William H. Ahearn, Kathy M. Clark, Rebecca P. F. MacDonald, & Bo In Chung (2007).
Assessing and treating vocal stereotypy in children with autism.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
40, 263-275.
Previous research implies that stereotypic behavior tends to be maintained by the sensory consequences
produced by engaging in the response. Few investigations, however, have focused on vocal stereotypy.
The current study examined the noncommunicative vocalizations of 4 children with an autism spectrum
disorder. First, functional analyses were conducted in an attempt to identify the function of each child’s
behavior. For each of the participants, it was found that vocal stereotypy was likely not maintained by
the social consequences. Following assessment, response interruption and redirection (RIRD) was
implemented in an ABAB design to determine whether vocal stereotypy could be successfully redirected.
RIRD involved a teacher issuing a series of vocal demands the child readily complied with during regular
academic programming. Vocal demands were presented contingent on the occurrence of vocal stereotypy
and were continuously presented until the child complied with three consecutively issued demands without
emitting vocal stereotypy. For each child, RIRD produced levels of vocal stereotypy substantially lower than
those observed in baseline. For 3 of the children, an increase in appropriate communication was also observed.
The children’s teachers were trained to implement RIRD. Brief follow-up probes and anecdotal information
implied that the treatment had a positive impact in the natural environment.
DESCRIPTORS: vocal stereotypy, automatic reinforcement, response interruption, autism