Investigations of operant ABA renewal during differential reinforcement.

Ryan T Kimball, Brian D Greer, Kayla R Randall, Adam M Briggs
Author Information
  1. Ryan T Kimball: University of Nebraska Medical Center's Munroe-Meyer Institute.
  2. Brian D Greer: University of Nebraska Medical Center's Munroe-Meyer Institute.
  3. Kayla R Randall: University of Nebraska Medical Center's Munroe-Meyer Institute.
  4. Adam M Briggs: University of Nebraska Medical Center's Munroe-Meyer Institute.

Abstract

Operant renewal is a form of relapse in which a previously extinguished response recurs due to a change in context. We designed two experiments to examine the impact of differential reinforcement of alternative behavior on ABA renewal in a translational model of relapse with 12 children. We compared levels of renewal in two 3-phase arrangements. In one arrangement, we reinforced target responding in Context A, extinguished responding in Context B, and returned to Context A while continuing to implement extinction. In a second arrangement, an alternative response produced reinforcement in Context B and during the return to Context A. Results across the 2 experiments indicated 3 general findings. First, extinction plus differential reinforcement disrupted target behavior more consistently in Context B relative to extinction alone. Second, renewal tended to be greater and more persistent during extinction alone relative to extinction plus differential reinforcement. Third, the renewal effect appeared to depend on whether the alternative response had a history of extinction in Context A. We discuss methodological implications for the treatment of severe destructive behavior.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 HD079113/NICHD NIH HHS
  2. R01 HD083214/NICHD NIH HHS
  3. R01 HD093734/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Child
Child, Preschool
Conditioning, Operant
Extinction, Psychological
Female
Humans
Male
Psychology, Child
Reinforcement Schedule
Reinforcement, Psychology

Word Cloud

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