Thompson, R. H., & Iwata, B. A. (2000).
Response acquisition under direct and indirect contingencies of reinforcement.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
33, 1-11.
We compared the effects of direct and indirect reinforcement
contingencies on the performance of 6 individuals with profound
developmental disabilities. Under both contingencies, completion
of identical tasks (opening one of several types of containers)
produced access to identical reinforcers. Under the direct
contingency, the reinforcer was placed inside the container to be
opened; under the indirect contingency, the therapist held the
reinforcer and delivered it to the participant upon task
completion. One participant immediately performed the task at
100% accuracy under both contingencies. Three participants showed
either more immediate or larger improvements in performance under
the direct contingency. The remaining 2 participants showed
improved performance only under the direct reinforcement
contingency. Data taken on the occurrence of "rrelevant"
behaviors under the indirect contingency (e.g., reaching for the
reinforcer instead of performing the task) provided some evidence
that these behaviors may have interfered with task performance
and that their occurrence was a function of differential stimulus
control.
DESCRIPTORS: _reinforcement, instruction, responsereinforcer
relations, stimulus control