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Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

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Page 1: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing

A Conceptual Analysis

Presented by Ira Rinn

Page 2: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Organization

Sources Description of Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing (SSP) Relevant Terms Types of Conditioning Conceptual Analysis of SSP Q and A References

Page 3: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Sources

PsycINFO“stimulus-stimulus pairing” = 11 articles (most were

inaccessible)

Google“stimulus-stimulus pairing” = 3 articles could be accessed

SundbergPresentation slides

Page 4: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Description of Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing

Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing is a process for promoting spontaneous vocalizations

The basics:– Learner engages in reinforcing activity

(observations/preference assessments)– Instructor emits a vocal stimulus (repeatedly)– Learner emits same vocal stimulus… due to its being pairing

with the reinforcing activity– Instructor makes no significant attempt to reinforce response

Page 5: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Variations of SSP

Instructor emits vocal stimulus before (and only before) the learner gains access to the established reinforcer

If providing an edible – the instructor emits the vocal stimulus before, during, and after the provision of the edible

A variable schedule of emissions (not models) are employed per time interval

Page 6: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

A few important terms…

• So how does Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing relate to Classical Conditioning?

• Classical conditioning builds associations that elicit reflexive responses

Operant conditioning builds associations that evoke learned responses (via consequences)

Reinforcer conditioning builds associations that develop the reinforcing capacity of stimuli(NS functions as PR)

WHERE DOES SSP FIT IN?

Page 7: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Classical (Respondent) Conditioning: The Reflex

Page 8: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Classical Conditioning: How to do it?

Types of Conditioning– Forward – NS precedes US– Backward – NS follows US– Simultaneous – NS and US occur/presented at once

Associations require consistent pairings

Which one works best?

Page 9: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Classical Conditioning: Building the Association

Page 10: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Classical Conditioning: Conditioning Complete

Page 11: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Are SSP and Classical Conditioning the Same?

Any Ideas? Is the learned response in SSP a reflex? Are we manipulating the stimuli that elicit the

response? Well then WHAT IS IT!?

Page 12: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Operant Conditioning: The Training

Page 13: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Operant Conditioning: The Result

Page 14: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Is SSP the same as Operant Conditioning?

Ideas? Are we developing the stimulus control of a

formerly neutral stimulus? Is the response maintained by a separate

consequence?

Page 15: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Conditioned Reinforcement: Before Conditioning…

Page 16: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Conditioned Reinforcement: During Conditioning…

Page 17: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Conditioned Reinforcement: Conditioning Complete

Page 18: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

So what about Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing!?

Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing is a way to develop a reinforcer via classical-conditioning methods (but we’re not done yet!)

SSP turns an NS into a CR through pairing procedures borrowed from classical conditioning (forward, backward, simultaneous)

So what’s the big deal?

Page 19: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

The Big Deal is…

Because when reinforcer conditioning is normally done, the NS is a stimulus that we control, not a response the learner emits freely

We condition reinforcers so that we can provide them when appropriate – here there’s no reinforcer provided…

So what is it called when a response is reinforcing in-and-of-itself? When the response and consequence are one in the same – inseparable?

Page 20: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Automatic Reinforcement

When a response produces (or simply is) its own reinforcer – we call it “automatic reinforcement”

No additional stimuli is provided by the environment

Examples? So what does that make Stimulus-Stimulus

Pairing?

Page 21: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

So that makes SSP… (drum-roll)

SSP is a conditioning procedure that attempts to make verbal responses automatically reinforcing

So why don’t we all use it? From a conceptual standpoint, its problem might be that

the association being built is with the instructor’s verbal response

There can’t be automatic reinforcement until the student emits the response

What do YOU think?

Page 22: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

Q and A

Convinced or skeptical? Would you use it?

– Why? Why not?– In what situations, with what learners?

Would parents like it? If it’s ABA-based, why is the field (at large)

reluctant to consider using (or at least studying) it?

Page 23: Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing A Conceptual Analysis Presented by Ira Rinn

References

Evaluating Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing and Direct Reinforcement in the Establishment of an Echoic Repertoire of Children Diagnosed with Autism. Barbara E. Esch, James E. Carr, and Jack Michael The Analysis of Verbal Behavior 2005, 21, 43–58

Effects of a Stimulus–Stimulus Pairing Procedure on Conditioning Vocal Sounds as Reinforcers So-Young Yoon and Gina M. BennettThe Analysis of Verbal Behavior 2000, 17, 75–88

The Effects of a Stimulus-Stimulus Pairing Procedure on the Acquisition of Conditioned Reinforcement on Observing and Manipulating Stimuli by Young Children with Autism Jennifer M. Longano and R. Douglas Greer Journal Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2006, vol. 3