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T he VB-MAPP and Generative Learning Repertoires

T he VB-MAPP and Generative Learning Repertoires. Mark L. Sundberg, Ph.D., BCBA-D (www.marksundberg.com). The Importance of Language Assessment. An assessment provides the foundation for an intervention program

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T he VB-MAPP and Generative Learning Repertoires

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  1. The VB-MAPP andGenerativeLearning Repertoires Mark L. Sundberg, Ph.D., BCBA-D (www.marksundberg.com)

  2. The Importance of Language Assessment • An assessment provides the foundation for an intervention program • An assessment provides a baseline measure of a child’s existing language abilities • Necessary to obtain a direct and developmental measure of the language and social skills that a child can demonstrate (e.g., echoics, mands, tacts, intraverbals, listener behaviors) • Necessary to obtain a measure of the language, learning, and social barriers that are impeding skill acquisition (e.g., noncompliance, echolalia, rote responding) • Necessary to obtain measures of generative learning(e.g., bidirectional naming, equivalence, joint control, framing)

  3. Traditional Language Assessment • Most standardized language assessment tools for children with autism fail to provide all of this necessary information (Esch, LaLonde, & Esch, 2010; Gould, Dixon, Najdowski, Smith, & Tarbox, 2011) • Esch et al., found that 26 out of 28 assessments failed to assess a child’s mand repertoire • Also, none provided an assessment of barriers or generative learning • Skinner’s (1957) analysis of verbal behavior can provide an evidenced-based conceptual and technological foundation for language assessment and intervention

  4. The Value of Skinner’s Analysis of Language:Expressive Language • Skinner delineates and expands the traditional categories of expressive (speaker) and receptive (listener) language • Speaker behavior is expanded across the verbal operants • Echoic (motor imitation, copyingtext) • Mand • Tact • Intraverbal • Textual • Taking dictation • Interaction and interdependence of the verbal operants (multiple control)

  5. The Value of Skinner’s Analysis of Language: Receptive Language • Listener behavior is expanded to six distinct repertoires • Mediating reinforcement • Serving as an audience (SD) for a speaker • A listener takes specific action controlled by a speaker’s words • “Verbal behavior would be pointless if a listener did nothing more than reinforce the speaker for emitting it” (Skinner, 1957, p. 151) • Respondent emotional behavior • Listener discriminations (traditional receptive language) • Listener as a speaker (overt or covert) • Self-listening (covert speaker and listener behavior)

  6. The Value of Skinner’s Analysis of Language:Complex Language • Skinner’s analysis of verbal behavior also provides the conceptual foundation for the assessment of generative learning and other types of complex verbal behavior (S&HB ch. 14; the second half of VB) • Convergent and divergent multiple control • Bidirectional naming (Common BiN, Visual BiN, Intraverbal BiN) • Joint control • Autoclitic verbal behavior (e.g., intraverbal autoclitic frames) • Stimulus equivalence • Relational framing • Recombinative generalization

  7. Interlocking Speaker and Listener Behavior: A Verbal Episode • Language involves an interaction between a speaker and a listener, including when a speaker is her own listener • Skinner (1957) termed the basic unit of analysis a verbal episode • In a verbal episode, a speaker emits any type of verbal behavior (e.g., mand, tact, intraverbal), in any form (e.g., speech, sign language, eye contact) • And, in the same verbal episode, a listener (1) serves as an audience for a speaker, (2) provides reinforcement for a speaker, and (3) responds in specific ways to the speaker’s behavior • The roles of speaker and listener alternate in verbal episodes, and usually involve covert (private) speaker and listener behavior as well

  8. A Verbal EpisodeInvolving a Mand Relation Convergent Multiple Control Speaker #1 Listener #1 (self-listener) History & getting there----> Starbucks nonverbal context Listener #2 Specific reinforcement Mand response NVSD V SD MO for latte “Tall latte please” MO V SD Verbal SDs “Hi”/ Menu Self-echoic NVSD Cashier attending (audience) Conditional discrimination (if-if....then)

  9. The Listener’s Role in a Mand Relation Convergent Multiple Control Speaker #1 Speaker #1 Specific reinforcement Listener #2 & Speaker #2 CMOs Job, people in line, etc. MO Function- altering ........ Verbal SD “Tall latte” Nonverbal Behavior Go get latte VSD NV SD “Okay. Name?” Abolishing operation /GSr NV SD Nonverbal SD Audience NVSD Nonverbal Context Conditional discrimination (if-if....then)

  10. Verbal Behavior Milestones Assessment and Placement Program:The VB-MAPP • There are six components of the VB-MAPP • The VB-MAPP: Milestones Assessmentmeasures 16 domains with 170 language, learning, and social milestones, across 3 developmental levels (0-18 months, 18-30 months, 30-48 months) • The VB MAPP: Barriers Assessment examines 24 common learning and language barriers often faced by children with autism • The VB MAPP: Transition Assessmentis a summary assessment of 18 domains and can serve as a guide for planning a child’s educational needs

  11. Verbal Behavior Milestones Assessment and Placement Program:The VB-MAPP • The VB-MAPP: Supporting Skills provides a checklist of hundreds of additional skills that may not warrant milestone status, but support the development of each of the domains (e.g., mands for attention, tacts of auditory stimuli) • The VB-MAPP: Placement and IEP Goalsoffer recommendations for program development based on the child’s VB-MAPP profile, and his specific scores on the 170 milestones and the 24 Barriers • The VB-MAPP: Generative Learning Assessment (under development) provides a measure of 35 generative learning repertoires

  12. The Core Domains of the VB-MAPP • The elementary verbal operants (echoic, mand, tact, intraverbal, etc.) • The listener skills • Vocal output • Independent play • Social skills and social play • Visual perceptual skills and matching-to-sample • Grammatical and syntactical skills • Group and classroom skills • Beginning academic skills • Generative learning repertoires

  13. 30-48 months Typical development There are 3 developmental levels 18-30 months Typical development 0-18 months Typical development

  14. Reading, writing, and math are added in level 3 LRFFC, IV, group, and linguistic measures are added in levels 2 and 3 Motor imitation and echoic appear only in levels 1 and 2 Vocal play (babbling) is dropped in levels 2 and 3

  15. 4 things to look for in a VB-MAPP profile (3) Are there stronger skills that can be used to teach weaker skills? (2) Are the skills fairly in balance with each other? (1) Primary level

  16. (4) Generative Learning • Typically developing children begin to demonstrate an explosion of language as early as 18 months (e.g., Hart & Risley, 1995; Rosales-Ruiz & Baer, 1997) • New and more complex speaker and listener skills emerge without direct training or direct reinforcement • Many children with autism don’t make this verbal leap • Generative learning: Acquiring one skill that enables or accelerates the acquisition of other skills, without direct training or reinforcement (e.g., generalized imitation, echoing, reading, equivalence)

  17. Higher-Order Classes of Behavior(Catania, 2013) • “An operant class that includes within it other classes that themselves can function as operants... • ...Higher-order classes may be a source of novel behavior as in imitation of the modeled behavior that the imitator hadn’t seen before... • .....Contingencies operate differently on the higher-order class than on the classes that are its components.... • ... A higher-order class may be called a generalized class” (p. 444)

  18. Generative Learning and Behavioral Cusps (Rosales-Ruiz & Baer, 1997) • Rosales-Ruiz & Baer define a behavioral cusp as: “any behavior change that brings the organism’s behavior into contact with new contingencies that have even more far-reaching consequences” (p. 533) • “What makes a behavior change a cusp is that it exposes the individual’s repertoire to new reinforcers and punishers, new stimulus controls, new communities of maintaining or destructive contingencies... • ....When some or all of those events happen the individual’s repertoire expands... • ...and perhaps that leads to some further cusps” (p. 534)

  19. Early Generative Learningand Behavioral Cusps • A cusp represents a new level of learning for a child(e.g., a pincer grasp, walking, manding) • A cusp can facilitate subsequent learning by being a prerequisite or a component of more complex behavior • Not all cusps are equal, some are especially generative • The combination of certain cusps can have far-reaching generative effects (e.g., echoic, tact, and listener cusps can generate emergent intraverbals) • For more details on cusps see Bosch & Fuqua, 2001; Hixson, 2004; Hixson, Reynolds, Bradley-Johnson, & Johnson, 2010

  20. VB-MAPP Generative Learning Repertoires The Explosion of Language

  21. How do Novel Verbal Relations Emerge Without Direct Reinforcement? • There are four similar, but distinct, behavioral accounts of how generative (novel, emergent, derived) verbal relations occur • Equivalence (Sidman, 1994) • Relational framing (Hayes et al., 2001) • Bidirectional naming (Horne & Lowe, 1996) • Joint control (Lowenkron, 1998)

  22. Stimulus Equivalence, Common Bidirectional Naming, a Relational Frame of Coordination, and Verbal Behavior Directly taught Emergent relation Symmetry B C-BiN Mutual Entailment Tact Transitivity Listener Teach A-B Transfer of function Auditory “cat” A MTS/ Listener MTS/ Tact Combinatorial Entailment Teach A-C Listener Textual Symmetry Written “cat” C-BiN Mutual Entailment C

  23. Class Expansion and Transfer of Function Directly taught Emergent relation B D Tact Sign “cat” Listener Tact Intra- verbal Intra- verbal Listener Teach A-B Auditory “cat” MTS/ Listener MTS/ Tact A Teach A-C Listener Textual Written “cat” Intraverbal Intraverbal C

  24. Class Merger and Categorization Contextual Cue/VSD F E B D Auditory “animal” Sign “cat” Tact Auditory “cat” Written “animal” A G Written “cat” C

  25. Bidirectional Naming (BiN)(Horne & Lowe, 1996) • Common BiN (C-BiN): the acquisition of a tact relation immediately produces a corresponding listener relation, and the acquisition of a listener relation immediately produces a corresponding tact relation, without direct training or reinforcement • C-BiNinitially establishes a child’s interlocking speaker (tact) and listener discrimination (LD) repertoires • C-BiN involves the combination of five verbal cusps: echoic, self-echoic, listener, self-listener, and tact (Greer & Ross, 2008; Horne & Lowe, 1996; Miguel, 2018)

  26. Bidirectional Naming (BiN)(Horne & Lowe, 1996) • Intraverbal BiN(I-BiN): a bidirectional relation between words (e.g., training on “cat” and “animal” generates a reverse intraverbal without training-- “animal” and “cat”) • Visual-BiN (V-BiN): a bidirectional relation between visual stimuli (e.g., training on matching a written word to a picture generates the ability to match the picture to the written word) • BiNs can produce stimulus equivalence, relational frames, and other types of emergent relations (e.g., Diaz, Luoma, & Miguel, 2019; Horne & Lowe, 1996; Jennings & Miguel, 2017; Ma, Miguel, & Jennings, 2016; Perez-Gonzalez, Salamah, & Garcia-Asenjo, 2018o, )

  27. The Road to Generative Learning:VB-MAPP Level 1 Generative Cusps

  28. The Road to Generative Learning:VB-MAPP Level 1 Generative Cusps

  29. VB-MAPP Level 1: Generative Cusps • Mand 5. Emits 10 different mands without prompts (except, What do you want?) — the desired item can be present (e.g., apple, swing, car, juice) • Social 5. Spontaneously follows peers or imitates their motor behavior 2 times (e.g., follows a peer into a playhouse) • Vocal 5. Spontaneously vocalizes 15 whole words or phrases with appropriate intonation and rhythm • Move to a Milestone: Joint attention (currently in the VB-MAPP supporting skills list)

  30. VB-MAPP Level 1:Generative Cusps

  31. The Road to Generative Learning:Developing Early Behavioral Cusps • What are the language and social skills demonstrated by a typically developing 18 month old child? • “18-month-old twins Stella and Lilah hold a short meeting in a laundry basket to discuss socks” (video babies in a basket) • Speaker skills (expressive language) • Mand • Echoic • Motor imitation • Tact

  32. The Road to Generative Learning:Developing Early Behavioral Cusps • Listener skills (comprehension) • Respond nonverbally to words: Listener discriminations (“receptive language”) • Respond verbally to words (emit echoic, mand, tact, and intraverbal responses) • Visual perceptual skills • Matching, sorting, eye-hand coordination, etc. • Play • Independent play • Social play • Social interaction (speaker-listener exchanges, turn taking, sharing)

  33. VB-MAPP Level 2:Generative (G) and Developing Cusps (DC)

  34. VB-MAPP Level 2:The Explosion of Language • Basic speaker, listener, social, and perceptual repertoires become established • These basic behavioral repertoires (Staats, 1972) provide the prerequisite and component repertoires necessary to produce generative learning (Staats called it “cumulative hierarchical learning”) • The combination of cusps produces especially powerful generative effects (e.g., C-BiN, I-BiN, equivalence, relational frames, joint control, recombinative generalization, incidental learning)

  35. Skinner’s (1957) Definition of Verbal Behavior • Skinner’s definition of verbal behavior focused on the basic behavioral processes involved in speaker and listener behavior • Skinner (1957) defined VB “as behavior reinforced through the mediation of other persons” (p. 2) • Listeners are “responding in ways which have been conditioned precisely in order to reinforce the behavior of the speaker” (p. 225) • Hayes et al., (2001) argued that Skinner’s definition of VB “is so broad as to include virtually all animal operant behavior in traditional behavior analytic research” (p. 218) • Hayes et al. (2001) propose that a response is not verbal until it participates in a complete relational frame (ME, CE, T of F)

  36. The Definition of Verbal Behavior and the Beginnings of “True Language” • Around 2 years of age is the developmental period atwhich “true language” has been said to occur (e.g., Chase & Danforth, 1991;Hayes et al.,2001; Hockett, 1960; Horne & Lowe, 1996; Malott, 2003) • In terms of our language abilities, at what point do humans separate themselves from nonhumans (e.g., Washoe, Koko, Lana, Alex, Nim)? • True language may be the point at which speaker and listener cusps combine, and through multiple control produce powerful generative effects (e.g., BiN, joint control, equivalence, relational framing, recombinative generalization) • Defining language at the point of true language comes at a cost

  37. VB-MAPP Level 2:Generative (G) and Developing Cusps (DC)

  38. VB-MAPP Generative Learning Repertoires The Explosion of Language

  39. VB-MAPP Level 2Generative Learning Repertoires • Tact 9. Tacts 50 two-component verb-noun and/or noun-verb combinations, tested or from a list of known two-component tacts (e.g., washing face, Joe swinging, baby sleeping) • Listener 9. Follows 50 two-component noun-verb and/or verb-noun instructions (e.g., Show me the baby sleeping. Push the swing.) • Linguistics 9. Emits functional prosody (i.e., rhythm, stress, intonation) on 5 occasions in one day (e.g., puts emphasis or stress on certain words such as, It’s MINE!) • Mand 10. Emits 10 new mands without specific mand training (e.g., spontaneously says Where kitty go?)

  40. VB-MAPP Level 2 Generative Learning Repertoires • Tact 10. Tacts a total of 200 nouns and/or verbs (or other parts of speech), tested or from an accumulated list of known tacts • Listener 10. Selects the correct item in a book, picture scene, or natural environment when named for 250 items, tested or from an accumulated list of known words • VP/MTS 10. Matches non-identical objects (3D) to pictures (2D) and/or vice versa, in a messy array of 10 containing 3 similar stimuli, for 25 items • Play 10. Assembles toys that have multiple parts for 5 different sets of materials (e.g., Mr. Potato Head, Little People sets, Cooties bugs, Kid K’ Nex)

  41. VB-MAPP Level 2 Generative Learning Repertoires • Social 10. Spontaneously mands to peers to participate in games, social play, etc., 2 times (e.g., Come on you guys. Let’s dig a hole.) • Echoic 10. Scores at least 90 on the EESA subtest (at least 10 from Groups 4 and 5) • Motor Imitation 10. Imitates (or attempts to with approximations) any novel motor action modeled by an adult with and without objects (i.e., a “generalized imitative repertoire”)

  42. VB-MAPP Level 2 Generative Learning Repertoires • LRFFC 10. Spontaneously tacts the item on 50% of the LRFFC trials (e.g., says dog given the verbal statement, Find an animal, and a visual array containing a picture of a dog)

  43. The Generative Effects of AchievingVB-MAPPMilestone LRFFC 10 • The tact brings the necessary elements of an intraverbal relation into the reinforced LRFFC trial, and a new IV relation gets reinforced along with the listener selection behavior • Tacting in LRFFC brings the speaker and listener repertoires together • “Variables Contributing to the Emergence of Intraverbal Responses after Listener Training” (Conine, Vollmer, & DelaRosa, 2019) • The goal of their study was to determine whether tacts emitted during listener training predict emergent intraverbals • Target intraverbals were probed (e.g., What flies? What swims?), then LRFFC training was provided, followed by another intraverbal probe, then tact training, and a final intraverbal probe

  44. How Does an Intraverbal Relation Emerge From Tact and Listener Training? • The observed emergent intraverbal behavior is a function of 5 types of multiple control (behavioral cusps) that interact with each other and affect behavior simultaneously • 1) Auditory conditional discrimination • 2) Divergent control: verbal SD evokes speaking, listening, & scanning • 3) Joint control: Tact/ IV evokes “dog” which evokes selection behavior followed by reinforcement • 4) C-BiN emergent tact-listener relations • 5) I-BiN: emergent reverse intraverbal relations

  45. VB-MAPP Level 2 Generative Learning Repertoires • Intraverbal 10. Answers 25 different who or where questions (e.g., Who is your friend? Where is your pillow?) • Group 10. Sits in a small group for 10 minutes, attends to the teacher or material for 50% of the period, and responds to 5 of a teacher’s SDs

  46. VB-MAPP Level 3:Generative Cusps (G)

  47. VB-MAPP Level 3 Generative Cusps • Mand 11. Spontaneously mands for different verbal information using a WH question word 5 times (e.g., What’s your name? Where do I go?) • Tact 11. Tacts the color, shape, and function of 5 objects (15 trials) when each object and question is presented in a mixed order (e.g., What color is the refrigerator? What shape is the valentine? What do you do with the ball?) (This is part tact and part intraverbal.) • Intraverbal 11. Spontaneously emits 20 intraverbal comments (can be part mand) (e.g., Dad says, I’m going to the car, and the child spontaneously says, I want to go for a ride!)

  48. VB-MAPP Level 3 Generative Cusps • Mand 12. Politely mands to stop an undesirable activity, or remove any aversive MO under 5 different circumstances (e.g., Please stop pushing me. No thank you. Excuse me, can you move?) • VP/MTS 12. Demonstrates generalized non-identical matching in a messy array of 10 with 3 similar stimuli, for 25 items (i.e., matches new items on the first trial) • Listener 13. Selects items from an array of similar stimuli based on 4 pairs of relative adjectives (e.g., big-little, long-short) and demonstrates actions based on 4 pairs of relative adverbs (e.g., quiet-loud, fast-slow)

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