Browsing by Author "Frank-Crawford, Michelle"
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Item Accumulated and distributed response–reinforcer arrangements during the treatment of escape-maintained problem behavior(Wiley, 2021-08-03) Frank-Crawford, Michelle; Borrero, John; Newcomb, Eli T.; Doan, Trang; Fisher, Alyssa; Rooker, Griffin W.Contingent positive reinforcement has proven more effective in treating escape-maintained problem behavior than contingent negative reinforcement, particularly when problem behavior continues to produce escape. However, this research has overwhelmingly used distributed-reinforcement arrangements, where tasks and reinforcer access are interspersed throughout the work period. An alternative to interspersal involves allowing the individual to accumulate and then receive a larger quantity of reinforcement once work requirements are completed; this is known as an accumulated-reinforcement arrangement. The current study examined the efficacy of, and preference for positive (food) and negative (break) reinforcement contingencies delivered in accumulated and distributed arrangements in the treatment of escape-maintained problem behavior. In Experiment 1, accumulated break was preferred for 4 of 5 participants and accumulated food was preferred for 3 of 5. In Experiment 2, accumulated break was similarly effective to distributed break for 3 of 5 participants and accumulated and distributed food were equally effective for 4 participants.Item Save the Best for Last I: Young Adults Demonstrate Negative Time Preference-A Replication and Extension(APA) Castillo, Mariana; Sun, Shuyan; Frank-Crawford, Michelle; Borrero, JohnGenerally, immediate outcomes are preferred to delayed outcomes, and in economics, this phenomenon is referred to as positive time preference. If positive time preference is normative, when asked to schedule a set of outcomes, a person should typically prefer a worsening sequence (i.e., choose to start with the best outcome and end with the worst outcome). Several studies have shown that when a choice is among a sequence of outcomes, people typically exhibit negative time preference (i.e., they prefer an improving series of events). In the current studies, college students responded to hypothetical questions via an online survey. Study 1a was a replication and extension of procedures described by Loewenstein and Prelec (1991, Section II). Response patterns like those of Loewenstein and Prelec were observed in that the percentage of participants who saved the best for last decreased when the interval between activities in the sequence increased. In Study 1b, participants were surveyed about their preference for the order in which they would experience hypothetical outcomes with sequences of different sizes (e.g., three activities to sequence or eight). As array size increased, the percentage of participants who saved the best for last, or generated a perfectly improving sequence, decreased. In Study 2, 192 college students responded to questions involving categorically different outcomes (e.g., noxious stimuli, food, exercise, schoolwork, leisure) via an online survey. A smaller percentage of participants saved the best for last relative to prior studies, but the percentage was highest when sequences involved noxious stimuli or food.Item Save the best for last II: Whether one saves the best for last depends on outcome category(APA, 2022) Castillo, Mariana; Sun, Shuyan; Frank-Crawford, Michelle; Rooker, Griffin W.; Borrero, JohnUsually, people prefer immediate over delayed outcomes. As such, when arranging outcomes, 1 could assume a person would prefer to start with the best outcome and end with the worst outcome. Nevertheless, people typically exhibit negative time preference (i.e., they prefer an improving series of outcomes) when the choice involves a sequence of outcomes. The generality of this finding was assessed across types of stimuli and populations. In Study 1, we examined the correspondence between college students’ preference for the order in which they experienced sequences of categorically different outcomes when those were hypothetical versus real. There was very strong correspondence in the ranks assigned to the hypothetical and real outcomes, but more variability in the sequences generated. In Study 2, we aimed to determine preschoolers’ preference for sequences. With academic items, two of the four participants chose to save the best for last. With leisure items, none of the participants saved the best for last. Preschoolers generally interspersed more- and less-preferred activities.