Durand V M, Carr E G
J Appl Behav Anal. 1987 Summer;20(2):119-32. doi: 10.1901/jaba.1987.20-119.
We tested the hypothesis that the "self-stimulatory" behaviors exhibited by some individuals may be socially mediated. Four developmentally disabled children who exhibited hand flapping and body rocking participated in a series of three experiments conducted to assess the influence of social variables on stereotyped behavior and to develop a treatment based on the assessment. Experiment 1 used an assessment procedure to determine the relative influences of social attention and task demands on stereotyped behavior. For all four children, hand flapping and body rocking increased when difficult academic tasks were introduced. Experiment 2 involved the use of a procedural time-out and demonstrated that removing task demands contingent on stereotyped behavior resulted in increased rates of hand flapping and body rocking. In Experiment 3, these results were used to develop a communication treatment that consisted of teaching the children to request assistance on the difficult tasks. This treatment resulted in significant reductions in self-stimulatory behavior. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that some forms of repetitive stereotyped behavior may come to serve social functions (e.g., escape from aversive situations). Teaching a functionally equivalent communicative alternative to escape-motivated stereotyped behavior can be an effective form of intervention for this problem.
我们对“一些个体表现出的‘自我刺激’行为可能是由社会因素介导的”这一假设进行了验证。四名表现出手部拍打和身体摇晃行为的发育障碍儿童参与了一系列三项实验,这些实验旨在评估社会变量对刻板行为的影响,并基于该评估制定一种治疗方法。实验1采用一种评估程序来确定社会关注和任务要求对刻板行为的相对影响。对于所有四名儿童来说,当引入困难的学业任务时,手部拍打和身体摇晃行为增加。实验2采用了程序性暂停的方法,结果表明,去除与刻板行为相关的任务要求会导致手部拍打和身体摇晃行为的发生率增加。在实验3中,利用这些结果开发了一种沟通治疗方法,即教导儿童在遇到困难任务时请求帮助。这种治疗方法使自我刺激行为显著减少。这些结果与以下假设一致,即某些形式的重复性刻板行为可能具有社会功能(例如,逃避厌恶情境)。针对出于逃避动机的刻板行为,教导一种功能等效的沟通替代方式可能是解决这一问题的有效干预形式。