9 results on '"Daniel R. Mitteer"'
Search Results
2. Reliability and validity of using structured visual‐inspection criteria to interpret latency‐based functional analysis outcomes
- Author
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Eleah Sunde, Adam M. Briggs, and Daniel R. Mitteer
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Observer Variation ,Philosophy ,Sociology and Political Science ,Data Collection ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Prior research has evaluated the reliability and validity of structured visual inspection (SVI) criteria for interpreting functional analysis (FA) outcomes (Hagopian et al., 1997; Roane et al., 2013). We adapted these criteria to meet the unique needs of interpreting latency-based FA outcomes and examined the reliability and validity of applying SVI criteria to 43 previously published latency-based FA datasets. Overall, raters agreed on SVI-determined FA outcomes (98% of functions and 95% of cases) and these outcomes corresponded well to the interpretations provided by the authors of these 43 datasets (94% of functions and 88% of cases), indicating a high degree of reliability and concurrent validity. Our findings suggest that the use of SVI criteria may (a) serve as an objective aid in the identification of behavioral function(s), (b) produce high levels of agreement among expert raters, and (c) serve as a useful resource when teaching students how to interpret latency-based FA outcomes.
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- 2022
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3. Further evaluation of treatment duration on the resurgence of destructive behavior
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Brian D. Greer, Timothy A. Shahan, Wayne W. Fisher, Daniel R. Mitteer, and Ashley M. Fuhrman
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Philosophy ,Sociology and Political Science ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Translation of promising procedures for mitigating treatment relapse has received considerable attention recently from researchers across the basic-applied continuum. One procedure that has demonstrated mixed support involves increasing the duration of treatment as a strategy for blunting resurgence. In a recent translational study, Greer et al. (2020) failed to detect a mitigation effect of increased treatment duration on the resurgence of destructive behavior. However, design limitations may have been responsible. The present study corrected these limitations by (a) employing a sequential design to decrease the possibility of multiple-treatment interference, (b) evaluating more treatment durations, (c) arranging treatments of fixed durations, and (d) conducting treatments of more extreme duration in a different clinical sample. Despite these improvements in experimental rigor and the testing of more extreme boundary conditions, the present study also failed to detect a mitigation effect of increased treatment duration. Likely explanations are discussed.
- Published
- 2022
4. Teaching behavior technicians to create publication-quality, single-case design graphs in graphpad prism 7
- Author
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Brian D. Greer, Daniel R. Mitteer, Wayne W. Fisher, and Victoria L. Cohrs
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0301 basic medicine ,050103 clinical psychology ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Direct feedback ,Single-subject design ,Video modeling ,Modelling ,03 medical and health sciences ,Philosophy ,030104 developmental biology ,Computer software ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Quality (business) ,Prism ,Psychology ,Software engineering ,business ,Applied Psychology ,Staff training ,media_common - Abstract
In this investigation, we (a) define the desirable features of publication-quality, single-case design graphs based on recommendations in the scholarly literature, (b) suggest GraphPad Prism as a suitable graphing program for creating graphs with those features, and (c) develop and validate a video-modeling tutorial designed to train behavior technicians to create such graphs. Our review identified nine commonly recommended features, and Prism facilitated the creation of graphs with those features. We evaluated the effects of a video-modeling tutorial on graphing performance in Prism using a multiple-baseline design. All four technicians showed mastery-level graphing accuracy with accompanying increases in efficiency following training, which maintained at follow-up without direct feedback from an expert behavior analyst. Social-validity measures found the posttraining graphs to be significantly better than publication quality. We discuss these findings relative to challenges of developing efficient and effective staff-training tutorials.
- Published
- 2018
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5. Further evaluation of differential exposure to establishing operations during functional communication training
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Amanda N. Zangrillo, Wayne W. Fisher, Daniel R. Mitteer, Patrick W. Romani, Ashley M. Fuhrman, and Brian D. Greer
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050103 clinical psychology ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Extinction (psychology) ,Research findings ,Differential reinforcement ,Philosophy ,Control theory ,Functional Communication ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Functional analysis (psychology) ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Recent research findings (DeRosa, Fisher, & Steege, ) suggest that minimizing exposure to the establishing operation (EO) for destructive behavior when differential reinforcement interventions like functional communication training (FCT) are introduced may produce more immediate reductions in destructive behavior and prevent or mitigate extinction bursts. We directly tested this hypothesis by introducing FCT with extinction in two conditions, one with limited exposure to the EO (limited EO) and one with more extended exposure to the EO (extended EO) using a combined reversal and multielement design. Results showed that the limited-EO condition rapidly reduced destructive behavior to low levels during every application, whereas the extended-EO condition produced an extinction burst in five of six applications. We discuss these findings in relation to the effects of EO exposure on the beneficial and untoward effects of differential reinforcement interventions.
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- 2018
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6. Toward meaningful outcomes in teaching conversation and greeting skills with individuals with autism spectrum disorder
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Daniel R. Mitteer, Kevin C. Luczynski, and Stephanie A. Hood
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Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Sociology and Political Science ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Teaching method ,education ,Life skills ,Developmental psychology ,Social Skills ,Social skills ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Conversation ,Child ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,Communication ,Teaching ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Philosophy ,Multiple baseline design ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Autism ,Female ,Corrective feedback ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
We identified greeting and conversation deficits based on a parent interview and semistructured direct assessment for one child and two adolescents with autism spectrum disorder. We taught the greeting and conversation skills using behavioral skills training and within-session corrective feedback. A multiple baseline across conversation and greeting skills demonstrated experimental control over the effects of the teaching on acquisition and generalization to novel adults. We also conducted embedded reversals to assess maintenance of the acquired skills. Teaching produced robust acquisition, generalization, maintenance, and treatment extension for 15 of the 16 targeted skills across participants. Participant and parent reports indicated high levels of social validity for the intervention and outcomes. The results support individualized assessment and intervention for improving greeting and conversation skills during unscripted interactions, which are requisite for more extended and complex social interactions.
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- 2017
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7. Comparisons of standardized and interview‐informed synthesized reinforcement contingencies relative to functional analysis
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Adam M. Briggs, Wayne W. Fisher, Brian D. Greer, Daniel R. Mitteer, and Andrew J. Sodawasser
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Male ,Problem Behavior ,050103 clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Sociology and Political Science ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,05 social sciences ,Consecutive case series ,Article ,Interviews as Topic ,Philosophy ,Child, Preschool ,Intellectual Disability ,False positive paradox ,Humans ,Female ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,Contingency ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,Functional analysis (psychology) ,Applied Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
We compared the functions of problem behavior identified by (a) a functional analysis (FA), (b) an interview-informed synthesized contingency analysis (IISCA) that was informed by the results of an open-ended interview and a structured observation, and (c) a standardized-synthesized contingency analysis (SSCA) in which we synthesized three common functions of problem behavior across 12 individuals in a controlled consecutive case series. We then compared outcomes across assessments. The FA was sufficient in identifying the variables maintaining problem behavior for 11 of the 12 participants, replicating the findings of Fisher, Greer, Romani, Zangrillo, and Owen (2016). Error type (i.e., false positives, false negatives) and error prevalence were similar across functions identified by the IISCA and the SSCA, calling into question the utility of the open-ended interview and the structured observation that informed the IISCA.
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- 2019
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8. Individual and combined effects of noncontingent reinforcement and response blocking on automatically reinforced problem behavior
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Katherine R. Lichtblau, Wayne W. Fisher, Daniel R. Mitteer, Andresa A. DeSouza, Valdeep Saini, and Brian D. Greer
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Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Sociology and Political Science ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,viruses ,Psychological intervention ,Combined intervention ,Article ,Extinction, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Pica (disorder) ,Child ,Reinforcement ,Applied Psychology ,Problem Behavior ,High rate ,Blocking (radio) ,05 social sciences ,virus diseases ,medicine.disease ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Philosophy ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Noncontingent reinforcement (NCR) and response blocking are 2 common interventions for problem behavior maintained by automatic reinforcement. We implemented NCR and blocking with 1 boy and found this combined intervention to be effective at decreasing high rates of automatically reinforced pica. With another child, we compared the effects of blocking alone to the combined intervention. With the 3rd child, we compared NCR alone and blocking alone to the combined intervention. Results showed that the combined intervention was effective at reducing automatically reinforced problem behavior while moderate to high levels of item engagement were maintained. When evaluated individually, neither NCR nor blocking was sufficient to reduce problem behavior to clinically significant levels.
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- 2016
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9. Assessment and treatment of pica and destruction of holiday decorations
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Patrick W. Romani, Brian D. Greer, Wayne W. Fisher, and Daniel R. Mitteer
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Facial expression ,Sociology and Political Science ,Punishment (psychology) ,Aggression ,Treatment outcome ,medicine.disease ,Differential reinforcement ,Developmental psychology ,Philosophy ,medicine ,Autism ,Pica (disorder) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Reinforcement ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Problem behavior exhibited by individuals with autism can be disruptive to family traditions, such as decorating for the holidays. We present data for a 6-year-old girl who engaged in automatically reinforced pica and destruction of holiday decorations. Treatment was evaluated within an ABCDCD reversal design. During baseline (Phases A and B), we observed elevated rates of problem behavior. We implemented differential reinforcement of alternative behavior in Phase C to teach a response to compete with problem behavior. Little change in toy play or problem behavior occurred. In Phase D, we added a facial screen to the differential reinforcement procedures, which resulted in increases in toy play and decreases in problem behavior. Findings are discussed in terms of how interventions for problem behavior can promote alternative behavior while they facilitate household activities and traditions.
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- 2015
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