The Immediate Effects of Being Observed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

The Immediate Effects of Being Observed

Description:

Don Rohn Nissan ... Heather Frederick, Angela Lebbon, Kristen Rost, Joe Sasson, ... Rusch et al. (1984) Dishwashers spent more time on task when ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: drjohn3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Immediate Effects of Being Observed


1
The Immediate Effects of Being Observed
  • John Austin Western Michigan University
  • Don Rohn Nissan North America, Inc.

Special thanks to Dr. James Carr, Dr. Debra
Hazel, Alicia Alvero, Heather Frederick, Angela
Lebbon, Kristen Rost, Joe Sasson, Siggi
Sigurdsson This research was supported in part
by a WMU Graduate College Research and Travel
Award.
2
Durability
  • Applied behavior analysts can change behavior
  • Getting lasting change is a different story
  • Durability, or maintenance, of behavior change is
    an important issue
  • For this talk, they are interchangeable terms

3
Maintenance
  • Typically conceptualized as
  • Continued effects first attributed to the
    treatment
  • Also
  • Generalization over time (Stokes Baer, 1977)
  • Continuation of effects once intervention is
    withdrawn (Boyce Geller, 2001)
  • Continuation of effects (Malott Suarez, 2001)

4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
The Issue
  • Not so much which conceptualization is correct
    as it is how to produce lasting change.
  • Recent review of the OBM literature, Sigurdsson
    (2004) found high positive correlations between
    certain institutionalization activities and
  • Effect size (d) between baseline and
    intervention, and
  • Effect size (d) between baseline and maintenance
    or follow-up data

9
Institutionalization Activities
  • Internal staff involvement in intervention design
  • Internal staff trained to implement any part of
    the intervention
  • Internal staff involved in formal data collection
    systems
  • Internal staff involved in formal consequence
    delivery systems
  • From Sigurdsson, 2004 based on McSween
    Matthews (2001) and Grindle, Dickinson,
    Boettcher (2000).

10
Aims
  • Examine reactivity to observation
  • What do people do when no one is looking?
  • In implementing behavioral systems, this is an
    important issue
  • Does feedback maintain behavior change in the
    absence of the observer?
  • Secondary Aim
  • What implications does this have for ABA research
    involving direct and ostensible observation?

11
Empirical Demonstrations of Reactivity
  • Work Behavior
  • Belfiore, Mace, and Browder (1989)
  • Workers produced more work units when an observer
    was present
  • Rusch et al. (1984)
  • Dishwashers spent more time on task when observer
    was present
  • Safety Behavior
  • Olson Austin (2001)
  • Bus operators responded systematically to the
    presence of a supervisor

12
Purpose
  • To determine the momentary effects of a safety
    observation by examining the safe behavior of
    participants prior to, during, and immediately
    following observation.
  • In the context of this symposium
  • To examine the durability of behavior change on a
    rather molecular scale

13
Method
  • Participants
  • 6 undergraduate psychology students
  • Setting
  • Simulated office environment
  • Observation room outfitted with a desk, desktop
    computer, adjustable chair, adjustable keyboard,
    and document holder
  • Equipment adjusted prior to each session to
    remove factors that would prevent safe
    performance
  • Participants engaged in a typing task (i.e.,
    transcription)

14
Method
  • Dependent variables
  • Neck position
  • Shoulder position
  • Back posture
  • Wrist position
  • Leg position
  • Feet flat on floor
  • Percentage of safe intervals calculated for each
    DV

15
Method
  • Measurement of Dependent Variables
  • Each 25-minute work session videotaped via hidden
    camera
  • Videotapes were scored using 20-second momentary
    sampling
  • Each DV scored as safe or unsafe
  • Data plotted in 5-minute blocks for each session
  • Mean of all pre-observation, observation, and
    post-observation blocks, across phases
  • Average safe performance for each 5-minute block

16
Method
  • Multi-element within subjects design with
    multiple baseline across behaviors
  • Information Phase
  • Participants reviewed safety handout with
    definitions of DVs prior to each session
  • Participants demonstrated each behavior to
    researcher to ensure they knew how to correctly
    perform
  • Overt Observation
  • Observer present for 5-minute observation (no
    observer during remaining 20 min)
  • Announced DVs measured
  • No Feedback
  • Feedback
  • Observer delivered feedback to participant
    following 5-min observation period

17
General Results
  • All participants demonstrated reactivity to the
    presence of the observer on at least 1 dependent
    variable
  • Feedback did not appear to maintain performance
    in post-observation intervals
  • In most cases, performance deteriorated
    immediately following observation
  • Observation generally resulted in increases in
    safety performance for several DVs
  • Data

18
Organization of Results
19
Participant A
20
Participant B
21
Participant C
22
Discussion
  • Do workers perform more safely when an observer
    is present compared to working alone?
  • These data suggest they do, when they are
    informed what is being observed
  • Does performance deteriorate in post observation
    intervals?
  • The data suggest that it doeswithin minutes

23
Discussion
  • Is performance improvement a product of
    reactivity or feedback?
  • The data suggest reactivity to be responsible for
    improvement
  • In cases where feedback improved performance, in
    was only observed when the observer was present
  • Effectiveness of feedback may have been limited
    by brevity of the intervention
  • Reactivity adds additional support to
    employee-driven initiatives
  • Train all employees to conduct observations

24
Discussion
  • Reinforcement (or other Tx) in addition to
    feedback may improve performance in
    post-observation intervals
  • To promote durability
  • Taking advantage of reactivity
  • Use the observation process to create reactivity
  • Reactivity gives observers an opportunity to
    provide reinforcement
  • The reactivity effects observed in this study
    were not short-term effects (20 sessions in some
    cases)

25
Future Research
  • We should be conducting well-constructed
    experiments to better understand this phenomenon.
  • Some of these are
  • What role is served by contingencies that are
    indiscriminable across phases (i.e.,
    generalization)? (Boyce Geller, 2001)
  • What role does involvement serve? (Boyce
    Geller, 2001)
  • What role does clear and consistent behavioral
    programming play? (Malott, 2001)
  • What role do rules play? (McSween Matthews,
    2001)

26
  • Questions?
  • john.austin_at_wmich.edu
  • Join the OBM Network online at www.obmnetwork.com
    !

Special thanks to Dr. James Carr, Dr. Debra
Hazel, Alicia Alvero, Heather Frederick, Angela
Lebbon, Kristen Rost, Joe Sasson, Siggi
Sigurdsson This research was supported in part
by a WMU Graduate College Research and Travel
Award.
27
  • Extras

28
Special Interventions
  • Two participants were exposed to special
    interventions
  • Based on poor performance on one or more DVs
  • Cant do and wont do
  • Participant D was exposed to corrective feedback
  • Participant E was allowed to escape the work
    session early if he met safety goal

29
Limitations of Overt Observation
  • Safety consultants recommend having observers
    announce when observations will occur (Krause,
    1997 McSween, 1995)
  • Disadvantage inherent to this approach is that
    the observer may not see the typical work
    practices of the employee
  • Reactive effect of observation
  • Workers may perform systematically to the
    presence or absence of the observer
  • Is this a bad thing?

30
Reactivity and Overt Observation
  • Safety data gathered from observations will not
    be an accurate representation of normal work
    practices
  • Could mask potential safety hazards that are
    discovered only after an injury occurs
  • The is what BBS is intended to prevent!

31
Implications
  • Alvero Austin (2000) suggested practical value
    of training all employees to conduct observations
  • Additional support?
  • If workers perform safely only when someone is
    watching, training all employees to conduct
    observations may maintain safe behavior because
    someone is always watching

32
Implications
  • Common criticism of BBS observations
  • People will only work safely when someone is
    watching.
  • Prior research suggests workers respond
    systematically to obvious observation
  • Do workers participating in a BBS process behave
    safely only when an observer is present?
  • How long does safe performance maintain following
    observation?
  • Is improvement in safe performance a result of
    receiving feedback or a product of reactivity to
    the observer?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com