SELF‐STIMULATORY BEHAVIOR AND PERCEPTUAL REINFORCEMENT
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 20 (1) , 45-68
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1987.20-45
Abstract
Self‐stimulatory behavior is repetitive, stereotyped, functionally autonomous behavior seen in both normal and developmentally disabled populations, yet no satisfactory theory of its development and major characteristics has previously been offered. We present here a detailed hypothesis of the acquisition and maintenance of self‐stimulatory behavior, proposing that the behaviors are operant responses whose reinforcers are automatically produced interoceptive and exteroceptive perceptual consequences. The concept of perceptual stimuli and reinforcers, the durability of self‐stimulatory behaviors, the sensory extinction effect, the inverse relationship between self‐stimulatory and other behaviors, the blocking effect of self‐stimulatory behavior on new learning, and response substitution effects are discussed in terms of the hypothesis. Support for the hypothesis from the areas of sensory reinforcement and sensory deprivation is also reviewed. Limitations of major alternative theories are discussed, along with implications of the perceptual reinforcement hypothesis for the treatment of excessive self‐stimulatory behavior and for theoretical conceptualizations of functionally related normal and pathological behaviors.Keywords
This publication has 124 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neural Basis of Rhythmic Behavior in AnimalsScience, 1980
- Using sensory extinction procedures in the treatment of compulsivelike behavior of developmentally disabled children.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1979
- Using sensory extinction procedures in the treatment of compulsivelike behavior of developmentally disabled children.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1979
- Rhythmic Habit Patterns in Infancy: Their Sequence, Age of Onset, and FrequencyChild Development, 1971
- Travel vision in infant monkeys: Maturation rate and abnormal stereotyped behaviorsDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1968
- Stereotypy, Arousal and AutismHuman Development, 1968
- EFFECTS OF PRETRAINING ON THE REINFORCING VALUE OF VISUAL STIMULI1Child Development, 1961
- OPERANT BEHAVIOR DURING ANESTHESIA RECOVERY: A CONTINUOUS AND OBJECTIVE METHODAnesthesiology, 1961
- Group Operant Behavior: An Extension of Individual Research Methodology to a Real-Life SituationThe Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1961
- Drives and the C. N. S. (conceptual nervous system).Psychological Review, 1955