Mary Halbur, Tiffany Kodak, Jessi Reidy, Samantha Bergmann
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Comparing Manipulations to Enhance Stimulus Salience during Intraverbal Training.
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may have difficulty acquiring intraverbal behavior. The present study compared manipulations of stimulus salience (i.e., volume increase, elongation) to teach intraverbals (e.g., "You drink [juice]" and "You drink from [cup]") to three participants diagnosed with ASD whose pre-treatment responding suggested restricted stimulus control. We used an adapted alternating treatments design to compare the efficacy and efficiency of increased volume, elongated, and unmodified antecedent verbal stimuli on correct intraverbal responses. Results suggested the volume increase condition was the most efficacious and efficient for two participants, whereas all conditions were similarly efficacious and efficient for one participant. High levels of responding maintained as the stimulus salience manipulations were removed.
期刊介绍:
The Analysis of Verbal Behavior (TAVB) is an official publication of the Association for Behavior Analysis International. The Mission of the journal is to support the dissemination of innovative empirical research, theoretical conceptualizations, and real-world applications of the behavioral science of language. The journal embraces diverse perspectives of human language, its conceptual underpinnings, and the utility such diversity affords. TAVB values contributions that represent the scope of field and breadth of populations behavior analysts serve, and Is the premier publication outlet that fosters increased dialogue between scientists and scientist-practitioners. Articles addressing the following topics are encouraged: language acquisition, verbal operants, relational frames, naming, rule-governed behavior, epistemology, language assessment and training, bilingualism, verbal behavior of nonhumans, research methodology, or any other topic that addresses the analysis of language from a behavior analytic perspective.