Treatment of elopement following a latency‐based interview‐informed,synthesized contingency analysis |
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Authors: | Joshua Jessel Rachel Metras Ruth Whipple Hillary Kirk Lauren Solsbery |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of North Texas, Denton, TX, USA;2. Queens College, New York, NY, USA;3. Child Study Center, New York, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Using a latency measure during a functional analysis of problem behavior increases the brevity of the assessment period and decreases risks resulting from exposure to contexts intended to evoke problem behavior. In addition, latency‐based functional analyses may be especially suitable for discrete behaviors such as elopement, which require resetting the environment after each instance of the response. We evaluated a comprehensive assessment and treatment package for the elopement of two children diagnosed with autism. We observed short latencies to elopement during the test condition of the analysis and no elopement during the control condition. We then taught the participants multiple forms of functional communication responses of increasing complexity while elopement was blocked. This was followed by the thinning of reinforcement to a terminal goal, creating a treatment package that nearly eliminated elopement and was socially validated by caregivers. |
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Keywords: | autism elopement interview‐informed analysis latency synthesized‐contingency analysis |
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