2019
DOI: 10.1002/bin.1674
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Latency‐based functional analysis in schools: Correspondence and differences across environments

Abstract: Functional analyses were conducted for problem behavior of three girls with intellectual and developmental disabilities.Analyses conducted under analog conditions measured rate and latency. Latency-based functional analyses were conducted in a classroom setting in multielement and reversal designs. Correspondence was identified between the standard functional analysis and the two latency analyses for one participant. Partial correspondence was found with the other two participants. These results are discussed … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Specifically, Badgett and Falcomata (2015) The * denotes studies where only some cases (participants) met the inclusion criteria to be included in this review. of one LFFA and one other FA type was observed for three participants, and no correspondence was observed across all three FA types (standard FA, multi-element LFFA, reversal LFFA) for one participant (Hansen et al, 2019). In the fifth case, disparate outcomes were observed for one out of the 10 participants in Thomason-Sassi et al (2011).…”
Section: Correspondence Between Lffas and Other Fa Typesmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…Specifically, Badgett and Falcomata (2015) The * denotes studies where only some cases (participants) met the inclusion criteria to be included in this review. of one LFFA and one other FA type was observed for three participants, and no correspondence was observed across all three FA types (standard FA, multi-element LFFA, reversal LFFA) for one participant (Hansen et al, 2019). In the fifth case, disparate outcomes were observed for one out of the 10 participants in Thomason-Sassi et al (2011).…”
Section: Correspondence Between Lffas and Other Fa Typesmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The results of Hansen et al (2019) highlight a particularly interesting point of discussion related to this point. Hansen et al (2019) evaluated correspondence across assessment types (standard session-based FA using a rate-based measure, LFFA using a multi-element design, and LFFA using a reversal design) for only one out of three participants.…”
Section: Correspondence Across Assessment Typesmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…Latency‐based FAs have been used to assess a variety of challenging behavior including problem behavior (e.g., Briggs et al, 2019; Hamilton et al, 2020; Thomason‐Sassi et al, 2011), food stealing (e.g., Lambert et al, 2019), transition‐related problem behavior (e.g., Harper & Luiselli, 2019), repetitive behavior (e.g., Chok & Harper, 2016; Neil & Jones, 2016), and elopement (e.g., Davis et al, 2013; Lambert, Finley, & Caruthers, 2017; Neidert et al, 2013; Traub & Vollmer, 2019). Further, latency‐based FAs have been used across a variety of settings including clinics (e.g., Briggs et al, 2019; Thomason‐Sassi et al, 2011), schools (e.g., Hansen et al, 2019; Lambert, Lopano, et al, 2017), hospital inpatient units (e.g., Lambert, Staubitz, et al, 2017), residential settings (e.g., Harper & Luiselli, 2019), and home environments (e.g., Chok & Harper, 2016; Neil & Jones, 2016). Given that latency‐based FAs represent an emerging practice that offers a potentially more feasible and safer alternative to the standard rate‐based FA, there is a need for SVI criteria that are suitable for this format.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%