| Literature DB >> 29697288 |
Kristi L Morin1, Jennifer B Ganz2, Emily V Gregori3, Margaret J Foster2, Stephanie L Gerow4, Derya Genç-Tosun5, Ee Rea Hong6.
Abstract
Although high-tech augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) is commonly used to teach social-communication skills to people with autism spectrum disorder or intellectual disabilities who have complex communication needs, there is a critical need to evaluate the efficacy of this approach. The aim of this systematic review was to evaluate the quality of single-case experimental design research on the use of high-tech AAC to teach social-communication skills to individuals with autism spectrum disorder or intellectual disabilities who have complex communication needs, to determine if this intervention approach meets the criteria for evidence-based practices as outlined by the What Works Clearinghouse. Additionally, information on the following extended methodological standards is reported on all included studies: participant description, description of setting and materials, interventionist description, baseline and intervention description, maintenance, generalization, procedural integrity, and social validity. The results from 18 multiple-baseline or multiple-probe experiments across 17 studies indicate that using high-tech AAC to teach social-communication skills to individuals with autism spectrum disorder or intellectual disabilities and complex communication needs can be considered an evidence-based practice, although the review of comparison (i.e., alternating treatment) design studies did not indicate that high-tech AAC is significantly better than low-tech AAC.Entities:
Keywords: Evidence-based practice; augmentative and alternative communication; autism spectrum disorder; high-tech AAC; intellectual disability; quality of design and evidence; quality of methodology; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29697288 DOI: 10.1080/07434618.2018.1458900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Augment Altern Commun ISSN: 0743-4618 Impact factor: 2.214