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REDUCING COVERT SELF-INJURIOUS BEHAVIOR MAINTAINED BY AUTOMATIC REINFORCEMENT THROUGH A VARIABLE

MOMENTARY DRO PROCEDURE

KAREN A. TOUSSAINT

MUNROE-MEYER INSTITUTE

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA MEDICAL CENTER

AND

JEFFREY H. TIGER

LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY

Covert self-injurious behavior (i.e., behavior that occurs in the absence of other people) can be difficult to treat. Traditional treatments typically have involved sophisticated methods of observation and often have employed positive punishment procedures. The current study evaluated the effectiveness of a variable momentary differential reinforcement contingency in the treatment of covert self-injury. Neither positive punishment nor extinction was required to produce decreased skin picking.

Key words: covert behavior, self-injury, differential reinforcement of other behavior

_______________________________________________________________________________

The treatment of covert self-injurious behav- ior (i.e., SIB that occurs in the absence of other people) presents a unique assessment and treatment challenge for therapists and caregiv- ers. Researchers in clinics and hospitals have relied on observation from behind one-way mirrors that are not commonly available in typical settings and have implemented positive punishment contingencies to reduce covert SIB. For instance, Piazza, Hanley, and Fisher (1996) reduced covert cigarette pica by having a therapist enter the room and provide a brief reprimand after each instance of pica observed from behind a one-way mirror. Maglieri, DeLeon, Rodriguez-Catter, and Sevin (2000) reduced the covert food stealing of an individual with Prader-Willi syndrome by delivering reprimands after a session in which food was missing from a baited room.

Differential reinforcement of other behavior (DRO) may provide an effective, appetitive-

based alternative for treating covert SIB. Page, Finney, Parrish, and Iwata (1983) arranged DRO contingencies to reduce the covert food stealing of two individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome by observing from behind an obser- vation window and delivering token reinforce- ment for periods without food stealing. Grace, Thompson, and Fisher (1996) treated covert self-injurious scratching via DRO by conduct- ing intermittent skin checks and delivering access to reinforcers for the absence of new injuries. This study was notable for its lack of dependence on direct observation, but this product form of measurement may not be sufficient to detect SIB in cases in which each instance of SIB does not leave a product (i.e., low-intensity SIB or SIB directed towards a previously injured area).

A variable momentary DRO (VMDRO) may be uniquely suited to treating covert SIB in settings that are not equipped with covert observation equipment. Unlike typical DRO procedures that arrange reinforcement delivery contingent on the continuous absence of a behavior for a specified interval, VMDRO procedures arrange reinforcement delivery

Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Jeffrey H. Tiger, who is now at the Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin– Milwaukee, 219 Garland Hall, 2441 E. Hartford Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 (e-mail: [email protected]).

doi: 10.1901/jaba.2012.45-179

JOURNAL OF APPLIED BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS 2012, 45, 179–184 NUMBER 1 (SPRING 2012)

179

contingent on the absence of a behavior at a particular moment (Repp, Barton, & Brulle, 1983). Because the procedure does not neces- sitate continuous observation, implementers may be able to arrange VMDRO contingencies during brief check-ins. Lindberg, Iwata, Kahng, and DeLeon (1999) demonstrated the efficacy of VMDRO contingencies with extinction at reducing overt SIB maintained by attention. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate a VMDRO contingency without extinction to reduce covert skin picking main- tained by automatic reinforcement.

METHOD

Participants and Setting

Kevin was a 12-year-old boy with multiple diagnoses including autism, cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury, and a genetic disorder involving deletion of Chromosome 6 and duplication of Chromosome 3. His psychologist had referred him to our university clinic for the assessment and treatment of self-injurious skin picking that had resulted in numerous open lesions to his arms, legs, and torso. Kevin spoke in short sentences and required minimal assistance with daily living tasks such as dressing and toileting. Therapists conducted all assess- ment and treatment sessions in a therapy room equipped with a video camera that allowed observation from an adjacent room.

Measurement and Interobserver Agreement

We defined skin picking as Kevin moving his fingertips or fingernails with pressure on his skin or clothing. Observers recorded skin picking using continuous frequency recording during 10-min assessment and treatment ses- sions. Observers scored a novel instance of skin picking when Kevin (a) paused for greater than 1 s between picks, (b) switched hands, or (c) changed the location of picking on his body or clothing with a distance greater than 3 in. from the previous location. We scored the frequency of skin picks rather than duration, because

Kevin’s skin picks were characteristically brief, discrete events. A second observer simultaneous- ly but independently scored the occurrence of skin picking during 55% of functional analysis sessions and 33% of treatment evaluation sessions. To assess interobserver agreement, we partitioned each observer’s records into 60 10-s intervals and compared each record on an interval-by-interval basis. We provided each interval in exact agreement a score of 1 and all other intervals a proportional score by dividing the smaller number of instances by the larger number of instances. We then summed each interval’s score, divided the sum by the total number of intervals, and converted this score to a percentage. The mean agreement score for skin picking was 91% (range, 65% to 100%) during the functional analysis and 92% (range, 57% to 100%) during the treatment evaluation.

Procedure

Preference assessments. We completed a struc- tured interview (Fisher, Piazza, Bowman, & Amari, 1996) with Kevin’s mother to identify an array of preferred leisure items and then conducted a paired-choice preference assess- ment (Fisher et al., 1992) to identify the most preferred item (access to an animated children’s video) to deliver in the VMDRO contingency.

Functional analysis. We conducted a func- tional analysis of Kevin’s skin picking based on the model described by Iwata, Dorsey, Slifer, Bauman, and Richman (1982/1994), which included attention, escape, control, and ignore sessions alternated in a multielement design. We then alternated alone and ignore sessions to determine if a therapist’s presence had a suppressive effect on picking (this functional analysis also appears in Kliebert, Tiger, & Toussaint, in press).

Treatment evaluation. During 10-min base- line sessions, Kevin was alone in the therapy room without access to leisure materials; we did not program any consequences for skin picking. VMDRO sessions were similar except that on a variable schedule, a therapist entered the room

180 KAREN A. TOUSSAINT and JEFFREY H. TIGER

and provided reinforcement in the form of a token and praise (e.g. ‘‘Good job not scratch- ing!’’) contingent on the absence of skin picking at that moment; she then left the room. If skin picking occurred during a check, the therapist exited the room without comment. We were able to observe Kevin’s skin picking continu- ously via the video equipment, but the therapist administered contingencies based on the ab- sence of skin picking only at the moment she entered the room. Kevin exchanged each of his earned tokens for 30-s access to a video following each session or, if he made an independent vocal request, cumulatively at the end of the day.

For each VMDRO session, we calculated five DRO intervals of 50%, 75%, 100%, 125%, and 150% of the mean interresponse time (IRT; see Lindberg et al., 1999). The mean IRT between picks was determined by calculating the mean across the last three baseline sessions (8 s). The VMDRO mean interval for the first VMDRO session then was set at 8 s, and the check-in intervals (i.e., 4 s, 6 s, 8 s, 10 s, and 12 s) were calculated based on this mean. The therapist conducted these checks in a random and counterbalanced order. We then progressively

increased the mean interval duration by 50% after every two consecutive sessions in which skin picking remained below 90% of baseline. If skin picking increased based on visual inspection of the data, we decreased the mean interval to its preceding value.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

We observed low and undifferentiated skin picking rates during functional analysis condi- tions (Figure 1). We then compared skin picking under both ignore and alone conditions to determine if skin picking was more likely to occur in the absence of an observer (we observed all sessions through video surveillance). Kevin engaged in consistently higher levels of skin picking during the alone condition, indicative of the covert nature of this behavior (Ms 5 7.7 during alone and 1.1 during ignore).

Kevin engaged in a mean of 5.7 picks per minute during the baseline of his treatment evaluation (Figure 2). After implementation of the VMDRO, skin picking immediately reduced to low levels. We gradually faded the mean VMDRO interval to 91 s with low levels of skin picking (M 5 0.4) prior to implementing a

Figure 1. Skin picks per minute during ignore, attention, toy play, and escape conditions of Kevin’s initial multielement functional analysis and additional alone and ignore comparisons.

REDUCING COVERT SIB VIA VMDRO 181

reversal. Withdrawal of the VMDRO contin- gency resulted in increased skin picking (M 5 6.9); reinstatement of the treatment condition again resulted in a greater than 90% reduction in skin picking (M 5 0.4) that was maintained as we faded the mean VMDRO interval to 300 s.

In the current evaluation, we reduced high- rate, covert skin picking to near zero via a VMDRO without the use of extinction or positive punishment. Previous research suggests that arranging extinction for problem behavior is typically necessary for differential reinforce- ment procedures to be effective (Hagopian, Fisher, Sullivan, Acquisto, & LeBlanc, 1998; Mazaleski, Iwata, Vollmer, Zarcone, & Smith, 1993). Instead of extinction, which would have involved attenuating the sensory consequences

of skin picking, we delivered high-preference leisure items contingent on the absence of skin picking; contingent access to these leisure items successfully competed with the automatic reinforcers for self-injury. It is likely that the reinforcing value of leisure items combined with praise was greater than that obtained by engaging in skin picking. Had we not been able to identify such high-preference items, treatment success using a VMDRO would have been less likely. Given the importance of identifying items that will compete successfully with self-injury, future research and application of this procedure may include a competing- items assessment prior to the implementation of differential reinforcement procedures (Fisher, DeLeon, Rodriguez-Catter, & Keeney, 2004).

Figure 2. Rates of skin picking during baseline (BL) and VMDRO conditions. The numbers above each data point indicate the mean VMDRO interval duration (in seconds). The horizontal dashed line depicts the 90% reduction criterion we used for decision making.

182 KAREN A. TOUSSAINT and JEFFREY H. TIGER

It is possible that the DRO contingency was unnecessary to obtain the present treatment effects and that intermittent check-ins alone were a sufficient deterrent for skin picking, given the covert nature of this behavior. An alternative control condition to address this possibility would be to maintain a similar check-in schedule during a reversal to baseline without implementing the DRO contingency. Continued suppression under this condition would have indicated the suppressive effect of the therapist’s presence (see Athens, Vollmer, Sloman, & St. Peter Pipkin, 2008), and a reemergence of skin picking would have indicated the necessity of the DRO contingen- cy. Future VMDRO research on treating covert behavior should include this control.

Tentatively assuming the beneficial nature of the DRO portion of these procedures, VMDROs provide caregivers with a low-tech means of capturing covert SIB other than relying on permanent behavioral products. Check-ins are less costly than using video equipment or one-way observation mirrors and can be implemented in multiple settings. As mentioned previously, we used video moni- toring for evaluation purposes only; we determined the delivery of reinforcement only via the therapist’s observations during the VMDRO check. In this regard, the video- monitored observations likely were not essen- tial to implementing contingencies as caregiv- ers would typically implement in home and school settings.

At the completion of the fading schedule, a caregiver initiated a check-in every 300 s (5 min) on average, delivered a praise statement and a token when appropriate, and periodically ar- ranged a token-exchange period. We feel that therapists could reasonably expect integrity with such an intervention by caregivers, such as parents and teachers, in conjunction with their other responsibilities. Teachers in particular are likely to view such a relatively low-effort procedure more favorably than one that requires continuous

monitoring (e.g., whole-interval DRO). Future research may directly assess the social validity of VMDRO contingencies compared to other differential reinforcement procedures.

REFERENCES

Athens, E. S., Vollmer, T. R., Sloman, K. N., & St. Peter Pipkin, C. C. (2008). An analysis of vocal stereotypy and therapist fading. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 41, 291–297.

Fisher, W. W., DeLeon, I. G., Rodriguez-Catter, V., & Keeney, K. M. (2004). Enhancing the effects of extinction on attention-maintained behavior through noncontingent delivery of attention or stimuli identified via a competing stimulus assessment. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 37, 171–184.

Fisher, W. W., Piazza, C. C., Bowman, L. G., & Amari, A. (1996). Integrating caregiver report with a direct choice assessment to enhance reinforcer identification. American Journal on Mental Retardation, 101, 15–25.

Fisher, W., Piazza, C. C., Bowman, L. G., Hagopian, L. P., Owens, J. C., & Slevin, I. (1992). A comparison of two approaches for identifying reinforcers for persons with severe to profound disabilities. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 25, 491–498.

Grace, N. C., Thompson, R., & Fisher, W. W. (1996). The treatment of covert self-injury through contin- gencies on response products. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 29, 239–242.

Hagopian, L. P., Fisher, W. W., Sullivan, M. T., Acquisto, J., & LeBlanc, L. A. (1998). Effectiveness of functional communication training with and without extinction and punishment: A summary of 21 inpatient cases. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 31, 211–235.

Iwata, B. A., Dorsey, M. F., Slifer, K. J., Bauman, K. E., & Richman, G. S. (1994). Toward a functional analysis of self-injury. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 27, 197–209. (Reprinted from Analysis and Intervention in Developmental Disabilities, 2, 3–20, 1982)

Kliebert, M. L., Tiger, J. H., & Toussaint, K. A. (in press). An approach to identify the conditions under which response interruption will reduce automatically rein- forced problem behavior. Behavior Analysis in Practice.

Lindberg, J. S., Iwata, B. A., Kahng, S. W., & DeLeon, I. G. (1999). DRO contingencies: An analysis of variable-momentary schedules. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 32, 123–136.

Maglieri, K. A., DeLeon, I. G., Rodriguez-Catter, V., & Sevin, B. M. (2000). Treatment of covert food stealing in an individual with Prader-Willi syndrome. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 33, 615–618.

Mazaleski, J. L., Iwata, B. A., Vollmer, T. R., Zarcone, J. R., & Smith, R. G. (1993). Analysis of the reinforcement and extinction components in DRO contingencies with self-injury. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 26, 143–156.

REDUCING COVERT SIB VIA VMDRO 183

Page, T. J., Finney, J. W., Parrish, J. M., & Iwata, B. A. (1983). Assessment and reduction of food stealing in Prader-Willi children. Applied Research in Mental Retardation, 4, 219–228.

Piazza, C. C., Hanley, G. P., & Fisher, W. W. (1996). Functional analysis and treatment of cigarette pica. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 29, 437–450.

Repp, A. C., Barton, L. E., & Brulle, A. R. (1983). A comparison of two procedures for programming the differential reinforcement of other behaviors. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 16, 435–445.

Received July 30, 2010 Final acceptance May 10, 2011 Action Editor, William Ahearn

184 KAREN A. TOUSSAINT and JEFFREY H. TIGER

Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.