negative reinforcer - meaning and definition. What is negative reinforcer
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What (who) is negative reinforcer - definition

CONSEQUENCE THAT WILL STRENGTHEN AN ORGANISM'S FUTURE BEHAVIOR WHENEVER THAT BEHAVIOR IS PRECEDED BY A SPECIFIC ANTECEDENT STIMULUS
Reinforcers; Reinforcement (psychology); Reinforcement hierarchy; Positive reinforcement; Schedule of reinforcement; Continuous reinforcement; Positive reinforcer; Negative reinforcement; Reinforce; Concurrent schedules of reinforcement; Schedules of reinforcement; Superimposed schedules of reinforcement; Superimposed Schedules of Reinforcement; Conditioned reinforcer; Schedules of Reinforcement; Concurrent schedule of reinforcement; Reinforcing; Reinforcement Schedules; Reinforcer; Reinforcement schedule; Information hypothesis of conditioned reinforcement; Differential reinforcement; Variable ratio; VR schedule; Intermittent reinforcement; Reinforcing stimuli; Negative reinforcer; Negative Reinforcement; Reinforcing stimulus; Positively reinforcing; Positively reinforced; Negatively reinforced; Primary reinforcer; Secondary reinforcer; Conditioned reinforcement; Operant reinforcer; Operant reinforcement
  • A chicken riding a skateboard
  • A chart demonstrating the different response rate of the four simple schedules of reinforcement, each hatch mark designates a reinforcer being given

Negative number         
  • A visual representation of the addition of positive and negative numbers. Larger balls represent numbers with greater magnitude.
  • Negative storey numbers in an elevator.
  • The number line
REAL NUMBER THAT IS STRICTLY LESS THAN ZERO
Negative numbers; Negative and nonnegative numbers; Positive and negative numbers; Antinumber; Negative negative; Negative Negative; Negative negative number; Negative negative numbers; Negative Negative number; Negative Negative numbers; Negative Negative Number; Negative Negative Numbers; Negative negative Number; Negative negative Numbers; Directed number; History of negative numbers; Negative and non-negative numbers; Negative Number; Minus number
In mathematics, a negative number represents an opposite."Integers are the set of whole numbers and their opposites.
Negative pricing         
  • futures]] prices on the [[New York Mercantile Exchange]] in March, April, and May 2020
PRICES BELOW ZERO
Negative price; Negative prices
In economics, negative pricing can occur when demand for a product drops or supply increases to an extent that owners or suppliers are prepared to pay others to accept it, in effect setting the price to a negative number. This can happen because it costs money to transport, store, and dispose of a product even when there is little demand to buy it.
Gram-negative         
  • [[Gram-positive]] and -negative [[bacteria]] are differentiated chiefly by their [[cell wall]] structure
  • Gram-negative [[cell wall]] structure
GROUP OF BACTERIA THAT DO NOT RETAIN THE GRAM STAIN USED IN BACTERIAL DIFFERENTIATION
Gram negative; Gram negative bacterium; Gram negative bacteria; Gram-negative bacterium; Gram-negative bacterial infections; Gram-negative oxygenic photosynthetic bacteria; Gramnegative bacteria; Negibacteria; Gram-negative bacilli; Gram-negative; Gram-; Diderms; Gram-negative bacterial; Diderm bacteria
¦ adjective see Gram stain.

Wikipedia

Reinforcement

In reinforcement theory, it is argued that human behavior is a result of "contingent consequences" to human actions The publication pushes forward the idea that "you get what you reinforce" This means that behavior when given the right types of reinforcers can change employee behavior for the better and negative behavior can be weeded out.

The model of self-regulation has three main aspects of human behavior, which are self-awareness, self-reflection, and self-regulation. Reinforcements traditionally align with self-regulation. The behavior can be influenced by the consequence but behavior also needs antecedents. There are four types of reinforcement: positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, extinction, and punishment. Positive reinforcement is the application of a positive reinforcer. Negative reinforcement is the practice of removing something negative from the space of the subject as a way to encourage the antecedent behavior from that subject.

Extinction involves a behavior that requires no contingent consequence. If something (good or bad) is not reinforced, it should in theory disappear. Lastly, punishment is an imposition of aversive consequence upon undesired behavior. Punishment by removal is a common example or removing a benefit following poor performance. While reinforcement does not require an individual to consciously perceive an effect elicited by the stimulus, it still requires conscious effort to work towards a desired goal.

Rewarding stimuli, which are associated with "wanting" and "liking" (desire and pleasure, respectively) and appetitive behavior, function as positive reinforcers; the converse statement is also true: positive reinforcers provide a desirable stimulus. Reinforcement does not require an individual to consciously perceive an effect elicited by the stimulus. Thus, reinforcement occurs only if there is an observable strengthening in behavior. However, there is also negative reinforcement, which is characterized by taking away an undesirable stimulus. Changing someone's job might serve as a negative reinforcer to someone who has back problems, (e.g. changing from a laborer's job to an office position).

In most cases, the term "reinforcement" refers to an enhancement of behavior, but this term is also sometimes used to denote an enhancement of memory; for example, "post-training reinforcement" refers to the provision of a stimulus (such as food) after a learning session in an attempt to increase the retained breadth, detail, and duration of the individual memories or overall memory just formed. The memory-enhancing stimulus can also be one whose effects are directly rather than only indirectly emotional, as with the phenomenon of "flashbulb memory," in which an emotionally highly intense stimulus can incentivize memory of a set of a situation's circumstances well beyond the subset of those circumstances that caused the emotionally significant stimulus, as when people of appropriate age are able to remember where they were and what they were doing when they learned of the assassination of John F. Kennedy or September 11 terrorist attacks.

Reinforcement is an important part of operant or instrumental conditioning.