Fading and Behavioural Chaining
Fading and Behavioural Chaining
Fading and Behavioural Chaining
Fading is the gradual change over successive trials of an antecedent stimulus that
controls a response so that the response eventually occurs to a partially changed or
completely new antecedent stimulus.
Parents are likely to fade out their help and support when a child is learning to
walk or to ride a bicycle. A dance instructor might use less and less hand pressure
to guide a student through new dance steps. And as a teenager progresses in
drivers’ education, the driving instructor is likely to provide fewer and fewer hints
regarding traffic regulations.
Errorless discrimination training, sometimes referred to as errorless learning,
is the use of a fading procedure to establish a stimulus discrimination so that no
errors occur.
Errorless transfer of a discrimination can occur, and it has at least three advantages
over procedures involving trial and error:
o Errors consume valuable time.
o Second, if an error occurs once, it tends to occur many times, even though
it is being extinguished.
o Third, the nonreinforcement that occurs when errors are being extinguished
often produces emotional side effects such as tantrums, aggressive
behavior, and attempts to escape from the situation.
Script-fading procedures have been used to teach children with autism to initiate
interactions with others. Fading can also be used to teach tracing, copying, and drawing
shapes (e.g., circles, lines, squares, and triangles), numerals, and letters of the alphabet.
Chapter 11