Horner, R. H., Day, H. M., & Day, J. R. (1997).
Using neutralizing routines to reduce problem behaviors.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
30, 601-614.
Establishing operations can alter problem behaviors by changing
the momentary value of reinforcers associated with those problem
behaviors. If establishing operations (EOs) precede the
presentation of discriminative stimuli (SDs) for
problem behaviors, it may be possible to introduce neutralizing
routines that both reduce the value of reinforcers associated
with problem behaviors and decrease the occurrence of problem
behaviors. The present study examined this logic with 3
adolescents with severe intellectual disabilities. Initial
functional analyses indicated that problem behaviors were
motivated by either escape or tangible items. Functional
assessment interviews identified possible establishing operations
that were associated with the occurrence of problem behavior and
indicated that these establishing operations occurred over 1 hr
before presentation of the SD for problem behaviors. We
used an alternating treatments design to examine problem
behaviors during instruction under four conditions:
EO+SD, SD only, EO only, and neither
SD nor EO. For all 3 participants, problem behaviors
occurred almost exclusively during the EO+SD condition.
A further analysis compared the EO+SD condition when
neutralizing routines were embedded between the EO and the
SD. Results from an ABAB reversal design supported the
effectiveness of neutralizing routines to reduce these problem
behaviors. Applied and theoretical implications are discussed.
DESCRIPTORS: functional assessment, neutralizing routines,
establishing operations, developmental disabilities