Nancy A. Neef, Julie Marckel, Summer Ferreri, Sunhwa Jung, Lindsay Nist, & Nancy Armstrong (2004).
Effects of modeling versus instructions on sensitivity to reinforcement schedules.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
37, 267-281.
This study examined the effects of modeling versus instructions on the choices of 3 typically
developing children and 3 children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) whose
academic responding showed insensitivity to reinforcement schedules. During baseline, students
chose between successively presented pairs of mathematics problems associated with different
variable-interval schedules of reinforcement. After responding proved insensitive to the
schedules, sessions were preceded by either instructions or modeling, counterbalanced across
students in a multiple baseline design across subjects. During the instruction condition, students
were told how to distribute responding to earn the most reinforcers. During the modeling
condition, students observed the experimenter performing the task while describing her
distribution of responding to obtain the most reinforcers. Once responding approximated obtained
reinforcement under either condition, the schedules of reinforcement were changed, and neither
instruction nor modeling was provided. Both instruction and modeling interventions quickly
produced patterns of response allocation that approximated obtained rates of reinforcement, but
responding established with modeling was more sensitive to subsequent changes in the
reinforcement schedules than responding established with instructions. Results were similar for
students with and without ADHD.
DESCRIPTORS: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, concurrent schedules, history effects, instructions, matching, modeling, verbal behavior