| Literature DB >> 19936908 |
Lynn Kern Koegel1, Robert L Koegel, Israel Green-Hopkins, Cynthia Carter Barnes.
Abstract
The literature suggests children with autism use communication primarily for requests and protests, and almost never for information-seeking. This study investigated whether teaching "Where" questions using intrinsic reinforcement procedures would produce the generalized use of the question, and whether concomitant improvements in related language structures, provided as answers to the children's questions, would occur. In the context of a multiple baseline across participants design, data showed that the children could rapidly acquire and generalize the query, and that there were collateral improvements in the children's use of language structures corresponding to the answers to the questions the children asked. The results are discussed in the context of teaching child initiations to improve linguistic competence in children with autism.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 19936908 PMCID: PMC2837164 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-009-0896-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Age equivalents on standardized test measures for all three children
| Expressive vocab. (EOWPVT) | Receptive vocab. (ROWPVT) | Communication age (Geselle) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Child 1 | Named 4 items | No pointing response | 2;0 |
| Child 2 | 2;6 | 3;8 | 3;0 |
| Child 3 | 1;5 | Not testable/disruptive | 2;0 |
Targeted language structures for each child
| Child 1 | Child 2 | Child 3 |
|---|---|---|
| In | In | In |
| On | On | On |
| Under | Under | Under |
| Behind | Behind | Behind |
| On top | On top | In front of |
| Next to | Next to | Next to |
| In front of | In front of | |
| Between | ||
| Far away from | ||
| Also, for child 2 the following ordinal markers were included | ||
| First | ||
| Second | ||
| Third | ||
| Last |
Fig. 1The percentage of unprompted questions asked by each child in all baseline, intervention, and generalization sessions when items were hidden
Fig. 2The percentage of correct use of the targeted language structure for each child prior to and during intervention