In educational psychology, a reinforcer is the payoff that a person gets for doing the right thing. It can be specific praise for the activity completed, an activity or a thing. Probably the best is a reinforcing activity.
Primary reinforcers are innate, such as food and water, while secondary reinforcers are learned through association with primary reinforcers, such as money or praise. The primary reinforcers satisfy basic biological needs, while secondary reinforcers acquire value through conditioning and are often used in operant conditioning paradigms.
Primary reinforcers are inherently rewarding stimuli like food and water, while secondary reinforcers are learned through association with primary reinforcers or other rewards. Primary reinforcers satisfy basic biological needs, while secondary reinforcers acquire their value through conditioning and can vary among individuals and cultures.
Non-contingent reinforcement refers to reinforcers that are presented freely with no required responses. Basically whether or not the responses occur, reinforcers will be delivered; opposed to contingent reinforcement where reinforcers are only given once the desired response has occurred.
ionic and molecular
Secondary reinforcers are reinforcers that through classical conditioning or other such circumstance yield the same benefit to the individual as primary reinforcers. the benefit is that since the secondary reinforcer doesn't actually satisfy an innate drive or urge they tend to be cheaper and easier to administer than most primary reinforcers. For instance, in clicker training the sound of a click has been paired with praise or a treat, a click is a lot cheaper and a lot less time consuming to administer than praising or feeding an individual.
The combined use of primary and secondary reinforcers.
Types are too extraordinary to be basic. Types are more doable
the two basic types of diseases are viral and bacterial
Describe the basic data types in C Describe the basic data types in C
The four basic blood types are A, B, AB, and O.
when you remove someone's pants before enforcing....the law
My College level Health Textbook gives two examples of manipulative reinforcers: Manipulative reinforcers are incentives such as getting a lower rent in exchange for mowing the lawn or the promise of a better grade for doing an extra-credit project.