Fisher, W. W., Lindauer, S. E., Alterson, C. J., & Thompson, R. H. (1998).
Assessment and treatment of destructive behavior maintained by stereotypic object manipulation.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
31, 513-527.
In the current investigation, 2 participants with mental
retardation displayed property destruction and stereotypy, and
both responses involved the same materials (e.g., breaking and
tapping plastic objects). Three experiments were conducted (a) to
indirectly assess the functions of these two responses, (b) to
determine their relation to one another, and (c) to develop a
treatment to reduce the more serious behavior, property
destruction. In Experiment 1, previously destroyed materials were
either present or absent, and their presence reduced property
destruction but not stereotypy. In Experiment 2, matched toys
(ones that produced sensory stimulation similar to stereotypy)
were either present or absent, or were replaced by unmatched toys
(for 1 participant). Matched toys produced large reductions and
unmatched toys produced small reductions in property destruction
and stereotypy. In Experiment 3, attempts to pick up undestroyed
objects were either blocked or not blocked while matched toys
were continuously available. Response blocking reduced property
destruction (and attempts), prevented stereotypy, and increased
manipulation of matched toys. These results suggest that the two
aberrant responses formed a chain (e.g., breaking and then
tapping the object), which was maintained by the sensory
consequences (e.g., auditory stimulation) of the terminal
response, and that previously destroyed material or matched toys
made the initial response (property destruction) unnecessary.
DESCRIPTORS: automatic reinforcement, functional analysis,
property destruction, stereotypy