| Literature DB >> 25311615 |
Kristi M Rivas1, Cathleen C Piazza, Henry S Roane, Valerie M Volkert, Victoria Stewart, Heather J Kadey, Rebecca A Groff.
Abstract
In the current investigation, we evaluated a method for increasing self-feeding with 3 children with a history of food refusal. The children never (2 children) or rarely (1 child) self-fed bites of food when the choice was between self-feeding and escape from eating. When the choice was between self-feeding 1 bite of food or being fed an identical bite of food, self-feeding was low (2 children) or variable (1 child). Levels of self-feeding increased for 2 children when the choice was between self-feeding 1 bite of food or being fed multiple bites of the same food. For the 3rd child, self-feeding increased when the choice was between self-feeding 1 bite of food or being fed multiple bites of a less preferred food. The results showed that altering the contingencies associated with being fed increased the probability of self-feeding, but the specific manipulations that produced self-feeding were unique to each child. © Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior.Entities:
Keywords: choice; concurrent operants; feeding disorder; food refusal; food selectivity; pediatric feeding disorders; response effort; self-feeding
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25311615 DOI: 10.1002/jaba.170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Behav Anal ISSN: 0021-8855