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Teaching autistic children to respond to simultaneous multiple cues
Authors:Robert L. Koegel  Laura Schreibman
Affiliation:1. University of California, Santa Barbara, USA;2. Claremont Men''s College USA
Abstract:A number of studies have shown that autistic children tend to learn new discriminations by responding to only a restricted number of available cues and that this may be responsible for some of their abnormal behavior. Therefore, this investigation assessed the feasibility of teaching autistic children to respond to multiple cues. The results showed that four autistic children could learn a conditional discrimination requiring them to discriminate a multiple-cue complex from each of its two component cues. However, the autistic children did not learn this discrimination in the same manner as normal children. In the early trials, the autistics responded at a higher level to one of the two component cues. Only after many trials did the autistics respond equally on the basis of both component cues. The results of an initial attempt to teach a general set to respond to multiple cues showed that, when an autistic child was taught a series of successive conditional discriminations, the child eventually learned a set to approach new discriminations by responding equally on the basis of both component cues. The results are discussed in terms of understanding and treating autistic children's abnormal development.
Keywords:Reprints may be obtained from Robert L. Koegel   Social Process Research Institute   University of California   Santa Barbara   California 93106   or from Laura Schreibman   Psychology Department   Claremont Men's College   Claremont   California 91711.
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