“…Differential reinforcement of other behavior (DRO) is a decelerative behavioral intervention that involves delivery of a reinforcer contingent upon the absence of the target behavior during a given interval (Repp & Deitz, ). DRO is among the most‐commonly used decelerative behavioral interventions (Matson et al, ) and has been shown to effectively decrease a wide variety of behavioral excesses, including self‐injury (Cowdery, Iwata, & Pace, ), stereotypy (Repp, Deitz, & Deitz, ), aggression (Hammond, Iwata, Fritz, & Dempsey, ), motor tics (Capriotti, Brandt, Ricketts, Espil, & Woods, ), disruptive classroom behavior (Austin, Groves, Reynish, & Francis, ), and sibling conflict (Leitenberg, Burchard, Burchard, Fuller, & Lysaght, ). Several factors can influence the efficacy of a DRO procedure, including the duration of the DRO interval, the inclusion of an extinction component, reinforcer selection (function‐based versus arbitrary), and delivery of pre‐session rules (Watts, Wilder, Gregory, Leon, & Ditzian, ).…”