PSYC 6717 Week 1 Discussion: Operant Conditioning
Overview
Throughout your life, you have been conditioned to respond to certain stimuli in certain ways. This is known as operant conditioning. Operant conditioning is the type of learning in which the consequences of a behavior influence whether an individual will act in the same way in the future.
Emerging from the foundational work of B.F. Skinner, operant conditioning — also referred to as instrumental conditioning — is defined as a form of learning that uses positive or negative reinforcement, as well as punishment, to shape behaviors (Cooper, Heron, & Heward, 2020). Even when there was no clear formal behavior plan in place, the principles of operant conditioning have helped shape the patterns of behavior across your lifetime. In operant conditioning, you learn the relationship between your own behavior and the reinforcing or punishing consequences that follow from your environment. You may also come to recognize conditions — known as antecedents — where certain consequences are more or less likely to occur.
This week introduces you to the fundamentals of applied behavior analysis (ABA). You will reflect on how operant conditioning has affected your own life, analyze behavioral scenarios, and examine how the core concepts of antecedents, reinforcement, and punishment operate together to condition human behavior.
Photo Credit: Destina – stock.adobe.com
To Prepare
- Review the Learning Resources for this week, including Cooper, Heron, and Heward (2020), Chapters 1 and 2, which address the definition, characteristics, and basic concepts of applied behavior analysis.
- Consider how the terminology of operant conditioning relates to specific behaviors in your own life.
- Think about how your parents, teachers, or other significant figures reinforced or punished your behavior when you were growing up, and reflect on how those consequences influenced your actions over time.
- Consider how situations in your life today contribute to your behavior. Are you more or less likely to do something when a certain person is present, or when a specific environmental cue is in place?
- Review the interactive media in the Learning Resources, “Operant Conditioning Terms,” to consolidate your understanding of key vocabulary before drafting your post.
- Try to identify at least one clear instance in your life where operant conditioning — through antecedents, reinforcement, or punishment — played a direct role in shaping your behavior.
Discussion Instructions
By Day 4 of Week 1 — Initial Post
Post a description of a scenario from your own life that clearly illustrates the application of operant conditioning. In your post, you are required to:
- Describe the scenario in sufficient detail to make the behavioral dynamics clear to your colleagues.
- Explain how behavioral theory — specifically the concepts of antecedents, reinforcements, and/or punishment — was applied to condition the behavior in the scenario you described.
- Explain how the antecedent condition facilitated or inhibited the target behavior discussed. Be specific about what the antecedent was, how it functioned, and how it relates to the behavior that followed.
- Identify clearly whether the conditioning involved positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, positive punishment, negative punishment, or a combination of these consequences, and justify your identification using behavior-analytic terminology.
By Day 6 of Week 1 — Peer Responses
Read your colleagues’ postings and respond to at least two colleagues’ posts in one of the following ways:
- Expand on each colleague’s explanation of how they applied behavioral theory to their scenario, offering additional behavioral analysis, a relevant example, or a theoretical connection they may not have considered.
- Offer your perspective on whether you agree or disagree with each colleague’s explanation of how the antecedent condition facilitated or inhibited the target behavior discussed, and support your position with behavior-analytic theory and/or peer-reviewed research.
Be sure to support your posts and responses with specific references to behavior-analytic theory and research. In addition to the Learning Resources, search the Walden Library and/or the internet for peer-reviewed articles to support your posts and responses. Use proper APA 7th Edition format and citations, including for those sources found in the Learning Resources.
Return to this Discussion in a few days to read the responses to your initial posting. Note what you have learned and any insights you have gained from your colleagues’ comments.
What Your Post Should Demonstrate
Your assessor will look for evidence that you can:
- Apply operant conditioning terminology accurately to a real-life scenario, distinguishing clearly between antecedents, behaviors, and consequences (the ABC framework).
- Identify and correctly label the type of behavioral consequence at work (positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, positive punishment, negative punishment, or extinction).
- Explain, with specificity, how the antecedent condition set the occasion for the target behavior to occur or be suppressed.
- Engage meaningfully with peer-reviewed literature and course learning resources, using proper APA 7th Edition in-text citations and a corresponding reference list.
- Demonstrate genuine reflective thinking — your scenario should go beyond a surface-level description and show that you understand the underlying behavioral mechanisms at work.
Week 1 Learning Resources
- Cooper, J. O., Heron, T. E., & Heward, W. L. (2020). Applied behavior analysis (3rd ed.). Pearson. — Chapter 1: “Definition and Characteristics of Applied Behavior Analysis” (pp. 2–24); Chapter 2: “Basic Concepts and Principles” (pp. 25–46).
- Behavior Analysis Certification Board. (2018). About behavior analysis. https://www.bacb.com/about-behavior-analysis/
- Walden University, LLC. (2021). Operant conditioning terms [Interactive media]. Walden University Blackboard. https://class.waldenu.edu
Sample Answer Content — PSYC 6717 Week 1 Discussion: Operant Conditioning
Operant conditioning shapes far more of everyday behavior than most people consciously recognize, and one of the clearest examples from my own life involved studying habits formed during my undergraduate years. The antecedent in this case was the routine of sitting at a specific desk in the campus library — a cue that, over several semesters, became strongly associated with focused academic work. Whenever I studied there and received high grades afterward, the positive reinforcement of good marks strengthened the behavior of returning to that same location to study, a pattern consistent with what Cooper, Heron, and Heward (2020) describe as the selective strengthening of operant behavior through its consequences. On evenings when I attempted to study at home amid distractions, the absence of that antecedent cue meant the behavior of sustained studying was far less likely to occur, illustrating how antecedents set the occasion for behavior without directly causing it. According to Baer, Wolf, and Risley (1968), one of the defining features of applied behavior analysis is its commitment to socially significant behavior — and shaping study habits that improve academic performance fits squarely within that criterion.
Research in behavior analysis consistently demonstrates that antecedent conditions may be just as influential as consequences in maintaining behavioral patterns, particularly when stimulus control becomes well established over time. Miltenberger (2019) notes that antecedent manipulations — such as altering the physical environment to prompt desired behavior — are often more efficient than consequence-based interventions alone because they address the conditions that set the occasion for behavior before it occurs. In educational and clinical ABA settings, practitioners frequently use antecedent-based strategies, such as visual schedules or environmental restructuring, to increase the likelihood of desired behaviors without relying solely on reinforcement delivered after the fact. The three-term contingency — antecedent, behavior, consequence — remains central to how behavior analysts conceptualize, assess, and intervene on behavior across populations and settings, and developing fluency with this framework is foundational to competent practice.
References
Baer, D. M., Wolf, M. M., & Risley, T. R. (1968). Some current dimensions of applied behavior analysis. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1(1), 91–97. https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1968.1-91
Cooper, J. O., Heron, T. E., & Heward, W. L. (2020). Applied behavior analysis (3rd ed.). Pearson.
Miltenberger, R. G. (2019). Behavior modification: Principles and procedures (7th ed.). Cengage Learning. https://www.cengage.com/c/behavior-modification-7e-miltenberger/9781337553919
Skinner, B. F. (1938). The behavior of organisms: An experimental analysis. Appleton-Century-Crofts. [Foundational text — referenced in Cooper et al., 2020]
Virues-Ortega, J., & Haynes, S. N. (2021). Behavioral case formulation and intervention: A functional analytic approach. In Comprehensive handbook of psychological assessment (2nd ed., Vol. 3). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119385882
