ABA QuizVersión en línea Test your knowledge about Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) with this quiz! por Heather O'Brien 1 What is the main goal of ABA? a To decrease all behaviors b To increase socially significant behaviors c To maintain current behaviors d To eliminate all behaviors 2 Which of the following is a key component of ABA? a Punishment procedures b Medication administration c Data collection and analysis d Physical restraints 3 What type of reinforcement is commonly used in ABA? a Punishment b Extinction c Positive reinforcement d Negative reinforcement 4 Which of the following is NOT a common ABA technique? a Discrete trial training b Task analysis c Hypnosis d Prompting 5 What is the role of a behavior analyst in ABA? a To provide counseling services b To diagnose medical conditions c To assess, design, and implement interventions d To prescribe medications 6 What is a reinforcer in ABA? a Something that only works in group settings b Something that has no effect on behavior c Something that increases the likelihood of a behavior d Something that decreases the likelihood of a behavior 7 What is generalization in ABA? a The ability to focus on one specific skill b The ability to ignore environmental cues c The ability to learn new skills quickly d The ability to apply learned skills in different settings 8 What are the Goals of Behavior Analysis? Choose one or more answers a Description, Prediction and Control b Definition, Prediction and Command c Description, Replication and command 9 The assumption that the universe is a lawful and orderly place in which phenomena occur in relation to other events and not in a willy-nilly, accidental fashion. a Empiricism b Determinism c Parsimony d Pragmatism 10 The act of objective observation and measurement. a Determinism b Parsimony c Empiricism d Pragmatism 11 The practice of ruling out simple, logical explanations, experimentally or conceptually, before considering more complex or abstract explanations. a Parsimony b Determinism c Empiricism d Pragmatism 12 A practical approach to problems in which truth is found in the process of verification. a Determinism b Parsimony c Empiricism d Pragmatism 13 A theory that all forms of life naturally and continually evolve as a result of the interaction between function and the survival value of that function. Operant selection by consequences is the conceptual and empirical foundation of behavior analysis. a Ontogeny b Selectionism c Phylogeny 14 The history of development of an individual organism during its lifetime. a Ontogeny b Phylogeny c Selectionism 15 The history of the natural evolution of a species. Choose one or more answers a Selectionism b Pragmatism c Phylogeny 16 The philosophy of a science of behavior; there are various forms of behaviorism (methodological behaviorism and radical behaviorism). a Experimental Analysis of Behavior (EAB) b Applied Behavior Analysis c Behaviorism 17 Technology for improving socially significant behavior, focuses on humans, applied research, aligns with 7 dimensions of ABA. a Applied Behavior Analysis b Experimental Analysis of Behavior c Behaviorism 18 Any behavior change that persists across time, across settings, and across people. a Effective b Technological c Generality d Applied 19 ABA technologies should improve behavior enough that it makes socially significant differences in a person's life. a Applied b Technological c Generality d Effective 20 Clear and concise procedures so that they are replicable a Generality b Technological c Applied d Effective 21 Improves socially significant behaviors in real-world settings. a Generality b Effective c Technological d Applied 22 All ABA procedures should be derived from the basic principles of behavior analysis (reinforcement, punishment, and extinction). a Conceptually Systematic b Analytic c Behavioral d Mentalism 23 A functional relationship is demonstrated when manipulated events produce a reliable change in any measurable dimension of the targeted behavior and an experimenter can control the occurrence and non-occurrence of the target behavior. a Mentalism b Behavioral c Analytic d Mentalism 24 Observable, measurable, objective behavior a Mentalism b Behavioral c Conceptually Systematic d Philosophic Doubt 25 An approach to explaining behavior that assumes that a mental, or "inner," dimension exists that differs from a behavioral dimension and that phenomena in this dimension either directly cause or at least mediate some forms of behavior. a Philosophic Doubt b Behavioral c Mentalism d Analytic 26 A carefully controlled comparison of some measure of the phenomenon of interest (the dependent variable) used two or more different conditions in which only one factor at a time (the independent variable) differs from one condition to another. a Philosophic Doubt b Replication c Experimentation 27 (a) repeating conditions within an experiment to determine the reliability of effects and increase internal validity. (b) repeating whole experiments to determine the generality of finding of previous experiments to other subjects, settings, and/or behaviors. a Experimentation b Replication c Philosophic Doubt