The three components are a stimulus, a response, and an outcome. A stimulus evokes a response from the subject being conditioned. In a Skinner box, a light can be used as a stimulus to let the animal know when a certain behavior will lead to the desired outcome. For example, if the light is on and the animal presses the lever, it will receive food. However, if the light is off and the animal presses the lever, it will not receive food. This type of stimulus is referred to as a discriminative stimulus because it must be met before a response will lead to a particular outcome. According to Michael (1980) “a reinforcement frequency may be the same in the presence as in the absence of the stimulus, but in its presence that reinforcement may be of greater quantity, better quality, shorter delay, or may require less effort to obtain than in its absence” (p.47). This suggests that a discriminative stimulus may not have to be met for an outcome, but it needs to be met for an optimal and desirable outcome. The next component of operant conditioning is the response. A particular response leads to a particular outcome. In the Skinner box, the response is pressing the lever. In some instances, like the lever in the Skinner box, it does not matter how the lever is pressed as long as it gets pressed. It does not matter if the lever is pressed by the animal’s nose, paw, tail, etc. The last component is the outcome. This is the consequence of the action and can be positive or negative depending on whether or not the behavior is wanted or not. The outcome determines whether the subject is likely to repeat the behavior or avoid the
The three components are a stimulus, a response, and an outcome. A stimulus evokes a response from the subject being conditioned. In a Skinner box, a light can be used as a stimulus to let the animal know when a certain behavior will lead to the desired outcome. For example, if the light is on and the animal presses the lever, it will receive food. However, if the light is off and the animal presses the lever, it will not receive food. This type of stimulus is referred to as a discriminative stimulus because it must be met before a response will lead to a particular outcome. According to Michael (1980) “a reinforcement frequency may be the same in the presence as in the absence of the stimulus, but in its presence that reinforcement may be of greater quantity, better quality, shorter delay, or may require less effort to obtain than in its absence” (p.47). This suggests that a discriminative stimulus may not have to be met for an outcome, but it needs to be met for an optimal and desirable outcome. The next component of operant conditioning is the response. A particular response leads to a particular outcome. In the Skinner box, the response is pressing the lever. In some instances, like the lever in the Skinner box, it does not matter how the lever is pressed as long as it gets pressed. It does not matter if the lever is pressed by the animal’s nose, paw, tail, etc. The last component is the outcome. This is the consequence of the action and can be positive or negative depending on whether or not the behavior is wanted or not. The outcome determines whether the subject is likely to repeat the behavior or avoid the