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. 1997 Fall;20(2):61–85. doi: 10.1007/BF03392765

A renaissance in residential behavior analysis? A historical perspective and a better way to help people with challenging behavior

Steve Holburn
PMCID: PMC2733550  PMID: 22478282

Abstract

After a slow start, the popularity of applied behavior analysis for people with severe behavior problems peaked in the 1970s and was then battered down by the effects of methodological behaviorism, the aversives controversy, overregulation, and the inherent limitations of congregate living. Despite the ethical, technical, and conceptual advancements in behavior analysis, many people with challenging behavior live in futile environments in which the behavior analyst can only tinker. A radically behavioristic approach has become available that has the power to change these conditions, to restore the reciprocity necessary for new learning, and to bring residential behavior analysts more in contact with the contingencies of helping and teaching. The approach is consistent with alternatives that behaviorists have suggested for years to improve the image and effectiveness of applied behavior analysis, although it will take the behaviorist far from the usual patterns of practice. Finally, the approach promotes its own survival by promoting access to interlocking organizational contingencies, but its antithetical nature presents many conceptual and practical challenges to agency adoption.

Keywords: person-centered planning, residential behavior analysis, history, challenging behavior, organizational contingencies

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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