Worsdell, A. S., Iwata, B. A., Conners, J., Kahng, S., & Thompson, R. H. (2000).
Relative influences of establishing operations and reinforcement contingencies on self- injurious behavior during functional analyses.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
33, 451-461.
In the typical functional analysis in which the antecedent and
consequent events associated with problem behavior are
manipulated, the control condition involves elimination of both
the relevant establishing operation (EO) and its associated
contingency through a schedule of noncontingent reinforcement
(usually fixed-time [FT] 30 s). In some functional analyses,
however, antecedent events are manipulated in the absence of
differential consequences, and a common test condition in such
analyses also involves the delivery of reinforcement on an FT
30-s schedule. Thus, the same schedule of reinforcement (FT 30 s)
is not considered to be an EO in the former type of analysis but
is considered to be an EO in the latter. We examined the relative
influences of EOs and reinforcement contingencies on problem
behavior by exposing 6 individuals who engaged in self-injurious
behavior (SIB) to four combinations of functional analysis
conditions: EO present/contingency present, EO absent/contingency
present, EO present/contingency absent, and EO absent/contingency
absent. Results indicated that the only condition in which high
rates of SIB were observed consistently was one in which the EO
and the reinforcement contingency were both present. Implications
of these results for the design of functional analysis test and
control conditions are discussed.
DESCRIPTORS: _establishing operation, functional analysis,
self-injurious behavior