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Journey to Recovery:  Behavior Modification Basics
Presented by: Dr. Dawn-Elise Snipes
Executive Director, AllCEUs
Host: Counselor Toolbox
Objectives
~ Define behavior modification
~ Explore how behavior modification can be useful in practice
~ Learn basic behavior modification terms:
~ Unconditioned stimulus and response
~ Conditioned stimulus and response
~ Discriminitive stimuli
~ Learned helplessness
~ Reinforcement
~ Punishment
~ Extinction Burst
~ Premack Principle

Why Do I Care
~ Behavior modification principles will help you understand some of the reasons people act/react the way they do
~ By understanding what rewards(causes and motivates) peopleā€™s behavior or discourages (punishes/Strains) their behavior, we can better address their issues
~ The focus on observable, measurable conditions to the exclusion of cognitive interpretation underscores the mind-body connection
How can this be useful in practice
~ Traditional (strict) behavior modification can be quite useful in simplifying stimulus/reaction
~ Integrating the cognitive interpretations (labels) can help people in identifying and addressing what is causing their ā€œdistressā€ (Behaviorists would refer to excitatory response)
~ Understanding what causes feelings can also give people a greater sense of empowerment.
Example
~ Organisms learn behavior through direct and observational reinforcement and correction
~ Puppy 1 tackles puppy 2 ļƒ  threat
~ Puppy 2 responds by tackling puppy 1 ļƒ  counter threat
~ Both puppies get a surge of adrenaline
~ The puppy that dominates receives a dopamine surge that reinforces the prior behaviors — do that again.

~ If Puppy 1 plays too rough, then puppy 2 will either become more aggressive or leave.
~ Either way, puppy 1s behavior is punished.
Example 2
~ In addition to direct and observational learning, humans learn to label certain internal experiences with feeling words (angry, scared, happy)
~ Sally goes to a pet store.
~ A puppy comes out, sits in her lap and puts is head on her leg. This contact (we know from studies) usually causes the release of dopamine and oxytocin ā€“both reward chemicals. Sally calls this ā€œhappyā€
~ If Sally had previously had a threatening experience with a dog, when she saw it, her body would likely respond by secreting adrenaline, kicking off the fight or flight reaction. Sally would label this as ā€œfearā€
Points
~ People with dysphoria or unhelpful behaviors may need to:
~ Recondition X is not actually a threat (anymore)
~ Relabel the state
~ Stressed vs. hungry vs. bored vs. tired
~ Explore the dialectics: Excitement/Fear
~ Unhookā€“ X is causing me to have the feeling thatā€¦
Basic Terms
~ Unconditioned stimulus and response
~ Something that evokes an unconditioned/automatic response in an infant and adult
~ Loud noises
~ Pain
~ Excessive cold/heat
~ Contact
Basic Terms
~ Conditioned Stimulus
~ Something that in itself has no meaning to the person (yellow light)
~ Conditioned Response
~ The personā€™s reaction to the stimulus (slow down or floor it)
~ Stimuli and responses can be traced back to survival: Fight-Flee-Forget-Repeat
Basic Terms
~ Discriminitive stimulus
~ The stimulus which triggers the reaction. (Includes vulnerabilities)
~ Going to work
~ Good day
~ Bad day
~ Learned Helplessness ā€œDamned if I do, damned if I donā€™tā€
~ A response which occurs when people have tried and failed. Giving up.

Fight or Flee
~ Stimuli that present a threat of pain or death can trigger the excitatory fight or flight response
~ A useful intervention is to identify
~ The threat
~ If it is actually a threat
~ Break down parts of the situation into controllable and uncontrollable
Conditioning
~ Mindfulness can help people identify
~ Positive stimuli ļƒ  dopamine ļƒ  ā€œhappyā€
~ Negative stimuli ļƒ  adrenaline ļƒ  fight or flee
~ Little things build up and lead to a big reaction. (Pressure cooker)
~ Stimuli that trigger a negative reaction can be reconditioned as neutral by
~ Embracing the dialectics: Find the positive (snowy day)
~ Being psychologically flexible: Not worth the energy (rainy day)
Conditioning: Repeat
~ Adding and noticing positive stimuli in the environment is vital
~ Happiness Triggers
~ Smells (pumpkin spiceā€¦lol)
~ Sights (wildlife, my kids)
~ Sounds (babbling brook)
~ Feel (crisp autumn breeze)

Putting it Together
~ How can you use discriminative stimuli to:
~ Increase a feeling of control and ā€œself-efficacyā€ (Remind them to have a can-do attitude)
~ Increase ā€œself-esteemā€ (Remind them they are lovable)
~ Decrease angry responses (Remind them to use coping or distress tolerance skills)

New Terms
~ Positive Reinforcement
~ Providing something positive in order to increase the likelihood a behavior will occur again
~ Examples
~ Touch
~ Gifts (Food, Money (Paycheck))
~ Words of Affirmation
~ Acts of Service
~ Power (Choosing activities, promotion)
~ Quality Time
~ What can be added that is rewarding AND helpful for the person
New Terms
~ Negative Reinforcement
~ Removing something negative in order to increase the likelihood a behavior will occur again
~ Examples
~ Reducing nagging and fighting
~ Dropping restitution or additional charges upon completion of counseling
~ Can leave the table once vegetables are eaten
~ What can be eliminated that would be considered rewarding AND helpful for the person

New Terms
~ Positive Punishment
~ Adding something negative to decrease the likelihood that a behavior will recur
~ Examples
~ Antabuse
~ Additional Chores
~ Additional sessions
~ Rubber band snaps
~ What can be added that would be considered unpleasant for the person

New Terms
~ Negative Punishment
~ Removing something positive to decrease the likelihood that a behavior will recur
~ Examples
~ Freedom/privileges
~ Money (Fines)
~ Relationship/Setting boundaries to stop a behavior
~ Control/power
~ What can be eliminated that would be considered desirable?

~ You cannot just eliminate a behavior. You must put something in its place.

Types of Rewards and Punishments
~ Rewards and Punishments can be:
~ Emotional (Happiness)
~ Mental (Improved decision making, cognitive clarity)
~ Physical (Appearance, health, pain, energy, sleep, relaxation)
~ Social (Acceptance, admiration, support)
~ Spiritual/Karmic
~ Financial
~ Environmental (freedom, pleasant conditions)

Apply It
~ The more rewards that can be gained the stronger the motivation to repeat the behavior

Apply It
~ Behavior 1: Social Withdrawal
~ Social withdrawal is rewarding mainly due to negative reinforcement (elimination of the unpleasant)

Apply It
~ Behavior 2: Emotional Eating
New Term
~ Behavior Strain
~ The point at which the reinforcement or punishment is no longer effective
~ Effected by:
~ Age
~ Cognitive development
~ Strength of the reinforcement or punishment
~ Smaller, more frequent rewards for completion of smaller goals:
~ Provide rapid benefits
~ Maintain momentum
New Term
~ Extinction Burst
~ A temporary increase in a behavior when rewards are absent or insufficient
~ Child in the store
~ Pigeon wanting food
~ ā€œActing Outā€
~ The behavior ceases when the demands/costs of the behavior exceed the potential reward
~ What the person is doing for a promotion
~ What the person is doing to feel better/get his way
New Term
~ Premack Principle
~ Concurrently pairing something undesirable with something desirable
~ Examples
~ Laundry folding with watching television
~ Exercise with socialization/puppy time/nature
~ Studying with peer support
~ Cleaning with music/tv/aromatherapy
~ Work with coffee
New Term
~ Shaping
~ Rewarding the successive approximations of the target behavior
~ Punishing or ignoring non-target behaviors
~ Ignore if negative attention is better than no attention
~ Solidify gains
~ Withhold reward for a higher level of target behavior
~ Goal: Brewster meet me at the door quietly and sitting
~ Target behavior 1: Not jumping
~ Target behavior 2: Sitting on command
~ Target behavior 3: Sitting when I walk in without command

Apply It
~ Shaping
~ Cutting Behavior
~ Target Behavior #1: Ice cube or ink pen
~ Target Behavior #2: Alternate self-soothing behavior
~ Stress Eating
~ Target behavior #1 Fruit on a plate + mindfulness exercise (premack)
~ Target behavior #2 Drink + mindfulness exercise
~ Target behavior #3 Mindfulness exercise

New Term
~ Chaining
~ A cascade effect leading to a behavior
~ Behaviors, stimuli, reinforcements and punishments that lead up to a positive or negative result
Apply It
~ Example 1: Car problems
~ Slept well
~ Get up on time (Monday morning)
~ Get ready for work
~ Eat breakfast
~ Start driving to work and the car breaks down
~ ā€œGet Irritatedā€
~ Call for assistance

~ Example 1a: Car problems (dysregulation)
~ Didnā€™t sleep well
~ Get up late(Monday morning)
~ Get ready for work
~ Eat breakfast and spill coffee on your shirt
~ Start driving to work and the car breaks down
~ ā€œGet Angryā€
~ Cannot think straight

Apply It
~ Example 2: Stress Eating
~ Bad day at work
~ Come home
~ Start eating
~ Feel better
~ Example 3: Panic Attack
~ Didnā€™t sleep well
~ Get up
~ Drink 2 cups of coffee
~ Get stuck in traffic driving to work
~ Panic attack

Summary
~ If you eliminate a behavior, you must replace it with at least one, preferably 3 new ones
~ People are ā€œmotivatedā€ for rewards and to avoid punishment.
~ Decisional balance exercises can help people make new behaviors rewarding and old behaviorsā€¦less rewarding
~ Reinforcers must be reinforcing to the person
Summary/In Practice
~ When a client is trying to change a behavior
~ Analyze exceptions (chaining—what was different when you did not ā€¦)
~ Behavior chains can help identify antecedents/triggers and vulnerabilities
~ Remember that every behavior is maintained by rewards (getting up, going to work, eating)
~ Eliminating a behavior means
~ Making that behavior LESS rewarding than the alternative
~ Making the new behavior MORE rewarding than the alternative