Using Applied Behavior Analysis in everyday life
Addressing Behavior based on antecedents opposed to consequences.
Punishments are rampantly implemented throughout the country in addressing behaviors society deems inappropriate. Society may desire for consequences to modify behavior, but that effect doesn’t always materialize.
For instance, the United States possesses an incarceration rate among the highest in the world, along with one of the highest recidivism rates. While a complex example, it highlights punishment’s inability to be a blanket solution toward preventing future inappropriate behavior. Addressing behaviors on antecedents rather than consequences provides an alternative and often more effective approach toward modifying actions.
“Society as a whole often sees a problem and tries to create a solution without analyzing down to a behavioral level,” said Dr. Steven Sparks of Sparks Behavioral Services.
In creating solutions to problem behaviors, society can utilize methodologies from Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) rather than solely reacting to them through consequence. In his line of work, Dr. Sparks examines conditions before an inappropriate behavior occurs. This includes determining if a motivation issue persists, a skill deficiency interferes or if environmental factors influence outcomes.
“It’s the level of understanding human behavior and what gets people to do what they are doing,” Dr. Sparks said.
To focus on antecedents is to unearth how circumstances can be appropriately altered to achieve desired behaviors and outcomes that society deems reasonable.
Dr. Sparks references the everyday example of drivers speeding through pedestrian crossings (thus putting people at increased risk of danger). Traffic tickets are a long-established consequence of speeding and yet plentiful drivers maintain the hazardous habit.
Pedestrian safety research conducted by Western Michigan professor and behavior analysis expert Dr. Ron Van Houten helped develop pedestrian crossing gateway treatments for this problem. This solution installs signs on the edge of the road near crosswalks that drivers must travel between.
These signs influence drivers to naturally slow down, and when implemented has seen the baseline increase from 3 to 80 percent of drivers yielding to pedestrians. Through an antecedent approach, the inappropriate behavior of speeding is altered toward a better outcome of improving pedestrian safety.
Of course, these macro examples of addressing problem behaviors before they occur requires substantial time and effort. But these Applied Behavior Analysis tactics are also relevant on a micro level, such as a family household.
Punishment, which takes on a different meaning in ABA, is a frequently used parenting tool. In ABA, punishment refers to the addition or subtraction of something within an environment to decrease a behavior. While it can be effective, it potentially inspires unintended consequences — notably when the punisher is not actually aversive to the child.
“Things can get worse before they get better if you take this approach,” Dr. Sparks said.
An antecedent strategy can make things easier for parents by establishing proactive solutions to a child’s problem behavior. And it can even be done without eliminating what causes the inappropriate outcome.
Consider a child with a history of raiding the kitchen pantry and overindulging in unhealthy junk food. If they’re disallowed something like cookies, they aggressively and physically lash out. It’s a scenario in some households that results in punishment: the behavior receives consequences, such as cookies no longer being a pantry item, or the child goes in timeout.
Instead, if the focus remains on antecedents, perhaps it’s a scenario that becomes avoidable. In this case, the pantry’s organization can play a role in preventing the inappropriate outcome. A solution can be as simple as placing the cookies on the shelves out of reach and putting healthier alternative snacks for the child to grab during their pantry raid among the lower shelves. Perhaps the child simply opts for the more readily available snacks in lieu of the cookies.
Shifting focus to antecedents opposed to consequences in addressing behavior ultimately seeks to steer someone’s behavior into appropriate societal norms. On the micro level of a family household, it’s easier to experiment and implement. Upon the grander scale of enacting societal changes, it of course requires more effort and time but remains worthwhile — such as the work and research of Dr. Van Houten.
“It’s about addressing issues before they become issues,” Dr. Sparks said.



