behavior modification
Counter-conditioning is a behavioral training technique that involves replacing an undesirable behavior with a more desirable one. This is typically achieved by pairing the undesirable behavior with a positive experience to change the animal's emotional response. It is commonly used in animal training to help modify negative behaviors.
desirable changes are changes which we desire. Undesirable changes are changes which we dont desire. for example:souring of milk is a undesirable change and ripening of fruits is a desirable one.
When desirable or undesirable characteristics of personality are evaluated, you are assessing individual traits, behaviors, or tendencies that impact how a person thinks, feels, and behaves. This assessment helps in understanding someone's unique qualities, strengths, and weaknesses, and how they may interact with others and navigate different situations.
Undesirable is an example.
Undesirable
desirable: blonde hair blue eyes undesirable: jews
rains are desirble in times of drought and undesirable in the times of flood
put 'un' in front of it
Undesirable, bad, unattractive, disagreeable, disgusting...
When evaluating desirable or undesirable characteristics of personality, you are typically assessing traits and behaviors that are considered socially acceptable or unacceptable in a given context. This evaluation helps to understand how an individual's personality may impact their relationships, work performance, and overall well-being. It can also provide insights into areas for personal development or intervention.
Negative reinforcement encourages behaviors to continue with the incentive of taking away something bad. Punishment encourages bad behaviors to stop through fear of consequence. Psychologists recommend using negative reinforcement over punishment because it encourages desirable behaviors instead of removing undesirable behaviors without putting a desirable alternative in its place, and because it is based on a positive hope for reward, rather than fear of consequence.
no. Its a matter of controlling what is undesirable.