■ Current Issues
■ Archived Issues
■ Journal Search
■ On-line Issue Alert
■ AJIDD Information
■ On-line Help
■ Send Feedback
■ Journal Home Page
■ AAIDD Home Page
■ IDD Information
■ Reprints
■ Index
■ Subscriptions
■ Advertising

[Full-text Article] [PDF Version]
[PubMed Citation] [Related Articles in PubMed]


doi: 10.1352/0895-8017(2005)110<36:GROPBO>2.0.CO;2
American Journal on Mental Retardation: Vol. 110, No. 1, pp. 36–47.

Generalized Reduction of Problem Behavior of Young Children With Autism: Building Trans-Situational Interventions

Holly Reed Schindler and Robert H. Horner
University of Oregon


Abstract
The effects of functional communication training on the generalized reduction of problem behavior with three 4- to 5-year-old children with autism and problem behavior were evaluated. Participants were assessed in primary teaching settings and in three secondary, generalization settings. Through baseline analysis, lower effort interventions in the secondary settings were documented as ineffective when implemented alone. Higher effort interventions incorporating functional communication training were documented within a multiple baseline design to reduce problem behavior in the primary setting, but not in secondary settings until the lower effort interventions were re-introduced. Results demonstrate the need for trans-situational interventions based on a common functional assessment hypothesis across settings and including intensive interventions that enhance the effects of lower intensity interventions.


(Received 9/03/03, accepted 12/29/03.)

Section Editor: William E. MacLean Jr.


© Copyright by American Association on Mental Retardation 2005