Habituation When an unconditioned stimulus is presented repeatedly over a short period of time, the strength of the respondent behavior diminishes. 5th Edition Task ListB-3 Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning. 6th Edition TCOB.3 Identify and distinguish between respondent and operant conditioning. Related Content Unconditioned response (UR) An unlearned, automatic response (reflex) that is elicited by an unconditioned stimulus.Unconditioned stimulus (US) A stimulus that elicits an automatic response without any prior learningThree-term contingency: Known as the ABCs of behavior and involves an occasion for a behavior (A/SD), the behavior itself (B), and the consequence(C) that follows that behavior. These components (i.e., the antecedent,…Respondent behavior An involuntary behavior that is part of an organism’s genetic endowment, elicited without any prior learning, when an eliciting stimulus (US) produces a behavior (UR/REFLEX).Respondent conditioning What occurs when an unconditioned stimulus (US) is paired with a previously neutral stimulus (NS), causing the neutral stimulus to become a conditioned stimulus (CS) that elicits the reflexive behavior…Phylogeny A branch of biology that deals with genetically-inherited behavior.Operant behavior A voluntary and learned behavior determined and maintained by its history of consequences and defined by its function (not its topography).Operant conditioning A process that involves an occasion for a behavior (SD), the behavior itself, and the consequence that follows; a process that determines the future of that behavior’s occurrence or nonoccurrence.Ontogeny A branch of biology that deals with learned behaviors resulting from interaction with one’s environment.Neutral stimulus (NS) A stimulus that does not elicit a respondent behavior.Consequence A stimulus change that comes after a behavior.Conditioned response/reflex (CR) An unlearned, automatic response that is elicited by a previously neutral stimulus which has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus that typically elicits the response.Conditioned stimulus (CS) A formally neutral stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus and as a result can elicit a reflexive behavior.Dana's Do's: Conditioning Us to Understand Operant and Respondent Conditioning? PTB co-founder Dana Meller explains how one word can describe two different things. Here's how to practically understand the difference between operant and respondent conditioning. BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Respondent extinction When a previously neutral stimulus that was paired with an unconditioned stimulus to become a conditioned stimulus that elicits a conditioned response is presented repeatedly without the unconditioned stimulus, and…Master your ABA Terminology ➠ Exploring Contiguity & the Importance of Timing Let's take a quick dive into the concept of contiguity, in both respondent and operant conditioning. PTB co-founder Dana Meller explains its significance in understanding behavior change processes. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.ABA Terminology Challenge ➠ Respondent-Operant Interactions PTB co-founder Dana Meller discusses the simultaneous occurrence of respondent and operant conditioning, clarifying the differences between the two and how they influence behavior. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Test your ABA Terminology ➠ Operant Conditioning that Automatically Occurs Let's clarify the concept of automaticity of reinforcement and punishment, and its distinction from automatic reinforcement. With a relatable example, PTB co-founder Dana explains how an individual's behavior can be influenced without consciously knowing the reasons behind their actions. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Test your ABA Terminology ➠ Operant vs. Respondent Extinction PTB co-founder Dana Meller explains the differences between operant and respondent extinction procedures and how these procedures reduce challenging behaviors and diminish reflex responses in behavior management and conditioning. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.ABA Terminology ➠ Stimuli Paired in Respondent Conditioning Test your ABA terminology. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Test your ABA Terminology ➠ Temporal Contiguity Explained in Detail Test your knowledge of concepts and principles with PTB co-founder Dana Meller as she discusses the term temporal contiguity, its association with operant and respondent conditioning. Here, Dana breaks down the different relationship factors that contiguity shares with operant and respondent conditioning. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Breaking Down a BCBA® Mock Exam Question: Understanding Respondent-Operant Interactions Test your behavior-change procedures skills with PTB co-founder Dana Meller as she reviews a BCBA® mock exam question that explores respondent-operant interactions, comparing and contrasting habilitation, habituation and adaptation, with an emphasis on the importance of reinforcement. The breakdown touches on operant conditioning and its role in behavior change. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.Breaking Down a BCBA® Mock Exam Question: Understanding Respondent Conditioning Test your concepts and principles skills with PTB co-founder Dana Meller as she reviews a BCBA® mock exam question about respondent conditioning, breaking down the process. Refer to BCBA® Task List (5th ed.) Section B-3: Define and provide examples of respondent and operant conditioning.