Certified Behavior Consultant Canine- Knowledge
Assessed CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
,Certified Behavior Consultant Canine- Knowledge Assessed
CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
Operant Conditioning - Skinner - ANSWER learned by association -works with
VOLUNTARY behaviors - applying reinforcement or punishment AFTER the behavior
Creator of this method considered a "reinforcer" something that made a behavior occur
more frequently. If there was no change in the behavior, it wasn't a reinforcement.
Formula:
Discriminative Stimulus (your command)-Response-Consequence
Class Associated Learning-Pavlov-ANSWER Learned association between 2 events:1
event is neutral and 1 event elicits an unconditioned response. Works
w/INVOLUNTARY/automatic behaviors (like drooling) and placing a neutral sign (like
ringing a bell) BEFORE it.
John Watson's basic theory of behavior - ANSWER Behavior is based on responding to a
given stimulus
Learning - ANSWER a change in behavior that lasts for a long time
Baby Albert Experiment - ANSWER Dr. John Watson's Study
• Baby Albert was presented with loud crashing noises that were associated with a
white rat-become to know as fear conditioning)
• Baby Albert came to fear the rat without the noises
• Stimulus Generalization - baby Albert began to fear things similar to the rat such as
things with white hair
Thought to have proved fear was taught, not innate.
, Certified Behavior Consultant Canine- Knowledge Assessed
CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
Performance - ANSWER the doing of a behavior, doesn't mean that something was
learned
Discriminative Stimulus - ANSWER Your command
Temporary Criteria - ANSWER the beginning steps of an exercise towards performing a
command that is new to the dog
Reward Based Training - ANSWER uses positive reinforcement (rewards) and negative
punishment (removing something the dog likes - i.e. your attention)
Primary Reinforcer - ANSWER food, water, anything dog needs for survival. Food
activates parasympathetic nervous system, can calm dog, make him less fearful, &
result in training process being enjoyable
Secondary Reinforcer aka Conditioned Reinforcer - ANSWER Clicker, saying "yes",. ..
marks a behavior as rewardable and promises reward in near future. Rewards such as
tennis balls, petting, clapping, tug- dog is conditioned to like them. ALL OF THESE ARE
LEARNED THROUGH CLASSICAL CONDITIONING.
Tertiary Reinforcer - ANSWER anything that reliably predicts the chance of receiving
reinforcement - further removed than a secondary reinforcer.
reinforcement counterpoint - ANSWER Do not feed or reinforce undesired behaviors
during training
Shaping - ANSWER reinforcement of dog for successful progressive approximations of
the permanent criteria, aka final desired behavior.
Luring - ANSWER Entice the dog into the behavior by leading him into it with a treat.
Assessed CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
,Certified Behavior Consultant Canine- Knowledge Assessed
CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
Operant Conditioning - Skinner - ANSWER learned by association -works with
VOLUNTARY behaviors - applying reinforcement or punishment AFTER the behavior
Creator of this method considered a "reinforcer" something that made a behavior occur
more frequently. If there was no change in the behavior, it wasn't a reinforcement.
Formula:
Discriminative Stimulus (your command)-Response-Consequence
Class Associated Learning-Pavlov-ANSWER Learned association between 2 events:1
event is neutral and 1 event elicits an unconditioned response. Works
w/INVOLUNTARY/automatic behaviors (like drooling) and placing a neutral sign (like
ringing a bell) BEFORE it.
John Watson's basic theory of behavior - ANSWER Behavior is based on responding to a
given stimulus
Learning - ANSWER a change in behavior that lasts for a long time
Baby Albert Experiment - ANSWER Dr. John Watson's Study
• Baby Albert was presented with loud crashing noises that were associated with a
white rat-become to know as fear conditioning)
• Baby Albert came to fear the rat without the noises
• Stimulus Generalization - baby Albert began to fear things similar to the rat such as
things with white hair
Thought to have proved fear was taught, not innate.
, Certified Behavior Consultant Canine- Knowledge Assessed
CBCC-KA Verified Questions And Answers
Performance - ANSWER the doing of a behavior, doesn't mean that something was
learned
Discriminative Stimulus - ANSWER Your command
Temporary Criteria - ANSWER the beginning steps of an exercise towards performing a
command that is new to the dog
Reward Based Training - ANSWER uses positive reinforcement (rewards) and negative
punishment (removing something the dog likes - i.e. your attention)
Primary Reinforcer - ANSWER food, water, anything dog needs for survival. Food
activates parasympathetic nervous system, can calm dog, make him less fearful, &
result in training process being enjoyable
Secondary Reinforcer aka Conditioned Reinforcer - ANSWER Clicker, saying "yes",. ..
marks a behavior as rewardable and promises reward in near future. Rewards such as
tennis balls, petting, clapping, tug- dog is conditioned to like them. ALL OF THESE ARE
LEARNED THROUGH CLASSICAL CONDITIONING.
Tertiary Reinforcer - ANSWER anything that reliably predicts the chance of receiving
reinforcement - further removed than a secondary reinforcer.
reinforcement counterpoint - ANSWER Do not feed or reinforce undesired behaviors
during training
Shaping - ANSWER reinforcement of dog for successful progressive approximations of
the permanent criteria, aka final desired behavior.
Luring - ANSWER Entice the dog into the behavior by leading him into it with a treat.