Effects of Presession Pairing on the Challenging Behavior and Academic Responding of Children with Autism |
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Authors: | Amanda N. Kelly Judah B. Axe Ronald F. Allen Russell W. Maguire |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Behavior Analysis, Simmons College, Boston, MA, USA;2. Keiki Educational Consultants, Inc., Honolulu County, HI, USA;3. Department of Education, Simmons College, Boston, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | Presession pairing is an antecedent‐based procedure in which an instructor engages with preferred items with a child for a few minutes before an instructional session. Although this procedure has been described in manualized treatment guidelines for working with children with autism, there are currently no direct investigations of whether this manipulation has a beneficial impact on target responding or the child's social interactions. Functional analyses with three children with autism showed escape or attention and escape as reinforcers for their challenging behavior. Preference assessments identified highly and moderately preferred stimuli. In the context of a multiple baseline across participants design, the participants exhibited fewer challenging behaviors when instructional sessions were preceded by presession pairing than when they were not. Academic responding showed modest increases. Subsequently, in the presence of presession pairing with a novel task, the participants emitted no challenging behavior and similar or higher levels of accurate academic responding. One participant was available for a maintenance session without presession pairing 5 months later and showed near‐zero levels of challenging behavior and comparable levels of accurate academic responding. The implications of the findings and future directions are discussed. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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