| Literature DB >> 34150454 |
Azizull K Dhadwal1,2, Adel C Najdowski1, Jonathan Tarbox3.
Abstract
Behavioral research has demonstrated that children with autism spectrum disorder can be taught to recognize the false beliefs of others using video modeling (e.g., Charlop-Christy & Daneshvar Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 5(1), 12-21, 2003; LeBlanc et al. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 36(2), 253-257, 2003). The current study extended such research by teaching three children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and other developmental disabilities to respond appropriately to false-belief tasks using behavioral intervention strategies conducted in the natural environment with people in their enviornment. We used a nonconcurrent multiple-baseline across-participants design to evaluate the use of multiple-exemplar training, prompting, and reinforcement for training correct responses with two false-belief tasks: the hide-and-seek task and the M&Ms task. We also conducted a pre/posttest of an untrained false-belief task, the Sally-Anne task. All participants learned to pass the hide-and-seek task and the M&Ms task and improved on their performance on the Sally-Anne task during the posttest. © Association for Behavior Analysis International 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; False belief; Perspective taking; Social language; Theory of mind
Year: 2021 PMID: 34150454 PMCID: PMC8149531 DOI: 10.1007/s40617-020-00531-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Anal Pract ISSN: 1998-1929