Hanley, G. P., Piazza, C. C., & Fisher, W. W. (1997).
Noncontingent presentation of attention and alternative stimuli in the treatment of attention-maintained destructive behavior.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
30, 229-237.
Previous research has demonstrated that destructive behavior may
be reduced through noncontingent presentation of attention when
attention is identified as the stimulus responsible for
behavioral maintenance. Because it may not always be possible to
deliver attention in all situations, we examined the extent to
which alternative stimuli that have been identified through a
choice assessment would substitute for attention (the functional
analysisbased reinforcer) in a noncontingent reinforcement
procedure. Prior to treatment, functional analyses demonstrated
that the destructive behavior of 2 clients with mental
retardation was maintained by adult attention. Next, a stimulus
choice assessment identified highly preferred tangible items for
the 2 clients. Finally, we compared the effectiveness of two
noncontingent reinforcement procedures: continuous noncontingent
access to attention and continuous noncontingent access to the
tangible item identified in the choice assessment. For both
clients, these noncontingent reinforcement procedures reduced
destructive behavior. The results are discussed in terms of the
clinical implications for the treatment of destructive behavior
using functional and alternative stimuli.
DESCRIPTORS: noncontingent reinforcement, extinction, satiation,
developmental disabilities, preference assessments