| Literature DB >> 18712600 |
Dennis D Embry1, Anthony Biglan.
Abstract
This paper describes evidence-based kernels, fundamental units of behavioral influence that appear to underlie effective prevention and treatment for children, adults, and families. A kernel is a behavior-influence procedure shown through experimental analysis to affect a specific behavior and that is indivisible in the sense that removing any of its components would render it inert. Existing evidence shows that a variety of kernels can influence behavior in context, and some evidence suggests that frequent use or sufficient use of some kernels may produce longer lasting behavioral shifts. The analysis of kernels could contribute to an empirically based theory of behavioral influence, augment existing prevention or treatment efforts, facilitate the dissemination of effective prevention and treatment practices, clarify the active ingredients in existing interventions, and contribute to efficiently developing interventions that are more effective. Kernels involve one or more of the following mechanisms of behavior influence: reinforcement, altering antecedents, changing verbal relational responding, or changing physiological states directly. The paper describes 52 of these kernels, and details practical, theoretical, and research implications, including calling for a national database of kernels that influence human behavior.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18712600 PMCID: PMC2526125 DOI: 10.1007/s10567-008-0036-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev ISSN: 1096-4037
Example taxonomy of potential kernels
| Kernel example | Description | Behaviors affected | Evidence and experimental designs |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Kernels increasing frequency of behavior | |||
| Verbal praise | Person or group receives spoken (or signed) recognition for engagement in target acts, which may be descriptive or simple acknowledgements | Cooperation, social competence, academic engagement/achievement, positive parent–child interactions or marital relations, better sales; reduced disruptive or aggressive behavior; reduced DSM-IV symptoms | Leblanc et al. ( |
| Peer-to-peer written praise: “Tootle” notes, compliments books/praise notes | A pad or display of decorative notes is posted on a wall, read aloud, or placed in a photo album where peers praise behaviors | Social competence, academic achievement, work performance, violence, aggression, physical health, vandalism | Cabello and Terrell ( |
| Beat the timer or beat the buzzer | Reduced time set to complete a task, with access to reward or recognition if task successfully completed before time interval | Parent–child interactions, compliance, physical abuse, child aggression, ADHD, work completion, academic accuracy | Adams and Drabman ( |
| Mystery motivators/grab bag/prize bowl/game of life | Person draws variable prize of higher and lower values for engaging in targeted behavior | Conduct disorders, oppositional defiance, ADHD, substance abuse, work performance | DeMartini-Scully et al. ( |
| Public posting (graphing) of feedback of a targeted behavior | Results, products of activity posted for all, may be scores of individuals, teams, or display of work product for all to see | Speeding, academic achievement, conservation, donations, community participation, injury control | Parsons ( |
| Principal lottery | Tokens or symbolic rewards for positive behavior result in random rewards from status person (e.g., principal, authority figures) such as positive phone calls home | Academic achievement, disruptive behavior, aggression | Thorpe et al. ( |
| Safety or performance lottery | Tokens or reward tickets given for observed safety or performance behavior, then entered into lottery | Safety behaviors, accident reduction, improved sales or work performance | Geller et al. ( |
| Team competition | Groups compete on some task, performance, or game | Improved academic engagement/achievement, reduced disruptive behavior, increased sales, fund raising, and safety; reduced smoking; changed brain chemistry favoring attention and endurance | Beersma et al. ( |
| Contingent music | Music played or stopped in real time, based on observed behavior of the individual or group | Increased weight gain of babies, improved baby development possibly, work performance, academic achievement, attention and focus (ADHD symptoms down); reduced aggression | Allen and Bryant ( |
| Special play | Adult (caregiver or teacher) plays with the child, but lets the child lead in determining what games will be played and how | Improved stress physiology, compliance, and social competence; reduced trauma or depressive symptoms | Bratton et al. ( |
| Choral responding | Person(s) chant or sign answer to oral or visual prompt in unison; praise/correction follows | Compared to hand raising, improved academic achievement, disruptive symptoms, retention; reduced behavior problems | Godfrey et al. ( |
| Mystery shopper | Unknown individuals make “purchase” or “help request”, and target receives praise, reinforcement or corrective feedback | Reduced tobacco sales; improved customer relations; better sales, better compliance by pharmacists, better service from medical personnel or prevention personnel | Bennett et al. ( |
| Peer-to-peer tutoring | Dyad or triad take turns asking questions, give praise or points and corrective feedback | Improved academics, reduced ADHD/conduct problems, and long-term effects on school engagement decreased special education needs | Allsopp ( |
| Computer action game | Motor response to hit target or get right answer; visual/auditory feedback for correct response, with scoreboard | Increased attention and reduced ADHD like symptoms, which is associated with release of dopamine in the brain | Aase and Sagvolden ( |
| Correspondence training, “Say-Do” | Symbolic or live models typically represented with a language frame; others elicit what individual says will do and reinforcement follows | Increased rates of targeted behaviors such as academic engagement, disturbing behavior or self-care behaviors | Anderson and Merrett ( |
| Correspondence training, “Do-Say” | Symbolic or live models typically presented. Cues for behavior and reports by individual to others followed by praise/reinforcement | Increased rates of targeted behaviors such as academics, self-care or other developmental/life skill tasks | Merrett and Merrett ( |
| Kernels decreasing frequency of behavior | |||
| Time out | Using timer, remove from natural reinforcement for 1 min + 1 min for each year of age | Decreases non-compliance, argumentative behavior and mood outbursts | Fabiano et al. ( |
| Sit and watch, contingent observation or response lock out | Very brief removal from reinforcement (2 min or less), with high-density reinforcement upon reentry for desired behavior | Reduces disruptions in classroom, aggression on playground or during physical education, reduces dangerous behavior | Embry ( |
| Taxes on consumptive behaviors | Percent of purchase price of goods (cigarettes, alcohol, luxury | Increasing taxation on liquor or tobacco reduces consumption | Biglan et al. ( |
| Positive note home for inhibition | Adult sends home positive note for inhibition that results in home reward | Reduces disruptive and aggressive behavior and problems at home; increases engagement at school | Gupta et al. ( |
| Timed rewards for inhibition (DRO) | Using fixed or variable interval, person receives praise and reward for not engaging in a behavior | Reduces ADHD symptoms, conduct problems, accidental attention to negative; increases engagement in prosocial activities | Conyers et al. ( |
| Premack principle | The opportunity to engage in a high-probability behavior is made contingent engaging in a targeted behavior or on the inhibition of problematic behavior | Decreases ADHD like behavior, inattention, disruptive behavior, non-compliance | Agathon and Granjus ( |
| Response-cost (point loss) | Small symbolic reward removed or debited, non-emotionally, quickly following targeted behavior | Decreases inattention and disruption; decreases ADHD like behaviors; may if used as a part of teams in first grade decrease substance abuse over lifetime | Conyers et al. ( |
| Low emotion or “private” reprimands | Corrective feedback given without biological cues of threat or intense emotion; short rather than long reprimands are typically of more effective ones | Reduces inattention, disruptions, aggression; reduces emotional responding by adults, including attention to negative behavior | Abramowitz et al. ( |
| Stop clock | Clock triggered when students misbehave. Lower times on the clock result in access to rewards | Increased academic engagement and reduced disruptions | Cowen et al. ( |
| Law enforcement fine or citation | Fine or ticket given for relatively minor non-compliant behavior | Reduces tobacco possession, illegal water use, parking in handicap spots | Agras et al. ( |
| Over-correction or positive practice | Person repeats restorative or correct behavior many times | Reduces symptoms of developmental delay; reduces aggression or noncompliance; may reduce accidental attention to negative behavior | Carey and Bucher ( |
| Buzzer/noise training | A buzzer or noxious noise happens upon some undesired behavior | Reduces non seatbelt use, bedwetting, walking through unauthorized door or driving on shoulder of road | Ankjaer-Jensen and Sejr ( |
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| Non-verbal transition cues | Visual, kinesthetic and/or auditory cues to single shift attention or task in patterned way, with praise or occasional rewards | Reduces dawdling, increases time on task or engaged learning; gives more time for instruction | Abbott et al. ( |
| Stop lights in school settings or traffic settings | Traffic light signals when behavior is appropriate/desirable or inappropriate/undesirable in real time, and connected to a kind of occasional reinforcement | Decreases noise, off task behavior, or increases stopping in dangerous intersections | Cox et al. ( |
| Boundary cues and railings | These may be lines or other cues such as ropes or rails that signal where behavior is safe, acceptable or desired | Decreases dangerous behavior; decreases pushing and shoving; increases waiting behavior in a queue; reduces falls | Carlsson and Lundkvist ( |
| Cooperative, structured peer play | Planned activities during children playtime and involve rules, turn taking, social competencies, and cooperation with/without “soft competition” | Decreases aggression/increases social competence; affects BMI, reduces ADHD symptoms and increases academics after; reduces social rejection in M.S. | Bay-Hinitz et al. ( |
| Self-modeling | Drawn, photographic, or video model viewer/listener engaging targeted behavior, receiving rewards or recognition | Increases academic engagement; increases attention; increases recall and long term memory; improves behavior; reduces dangerous behavior; increases social competence; improved sports performance; reduced health problems | Barker and Jones ( |
| Self-monitoring | Coding target behavior with a relational frame, which is often charted or graphed for public or semi-public display, occasioning verbal praise from others | Reductions in alcohol, tobacco use; reductions in illness symptoms from diabetes; increased school achievement; changes in other social competencies or health behaviors; reductions in ADHD, Tourettes and other DSM-IV disorder; improvement in brain injured persons | Agran et al. ( |
| Paragraph shrinking | After hearing or seeing some content, person learns to “shrink” meaning to eight to ten words, full sentence; praise typically happens for good summaries | Improved reading responses and retention | Bean and Steenwyk ( |
| Errorless discrimination training | Stimuli are faded or shaped in such a way that errors are nearly non-existent | Improved reading, letter recognition and life-task discriminations; reductions in symptoms of mental retardation or brain injury | Akhtar et al. ( |
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| Adjectival noun for belonging to status group | Verbal phrase “I am/we _____” is paired with status, belonging, protection or safety | Increased rule governed behavior; increases behavior associated with the named group; decreases aggression within group; may affect physical health | Choenarom et al. ( |
| Public commitment | Individuals sign or pledge self to collective behavior | Voting, contributing money, recycling | Burgess et al. ( |
| “US” and “THEM” role framing | Individuals or groups divided into two groups, with differences framed by clothing, adornment, language, social position, etc. | Increase aggression and violence by each group toward each other | Roos ( |
| Graphic/node maps | A graphic organizer for goal-based behavior, guided by other status individuals | Increased sobriety and goal completion; increased treatment compliance | Collier et al. ( |
| MI | Oral or written questions by status individual (or on paper) around major goals of target person with clarifying questions about interfering behavior | Reduced substance abuse, increased social competence & related goals; reduced injuries or antisocial behavior; increase in healthy behaviors, increase achievement | Cohen et al. ( |
| Media associating behavior with | Media (TV, video, radio) showing behavior results in social rejection or escape from social rejection | Reduces sexually transmitted diseases; reduces alcohol, tobacco and other drug use | Beyth-Marom et al. ( |
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| Pleasant greeting with or without positive physical touch | Friendly physical and verbal gestures, on a frequent basis | Affects donations; social status an perceptions of safety or harm; affects behavior streams of aggression, hostility or politeness | Edwards and Johnston ( |
| Massage, brushing or stroking | Any method of rubbing, stroking and therapeutic touch applied to the body | Reduces aggression, arousal, cortisol, depressive symptoms, PTSD symptoms, and pain | Diego et al. ( |
| Turtle technique | Using a turtle metaphor, child holds self, verbal frame, breaths through nose, and engage in sub-verbal or verbal self-coaching, with peer or adult reinforcement | Reduces arousal and aggression against peers or adults | Heffner et al. ( |
| Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation or increased fish consumption | 1–3 g taken orally per day; or fish consumption several times per week high in omega-3 | Reduces aggression, violence, depression, bipolar disorder, post-partum depression and borderline personality disorder; early evidence for reducing symptoms of developmental disorders; and for reducing CVD and asthma | Fava ( |
| Zinc supplementation or dietary consumption | 15 mg/day eaten or supplemented | Evolving evidence finds the addition of zinc to the diet or by supplementation to increase the effectiveness of drug treatment and/or may prevent ADHD symptoms | Akhondzadeh et al. ( |
| “Rough and tumble” free play with higher status conspecific | Several times per week child or adolescent engages in rough and tumble play, causing increased arousal and self-control mediated by status adult or peer | Reduces aggression, teaches self-control, may improve status among same-sex peers; changes c-fos gene expression in lab animals; the behavior may be especially important to the development of positive behavior among boys and unique contribution of fathering | Boulton and Smith ( |
| Aerobic play or behavior | Daily or many times per week child or adult engage running or similar aerobic solitary activities, game, or food gathering behavior | Reduces ADHD symptoms, reduces depression; reduces stress hormones; may increase cognitive function; decreases PTSD | Antunes et al. ( |
| Nasal breathing | When aroused, person breaths through nose, not mouth | Reduces panic, anxiety and hostility; may improve cognitive function; changes core temp of limbic area | Backon ( |
| Progressive muscle relaxation | Person tenses and relaxes sequence of muscles combined with anxiety evoking stimulus | Reduces panic, fear, anxiety; decreases negative attributions; decreases phobic responses with paired with evoking stimuli | Larsson et al. ( |
TS, time-series; RCT, randomized control trial
Kernel utility across age groups
| Infants | Children | Teens | Adults | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verbal praise | * | * | * | * |
| Peer-to-peer written praise—“tootle” notes, compliments books/praise notes | NA | * | * | * |
| Beat the timer or beat the buzzer | * | * | * | * |
| Mystery motivators/grab bag/prize bowl/game of life | P | * | * | * |
| Public posting (graphing) of feedback of a targeted behavior | NA | * | * | * |
| Principal lottery | NA | * | * | |
| Safety or performance lottery | NA | * | * | * |
| Contingent music | * | * | * | * |
| Team competition | NA | * | * | * |
| Special play | * | * | ||
| Choral responding | * | * | P | P |
| Mystery shopper | NA | P | P | |
| Peer-to-peer tutoring | NA | * | * | * |
| Computer action game | P | * | * | * |
| Correspondence training, “Say-Do” | NA | * | * | P |
| Correspondence training, “Do-Say” | NA | * | * | P |
| Time out | * | * | ||
| Sit and watch, contingent observation, or response lock out | * | * | * | * |
| Taxation on consumptive behaviors | NA | NA | * | * |
| Positive note home for inhibition | NA | * | * | |
| Timed rewards for inhibition (DRO) | * | * | * | * |
| Premack principle | * | * | * | * |
| Response-cost (point loss) | P | * | * | * |
| Low emotion or “private” reprimands | * | * | * | * |
| Stop clock | NA | * | * | * |
| Law enforcement fine or citation | NA | NA | * | * |
| Over-correction or positive practice | * | * | * | * |
| “Buzzer/noise training” | P | * | * | |
| Non-verbal transition cues | * | * | * | * |
| Stop lights in school settings or traffic settings | NA | * | * | * |
| Boundary cues and railings | * | * | * | * |
| Cooperative, structured peer play | P | * | * | |
| Self-modeling | P | * | * | * |
| Self-monitoring | NA | * | * | * |
| Paragraph shrinking | NA | * | * | P |
| Errorless discrimination training | * | * | * | * |
| Adjectival noun for belonging to status group | P | * | * | * |
| Public commitment | NA | * | * | * |
| “US” and “THEM” role framing | P | * | * | * |
| Graphic/node maps | NA | * | * | * |
| MI | NA | P | * | * |
| Media associating behavior with “immediate” negative social outcomes | NA | P | * | * |
| Pleasant greeting with or without positive physical touch | * | * | * | * |
| Massage, brushing or stroking | * | * | * | * |
| Turtle technique | P | * | NA | NA |
| Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation or increased fish consumption | * | * | * | * |
| Zinc supplementation or dietary consumption | P | * | * | * |
| “Rough and tumble” free play/martial arts with higher status conspecific | NA | * | * | * |
| Aerobic play or behavior | P | * | * | * |
| Nasal breathing | P | * | * | * |
| Progressive muscle relaxation | NA | * | * | * |
NA, not applicable; *, experimental evidence; P, predicted utility
Applying kernel to community-level methamphetamine addiction issues
| Kernel | Strategy and procedure | Sample citations | Quality of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prize bowl (contingency management) for sobriety and recovery | Multiple contracts/grants to organizations to recruit individuals at jails, ERs, shelters plus thru existing courts, clinics, faith-based organizations w/monitoring of results across settings | Petry and Martin ( | Multiple RCT; 1 with comparisons to proven program |
| Omega-3 supplements | 2 g/day to reduce comorbid depression, bipolar disorder, aggression, plus CVD symptoms, promoted at jails, clinics, shelters, public health, and outreach workers. Policy changed to support addition to government formularies | Freeman et al. ( | Cross-national epi; lab studies; RCT with/without other meds |
| Kangaroo care for infants | Infants born to addicted moms or moved to foster care (Conde-Agudelo et al. | Ferber and Makhoul ( | Lab studies for mechanisms; case studies; randomized trials |
| Errorless compliance training for exposed children | Toddlers/preschoolers neglected or abused by drug-using parents receive errorless compliance training by bio parent, foster parent, and/or teacher; Policy implemented via court order | Ducharme ( | Empirical case studies; several multiple baselines; randomized control studies |
| Self-modeling for exposed preschool and elementary children | Exposed preschoolers and elementary children under court petition or special ed receive self-modeling videos or digitally created storybooks for social skills and behavior at home, foster care, or care settings. Academic, social skills and self-regulatory behaviors taught related to developmental delays | Clare et al. ( | Multiple single subject studies using interrupted time-series designs; meta analyses of single subject studies |
| Community-wide adult to child/youth positive praise notes | Local governments and school districts promote community-wide praise notes from adults to increased protective factor of reinforcement of social competence, which protect against substance abuse and related antisocial behaviors | Gupta et al. ( | Multiple interrupted time-series studies on individual level and school level; a few RCT with practice embedded |
| Red flag training for exposed children or teens with serious emotional disturbance | Dependency or delinquency court order or special education plan includes Red Flag procedure to reduce explosive anger and aggression among children exposed to drugs, neglect, or abuse | Ninness et al. ( | Multiple interrupted time-series designs |
| MI for at-risk youth | Juvenile justice, emergency room, and school personnel conduct motivational interviews for youth engaged in problematic behaviors; supportive policies and contracts issued | Colby et al. ( | Multiple randomized control studies |