Implications for practice: Resurgence and differential reinforcement of alternative responding

During the maintenance stages of differential reinforcement of alternative responding (DRA), failure to reinforce alternative responses could result in a resurgence of problem behavior. However, translational work done with arbitrary human responses suggests that teaching individuals to emit multipl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied behavior analysis 2015-12, Vol.48 (4), p.781-784
Hauptverfasser: Bloom, Sarah E., Lambert, Joseph M.
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Lambert, Joseph M.
description During the maintenance stages of differential reinforcement of alternative responding (DRA), failure to reinforce alternative responses could result in a resurgence of problem behavior. However, translational work done with arbitrary human responses suggests that teaching individuals to emit multiple alternative responses in sequential order may facilitate the resurgence of appropriate, rather than problem, behavior. This paper discusses the practical implications of serial DRA training on problem and appropriate behavior resurgence, as presented in the preceding article, “Serial Alternative Response Training As Intervention for Target Response Resurgence.” Clinical scenarios as well as implications for self‐advocacy and acceptability of behavioral interventions are considered.
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subjects Animals
Applied Behavior Analysis
Behavior
Behavior Patterns
Behavior Problems
Behavior Therapy - methods
Communication
Conditioning, Operant
differential reinforcement
Extinction
Extinction, Psychological
Humans
Mental Disorders - rehabilitation
problem behavior
Reinforcement (Psychology)
Reinforcement Schedule
resurgence
Teaching
Topography
title Implications for practice: Resurgence and differential reinforcement of alternative responding
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