1. ENHANCING THE EFFECTS OF EXTINCTION ON ATTENTION-MAINTAINED BEHAVIOR THROUGH NONCONTINGENT DELIVERY OF ATTENTION OR STIMULI IDENTIFIED VIA A COMPETING STIMULUS ASSESSMENT
- Author
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Kris M. Keeney, Vanessa Rodriguez-Catter, Iser G. DeLeon, and Wayne W. Fisher
- Subjects
Male ,Sociology and Political Science ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Extinction, Psychological ,Play and Playthings ,Developmental psychology ,Philosophy ,Behavior disorder ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Research Article ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Recent research has shown that the noncontingent delivery of competing stimuli can effectively reduce rates of destructive behavior maintained by social-positive reinforcement, even when the contingency for destructive behavior remains intact. It may be useful, therefore, to have a systematic means for predicting which reinforcers do and do not compete successfully with the reinforcer that is maintaining destructive behavior. In the present study, we conducted a brief competing stimulus assessment in which noncontingent access to a variety of tangible stimuli (one toy per trial) was superimposed on a fixed-ratio 1 schedule of attention for destructive behavior for individuals whose behavior was found to be reinforced by attention during a functional analysis. Tangible stimuli that resulted in the lowest rates of destructive behavior and highest percentages of engagement during the competing stimulus assessment were subsequently used in a noncontingent tangible items plus extinction treatment package and were compared to noncontingent attention plus extinction and extinction alone. Results indicated that both treatments resulted in greater reductions in the target behavior than did extinction alone and suggested that the competing stimulus assessment may be helpful in predicting stimuli that can enhance the effects of extinction when noncontingent attention is unavailable. DESCRIPTORS: Attention-maintained problem behavior, competing stimuli, extinction, functional analysis, noncontingent reinforcement
- Published
- 2004
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