; public
records of intoxication; and various indirect
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1721
proportion of cases deriving some benefit from a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1722
detailed examination of the pattern of alcohol
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1723
failed to achieve its intended objective. To
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1724
Wallace 31 Emetine 42 4-17
(1949) months
DeMorsier 150 Apomorphine 46 8-31
& Feldmann months
(1950)
Mestrallet & 183 Apomorphine 41
Lang (1959)
Ruck Apomorphine 50 1.5 years
(1956)
Kantorovich 20 Electric 82 3 weeks-20
(1934) shock months
Blake 25 Electric 23 12 months
(1967) shock
37 Electric 48 12 months
shock with
relaxation
training
Miller 24 Verbally 83 9 months
(1959) induced
aversion
Anant 26 Verbally 96 8-15
(1967) induced months
aversion
Ashem & 15 Verbally 40 6 months
Donner induced
(1968) aversion
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1725
counterconditioning. The figures in the table
generally do not include cases whose drinking
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1726
encountered for the first time in the treatment
situation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1727
conspicuous absence of any controlled
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1728
age range, varied socioeconomic levels, and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1729
Continued association with drinking companions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1730
provide a further comparison group, every fourth
rate.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1731
treatment has an 86 percent chance of remaining
None 88 74
One 113 80
Two 57 95
Three 20 90
Four or more 7 100
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1732
gastrointestinal ulceration or hemorrhage, hernia,
hepatic cirrhosis, cardiac conditions, and coronary
DISULFIRAM REGIMEN
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1733
time experienced intensely aversive physiological
reactions when they subsequently drank even
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1734
results obtained through this method, along with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1735
of ingesting even small amounts of alcohol while
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1736
administered to the client during his first
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1737
which the relative efficacy of different modes of
experimental design.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1738
are no adequate data available for estimating
order of 10 to 15 percent.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1739
headache, unpleasant taste and body odor,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1740
disulfiram in inhibiting acetaldehyde metabolism,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1741
rating based on degree of abstinence, general
apomorphine-counterconditioning, or disulfiram
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1742
suggestive value. In view of the limited and
become available.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1743
and the client is able to drink within several days
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1744
treatment of alcoholism. Persons were given
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1745
personal resources to derive adequate
gratifications from sober behavior (Thimann,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1746
respect to a broad range of behavior. The
of chronic inebriety.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1747
assumed to be best suited for such cases, a belief
drinking behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1748
aversive experiences and avoidance. Therefore,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1749
alcoholics for whom the hospital privileges were
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1750
alcoholics who have set themselves high standards
behavioral deficits.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1751
interpersonal situations that typically provoked
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1752
behavior which will become prepotent over
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1753
made of its members, anonymity is respected,
failures and deviant tendencies are not
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1754
into the larger community.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1755
but these programs fail to reach those who, on the
alternatives.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1756
more constructive modes of behavior. It is
rehabilitation.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1757
Sanderson, & Laverty, 1964; Clancy, Vanderhoof, &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1758
principles, is better designed to instill marked
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1759
emesis (Cooper, 1963). Moreover, persons who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1760
If the major purpose of aversion experiences is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1761
1964; Matthews, 1964) under special
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1762
As noted earlier, aversion therapy has proved
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1763
removed, persons who seek to alter their sexual
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1764
form of symbolically revivified feelings of
revulsion.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1765
control rather than automatic immunity to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1766
therapy is much less effective in cases where
interactions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1767
reinforcing to predominate over anesthetic
corresponding behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1768
The major value of aversive procedures is that
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1769
Allchin, W. H. Behaviour therapy. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 1964, 110, 108.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1770
Barlow, D. H., Leitenberg, H., & Agras, W. S. The
experimental control of sexual deviation through
manipulation of the noxious scene in covert
sensitization. Journal of Abnormal Psychology,
1969, 74, 596-601.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1771
Bourne, P. G., Alford, J. A., & Bowcock, J. Z. Treatment
of Skid Row alcoholics with disulfiram. Quarterly
Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1966, 27, 42-48.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1772
Casey, A. The effect of stress on the consumption of
alcohol and reserpine. Quarterly Journal of
Studies on Alcohol, 1960, 21, 208-216.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1773
alcohol consumption in rhesus monkeys. Science,
1960, 132, 223-224.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1774
1962, 23, 94-104.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1775
Eriksen, C. W., & Kuethe, J. L. Avoidance conditioning
of verbal behavior without awareness: A
paradigm of repression. Journal of Abnormal and
Social Psychology, 1956, 53, 203-209.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1776
Health and Human Behavior, 1961, 2, 283-292.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1777
response. Journal of Comparative and
Physiological Psychology, 1964, 57, 154-155.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1778
alcoholic beverages on skin conductance and
emotional tension. I. Wine, whisky, and alcohol.
Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1957, 18,
190-204.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1779
Hogans, A. F., Moreno, C. M., & Brodie, D. A. Effects of
ethyl alcohol on EEG and avoidance behavior of
chronic electrode monkeys. American Journal of
Physiology, 1961, 201,434-436.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1780
43, 519-526.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1781
Kaplan, H. S. The effects of alcohol on fear extinction.
Dissertation Abstracts, 571-572.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1782
1959, 1,7-11.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1783
chronic alcoholism: VII. Technic. Diseases of the
Nervous System, 1942, 3, 243-247. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1784
McConaghy, N. Penile volume change to moving
pictures of male and female nudes in
heterosexual and homosexual males. Behaviour
Research and Therapy, 1967, 5, 43-48.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1785
fetishism: Clinical and psychological changes
during faradic aversion. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 1967,113,711-729.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1786
320.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1787
Association, 1963, 55, 411-415.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1788
Perloff, W. H. Hormones and homosexuality. In J.
Marmor (Ed.), Sexual inversion. New York: Basic
Books, 1965. pp. 44-69.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1789
Raymond, M., & O’Keeffe, K. A case of pin-up fetishism
treated by aversion conditioning. British Journal
of Psychiatry, 1965, 111, 579-581.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1790
Shanahan, W. M., & Hornick, E. J. Aversion treatment
of alcoholism. Hawaii Medical Journal, 1946, 6,
19-21.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1791
extinction of the conditioned eye blink in human
subjects. Psychological Review, 1966, 73, 445-458.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1792
A critique of current studies. Quarterly Journal of
Studies on Alcohol, 1957, 18, 288-301.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1793
3125 admissions over a period of ten and a half
years. Annals of Internal Medicine, 1949, 30, 580-
597.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1794
Wolpe, J. Conditioned inhibition of craving in drug
addiction: A pilot experiment. Behaviour Research
and Therapy, 1965, 2, 285-288.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1795
9
Symbolic Control of
Behavioral Changes
Both complex behaviors and even relatively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1796
detail questions regarding variables that govern
self-regulatory mechanisms.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1797
under the general term “awareness,” in the
precondition of change.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1798
Figure 9-1. Schematization of the functional relationship
between awareness and response change. Dashed lines
represent temporally contiguous events, arrows denote
causal relationships, and plus signs designate the
magnitude of response change.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1799
merely a verbal operant rather than as a factor
that controls performance. Since verbal and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1800
of behavioral change.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1801
performance gains is thus primarily a function of
reinforcement contingencies.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1802
serve as discriminative stimuli for directing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1803
discrimination learning. In these paradigms
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1804
from a rule or the rule was inferred from the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1805
activities in behavioral change processes. These
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1806
experiment reported by subjects either at periodic
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1807
fail to obtain performance gains in the absence of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1808
behavioral change it is therefore necessary to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1809
Figure 9-2. (A) Mean percent human noun responses given
by aware, unaware, and control groups in the verbal
conditioning task. (B) Mean percent of correct
responses given by subjects in the aware group prior to
and after verbalization of the reinforcement
contingency. Spielberger & DeNike, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1810
performance gains whatsoever. Of considerably
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1811
investigators who differ widely in their views
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1812
Figure 9-3. Average number of correct responses given on
blocks of words at varying distances from the point at
which the principle was first verbalized correctly.
Philbrick & Postman, 1955.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1813
adherents to cognitive explanations as probably
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1814
actually familial references is the correct response
investigators.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1815
nature of informative cues conveyed by the
interview probes. The more intensive the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1816
While this irregular pattern of relationships does
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1817
misclassified and their improved performances
awareness.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1818
phenomenon.
such measures.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1819
Because of the numerous problems associated
Kopp, 1966).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1820
subjects’ hypotheses than if self-instructional
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1821
appropriate to the situation, the occurrence and
scheduling of reinforcements, and the contingent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1822
since the addition of reinforcing consequences in
consequences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1823
The findings of Dulany are, in large part,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1824
schedules governed students’ responsiveness in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1825
under aversive contingencies. Simply exposing
Kaufman, 1969).
No schedule information
Minimal response instruction 17 17
Complete response instruction 161 161
Schedule information
Variable interval 88 43
Fixed interval 5 7
Variable ratio 250 269
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1826
It is noteworthy that among persons who have
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1827
experiments conducted with cooperative college
requirements.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1828
amount of learning can take place prior to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1829
persons’ choice behavior gradually adjusts to the
1955).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1830
awareness and “learning” are most likely to occur
process.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1831
behavior, but it is exceedingly doubtful that such
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1832
decisively by studies in which the reinforced
responses are not observable to the performer, or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1833
provide further convincing demonstrations of how
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1834
difficult to believe that planaria, goldfish, and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1835
limitations of paradigms of verbal conditioning for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1836
original level. Moreover, even in short-term
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1837
subjects to produce as many “Mm-hmms” as they
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1838
Figure 9-4. Mean percent of correct responses given during
the baseline (A), low-incentive (B), and high-incentive
(C) phases of the experiment by subjects who either
discovered the reinforcement contingency prior to or
after the incentive manipulation or remained unaware
throughout the experiment. Spielberger, Bernstein, &
Ratliff, 1966.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1839
indifferent to, or annoyed by, experimenters’
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1840
negative connotations, awareness may exert
inhibitory effects upon performance, as shown in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1841
psychotherapeutic situations. This difference may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1842
insights, no matter how valid they may be, have
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1843
the CS are measured. The studies (Bridger &
responses.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1844
differences in the locus of the emotion-producing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1845
the other hand, verbal instruction alone would not
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1846
provided by Dawson (1966), who found that the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1847
stimulus contingency, were not sufficient to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1848
contingency. Subjects in the first two groups, all of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1849
which extinction of autonomic responsiveness is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1850
Although a strong causal relationship has been
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1851
regardless of whether the CS was associated with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1852
1853
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 9-5. Mean GSR responses during acquisition and extinction for groups of subjects for whom the
CS was associated with either threat of shock alone or threat plus shock. The pseudo-conditioning
curves show the subjects’ GSR responses to control stimuli that were never paired with either
threat or shock. The latter data provide a control for the effects of general arousal and orienting
mechanisms. Bridger and Mandel, 1964.
extinction.
events.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1854
conditioning to occur, the associated stimulus
events must at least be registered in the nervous
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1855
eliminated when they gazed at mice, attentively
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1856
erroneously attributed to lack of conscious
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1857
approach emotion-neutralizing responses are
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1858
objects to which they are markedly attracted and
manner.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1859
the basis for the reinforcement. It is apparent from
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1860
produced consequences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1861
somewhat weaker reductive effects. These
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1862
smoking may be significantly reduced. Such
been performed.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1863
hand. Any interruptions from without, or intrusion
problem.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1864
If a person is to achieve greater voluntary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1865
kept in reserve for this very purpose.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1866
their control by reinforcement practices if one
adheres to the conventional paradigm in which an
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1867
certain classes of thoughts can be increased by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1868
environmental stimulus supports and the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1869
1960), to evaluate the empirical status of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1870
Although the findings were not disputed, their
methodological grounds.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1871
the relevant stimuli are below recognition level.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1872
few discrete verbal categories. Pseudo-subliminal
effects may arise from the differential accuracy of
events.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1873
incidence of accurate verbal recognition and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1874
mind, can perhaps be more plausibly and
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1875
each correlated with the eliciting stimuli, with the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1876
extent that certain factors impair the accuracy of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1877
of behavioral manifestations. It should likewise be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1878
In view of the questionable validity of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1879
framework of social influence, the degree of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1880
either directly or in derivative form. Opposing
disposal.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1881
accompany overt responses, implicit events may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1882
at the implicit level rather than merely produced
In social-learning interpretations of
repression, incompatible responses rather than
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1883
become irritated at a blameless person he is
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1884
domain. Rather, it is assumed that inhibited
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1885
existence of an unconscious mind. The former
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1886
response that the treatment is designed to alter,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1887
which apparently are sufficiently intense to
register and evoke some response in the central
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1888
Two conflicting hypotheses have been
reality-oriented controls.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1889
These alternative views cannot be evaluated
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1890
distorted, or remote symbolic representations in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1891
must play a relatively inconsequential role in
effects.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1892
certain candidates, to engage in or to abandon
smoking, or to pursue various other courses of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1893
have significant behavioral consequences, it would
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1894
changes in attitudes produced by persuasive
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1895
will be more highly correlated when attitudes are
attitudes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1896
persuasive influences are relatively unstable and
will, therefore, disappear unless the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1897
attempts to control consumer behavior through
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1898
behavior that is rendered intractable by its
Blanchard, 1969).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1899
among beliefs, feelings, and actions. A change in
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1900
an internal stimulus for psychological change then
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1901
behave favorably or unfavorably toward a given
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1902
relationship between these two sets of responses,
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1903
It should be emphasized that the foregoing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1904
have reciprocal effects? It might be argued that
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1905
behavior is determined by sets of interacting
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1906
evaluative responses that are under reinforcement
BELIEF-ORIENTED APPROACH
characteristics.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1907
Janis, 1959; Hovland, Janis, & Kelley, 1953;
Rosenberg et al., 1960) has been expressly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1908
and organization of persuasive arguments, which
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1909
of discrepancy of opinions advocated by a highly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1910
of rewarding and punishing consequences for
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1911
respond in the recommended manner by depicting
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1912
Negative appeals, on the other hand, portray
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1913
induced changes, are arranged as well. That is, if a
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1914
convictions they will eventually achieve success. A
reinforcement conditions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1915
means of immediately reinforcing the audience
AFFECT-ORIENTED APPROACH
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1916
be produced by contiguous association of objects
that are highly positive in valence with noxious
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1917
contiguously with appetizing foods (Janis, Kaye, &
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1918
opinions. These findings, however, must be
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1919
repetitive pairings with adjectives having negative
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1920
negative attributes to the tribes in accordance
pictorial presentations.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1921
emotion-arousing properties, and that alterations
in the affective domain are associated with
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1922
preferred food and enthusiastically relished a
delay period.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1923
modeled. The observed changes therefore cannot
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1924
Subjects were then given factual information
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1925
1926
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org
Figure 9-6. Attitudinal changes for subjects who received either one of the three treatment procedures or served
as untreated controls. The numeral 1 indicates subjects’ attitudes prior to the behavioral test,
and the numeral 2 shows their attitudes immediately after the test of avoidance behavior. Bandura,
Blanchard, and Ritter, 1969.
control subjects, whose evaluative reactions
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1927
The attitudinal consequences of affective
BEHAVIOR-ORIENTED APPROACH
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1928
experimental social psychology (Brehm & Cohen,
1962; Festinger, 1957), relies upon a behavior-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1929
cognitive dissonance (Festinger, 1957). Although
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1930
cognitive disequilibrium is usually created
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1931
attitude objects. Second, diverse opinions usually
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1932
arduous compulsions would, in a short time, suffer
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1933
After it was demonstrated that behavioral change
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1934
attractions in the disagreeable activity to justify to
inconsistent actions.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1935
repugnant actions for any length of time under
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1936
dissonance has been aroused by a given
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1937
reinforcement theory.” In fact, because of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1938
(Carlsmith, Collins, & Helmreich, 1966; Linder,
Rosenberg, 1965).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1939
serve as external inducements for discrepant
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1940
independent evidence that variations in reward
divergent results.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1941
perform the disagreeable task. In the procedure
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1942
and pressing” crisis, and urgent appeals to the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1943
performance of counter- attitudinal behavior can
below.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1944
inducement and are therefore compelled to
counterattitudinal performance.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1945
analogous changes in the cognitive domain may
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1946
improvisation or attitude change (Janis & King,
1954; Janis & Gilmore, 1965; Kelman, 1953;
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1947
similarly argues that the self-persuasive effects of
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1948
reason for employing rewards is to alter the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1949
and hence greater dissonance, and according to
self-persuasive behavior.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1950
agent would be inviting unnecessary trouble by
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1951
associations with minority groups furnish
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1952
attitudinal changes will endure.
MODIFICATION OF SELF-ATTITUDES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1953
example, college students who worked better in
groups than alone became more collectivistic in
abstract preferences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1954
the change agent displays empathy, noncontingent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1955
experience a great deal of self-generated distress
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1956
such persons no amount of self-exploration will
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1957
behavior is accompanied by a set of congruent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1958
explained later, even so-called internalized
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1959
discriminative functions of stimuli. Behavior is
controlled not only by its reinforcing
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1960
primary criterion is the occurrence of behavioral
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1961
previously occupied by the threadbare recliner. It
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1962
determinants.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1963
estimates of the probability of being caught and
across individuals.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1964
refractory even to severe external consequences
and outcomes.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1965
reinforcing values of most visual or auditory
solo.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1966
that it became relatively autonomous of external
reinforcements.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1967
Conversely, positive self-reinforcement may
repudiated.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1968
punishing responses. Since the person’s own self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1969
they are very much dependent on the real or
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1970
altered behavior will be adequately sustained
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1971
modification of the behavior of individuals who
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1972
possible and to expedite their release. A beneficent
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1973
that progressive adoption of more advanced
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1974
serve as the reinforcing agents. After accurate self-
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1975
evaluative, and reinforcement functions to
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1976
behavior of their associates will similarly alter
practiced direction.
of their peers.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1977
extinguishable unless given a sufficient amount of
social support. Various social groups, which differ
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1978
decisive influence on association preferences.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1979
rehabilitative programs, for example, concentrate
on producing radical changes in offenders’
substitute gratifications.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1980
teachers further reinforce, by approval and
Summary
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1981
reinforcing consequences modify behavior directly
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1982
findings, however, remains unclear because the
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1983
unless adequate incentives are provided to elicit
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1984
thought often disrupt psychological functioning, in
thought.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1985
corresponding changes in attitudes. This process
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1986
reinforcement control can be distinguished.
REFERENCES
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1987
Chicago: Rand McNally, 1968.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1988
Bandura, A., Blanchard, E. B., & Ritter, B. The relative
efficacy of desensitization and modeling
approaches for inducing behavioral, affective, and
attitudinal changes, Stanford University, 1969,
13, 173-199.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1989
reinforcement. Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 1966, 9, 557-565.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1990
Bridger, W. H., & Mandel, I. J. A comparison of GSR
fear responses produced by threat and electric
shock. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1964, 2,
31-40.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1991
covert sensitization. Psychological Record, 1966,
16, 33–41.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1992
Dabbs, J. M., Jr., & Janis, I. L. Why does eating while
reading facilitate opinion change? An
experimental inquiry. Journal of Experimental
Social Psychology, 1965,1, 133-144.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1993
awareness—a symposium of research and
interpretation. Durham, N. C.: Duke University
Press, 1962. pp. 102-129.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1994
Social Psychology, 1963, 66, 387-389.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1995
awareness: A methodological survey and
evaluation. Psychological Review, 1960, 67, 279-
300.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1996
Public Opinion Quarterly, 28, 404-417.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1997
persuasive communication. Journal of Personality,
1965, 33,370-391. (a)
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1998
New York: Wiley, 1958.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 1999
Hovland, C. I., Janis, I. L., & Kelley, H. H.
Communication and persuasion: Psychological
studies of opinion change. New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1953.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2000
conditions on the success of role playing in
modifying attitudes. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 1965,1, 17-27.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2001
Keller, L., Cole, M., Burke, C. J., & Estes, W. K. Reward
and informational values of trial outcomes in
paired-associate learning. Psychological
Monographs, 1965, 79 (12, Whole No. 605).
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2002
of awareness in verbal conditioning. Journal of
Psychology, 1963, 56, 193-202.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2003
Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1961, 62,
203-205.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2004
Psychiatry, 1967,113, 711-729.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2005
O’Connell, D. C., & Wagner, M. V. Extinction after
partial reinforcement and minimal learning as a
test of both verbal control and PRE in concept
learning. Journal of Experimental Psychology,
1967, 73, 151-153.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2006
Razran, G. Conditioning and perception. Psychological
Review, 1955, 62, 83-95.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2007
Rosenberg, M. J. Some limits of dissonance: Toward a
differentiated view of counter-attitudinal
performance. In S. Feldman (Ed.), Cognitive
consistency. New York: Academic Press, 1966. pp.
135-170.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2008
Scobie, S. R., & Kaufman, A. Intermittent punishment
of variable interval and variable ratio responding.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
1969, 12,137-147.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2009
64, 163-174.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2010
Staats, A. W., & Staats, C. K. Attitudes established by
classical conditioning. Journal of Abnormal and
Social Psychology, 1958, 57, 37-40.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2011
and on subsequent tests of “awareness.” Journal
of Psychology, 1963, 56, 203-211.
www.freepsychotherapybooks.org 2012