1 / 16

Treating Social Communication Behavior in Asperger’s Disorder

Treating Social Communication Behavior in Asperger’s Disorder. Celeste Domsch, Ph.D. Baylor University Stephen Camarata, Ph.D. Vanderbilt University ASHA Annual Convention 2003 Chicago, Illinois. Purpose. To examine the effects of treatment on social communication behaviors

rance
Download Presentation

Treating Social Communication Behavior in Asperger’s Disorder

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Treating Social Communication Behavior in Asperger’s Disorder Celeste Domsch, Ph.D. Baylor University Stephen Camarata, Ph.D. Vanderbilt University ASHA Annual Convention 2003 Chicago, Illinois

  2. Purpose To examine the effects of treatment on social communication behaviors in one child with Asperger’s Disorder

  3. DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria for Asperger’s Disorder • Qualitative impairment in social interaction • Restricted, repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behavior, interests, and activities • Disturbance causes clinically significant impairments in social, occupational, or other areas of functioning • No clinically significant general delay in language • No clinically significant delay in cognition, self-help, adaptive behavior or curiosity about the environment in childhood

  4. Hypotheses tested: • That treatment for two inappropriate social communication behaviors would decrease their rate of occurrence in the participant 2. That the rate of occurrence for three untreated behaviors would not change 3. That subjective ratings of the participant’s overall appropriateness would improve post-treatment

  5. Method: Participant • One participant, an 8-year-old male • IQ = 143 on the Stanford-Binet • Adaptive behavior composite = 98 on the Vineland • Receptive vocabulary quotient = 114 on PPVT-R • Expressive vocabulary quotient = 136 on EOWPVT-R • “… his difficulties in peer relations, low frequency of eye contact, inflexibility with routines, motor stereotypes, and weak adaptive behavior meet the criteria for a diagnosis of Asperger’s Disorder.”

  6. Method: Design • Multiple-baseline-across-behaviors design • Five impaired social communication behaviors noted at outset of study: • 1. Rocking • 2. Hand flapping • 3. Facial contortions • 4. Inappropriate eye contact • 5. Inappropriate voice volume • Rocking and hand flapping selected for treatment • Occurred more frequently than other behaviors during baseline • Were more obviously stigmatizing

  7. Method: Baseline • Seven 10-minute samples collected • Participant asked to behave as he normally would and discuss topics of interest to him • All videotaped • Reward was access to computer games on a laptop

  8. Method: Treatment • Employed the self-management strategy in Koegel and Frea (1993) • Participant identifies, labels, and receives rewards for successful control of treated behaviors • 13 treatment sessions over 6-week period • Sessions were 30 to 45 min. long; 2-3 times/week • Sessions 1-4 treated only rocking • Sessions 5-13 treated rocking and hand flapping • If participant successfully controlled rocking and hand flapping for intervals ranging from 1-2 minutes, he was immediately rewarded with brief access to computer games

  9. Method: Subjective Judgment of Appropriateness • Two SLPs unfamiliar with study served as observers • Observers watched 10 one-minute videotaped samples of participant • Rated each minute on a scale from 1-9 (“very inappropriate” to “very normal”) • Five one-minute samples from pre-treatment and five from one sample taken at 4 weeks post-treatment • Presented in randomized order

  10. Results: Treated Behaviors - Rocking

  11. Results: Treated Behaviors – Hand Flapping

  12. Results: Untreated Behaviors

  13. Results: Subjective Judgmentsof Appropriateness

  14. Discussion • Treatment appears to have been effective in reducing frequency of rocking, but had no apparent effect on hand flapping • Treatment had no apparent effect on the three untreated behaviors (facial contortions, voice volume, eye gaze) • Subjective judgments of overall appropriateness indicated improvement after treatment

  15. Conclusions • Self-management may be an effective strategy for improving some social communication behaviors in children with Asperger’s Disorder • Most frequent behaviors may require intensive and isolated treatment (e.g., one behavior treated at a time) • May want to consider substituting more appropriate behaviors, rather than attempting to eliminate inappropriate ones (e.g., hand wringing in lap for hand flapping near face)

  16. Reference • Koegel, R.L., & Frea, R.D. (1993). Treatment of Social Behavior in Autism Through the Modification of Pivotal Social Skills. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 26, 369-377. • Slides of this talk are also available at www.domsch.com.

More Related