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Oral overcorrection: side effects and extended applications.
Authors:L A Doke  L H Epstein
Affiliation:Moccasin Bend Psychiatric Hospital USA;Auburn University USA
Abstract:Experiment 1: In a specialized daycare program the use of oral overcorrection (contingent toothbrushing with an oral antiseptic) to suppress one child's thumbsucking at Language Time was found to suppress the behavior of another child who was not treated but who witnessed the target child's treatment. Experiment 2: The main effects of oral overcorrection were replicated. Contingent overcorrection threats (warnings), used independently, were then shown to suppress thumbsucking behavior that had returned to its baseline level. These effects were maintained one month after the threats were discontinued, but they did not generalize to other activity periods, particularly Nap Time. Experiment 3: Contingent threats were found to suppress the persistent nap-time thumbsucking of the child from Expt 2. Increments in certain other (nonoral) inappropriate behaviors were correlated with the suppression of thumbsucking. Threats to use oral overcorrection contingent upon nonoral misbehaviors at Nap Time were not effective. However, the actual use of oral overcorrection for these categories of nonoral misbehavior served to suppress these behaviors. Experimental controls combined treatment reversal and multiple baseline single-subject designs.
Keywords:Reprints may be obtained from L. Doke   Moccasin Bend Psychiatric Hospital   Moccasin Bend Road   Chattanooga   Tenn. 37405   or from L. Epstein   Department of Psychology   Aubrun University   Auburn   Alabama 36830.
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