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Person-treatment interactions across nonaversive response-deceleration procedures for self-injury: A case study of effects and side effects

✍ Scribed by Timothy J. H. Paisey; Robert B. Whitney; Jack Moore


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
1006 KB
Volume
4
Category
Article
ISSN
1072-0847

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Three nominally nonaversive response-deceleration treatment packages, "gentle teaching," differential reinforcement of incompatible behavior plus interruption, and graduated guidance, were administered to two profoundly retarded men who exhibited topographically similar selfinjurious head-hitting maintained under contrasting contingencies identified by functional analysis. Following No Demand and Instructional Demand baseline sessions, the three intervention packages were balanced across 18, 30-minute analog training sessions and three trainers in each subject's prevocational setting, using a simple panel-pressing task as the training objective. There were significant differences between the three packages in rates of target response suppression, effects on collateral behaviors, acquisition of panel pressing, and immediate post-treatment carry-over, both within and between subjects. It is concluded that both functional analysis and within-subject treatment comparison may assist in identification of the least restrictive alternative in applied service settings, and that topographic similarity of self-injury between subjects may not necessarily indicate selection of similar treatment packages.