1 / 18

Picture Exchange Communication System

Picture Exchange Communication System. Shamsi Sadeghzadeh, BCBA. Communication. The most Important Human Behavior… Next to Breathing. Communication. People spend most of their time Talking Listening Reading Writing Thinking. Communication. The sending and receiving of a message

shamus
Download Presentation

Picture Exchange Communication System

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. Picture Exchange Communication System Shamsi Sadeghzadeh, BCBA

  2. Communication The most Important Human Behavior… Next to Breathing

  3. Communication People spend most of their time • Talking • Listening • Reading • Writing • Thinking

  4. Communication • The sending and receiving of a message • An interpersonal behavior • A set of arbitrary symbols used to convey meaning

  5. Picture Exchange Communication System A system developed by Andrew Bondy and Lori Frost to provide an active system of picture communication to people with severe disabilities.

  6. PECS, cont. • PECS is a form of augmentative & alternative communication which is an evidence based practice. • PECS is designed to teach functional communication with an initial focus on spontaneity. • Research indicates that using PECS with young children can actually assist them to develop speech. • From the very beginning, focus is on independent initiation and avoiding verbal prompt- dependency. • PECS is intended to be combined with elements of behavior analysis.

  7. PECS, cont. • There is no required prerequisite training from person. • PECS does not inhibit speech development. • PECS is based on ABA. • PECS is a highly structured approach. • PECS encourages empowerment.

  8. Reinforcer Assessment • Observe the child’s attempts to gain access to desired items • Observe if child protests when item is removed • Ask parents/caregivers about child’s preferences • Systematically assess to develop “reinforcer hierarchy” • Most preferred • Moderately preferred • Actively avoided

  9. PECS, Phase I • Objective: - Upon seeing a “highly preferred” item, student will pick up a picture of the item, reach toward the trainer, releases the picture in the trainer’s hand, and receives a small piece of that item.

  10. Phase 1, cont. • No verbal prompt is used. • Use more than one “preferred items” but present one at e time • Physical exchange-fully assisted - pick-up - reach - release • Physical exchange- unprompted - no open hand prompt

  11. Phase 1-The physical Exchange • Two person prompt procedure, one to entice(communication partner) & one prompter • Communication partner’s role is to entice, reinforce & manage material • Prompter’s role is to wait for initiation, prompt, & fade prompts • Fully assisted physical exchange • Backward chaining used to fade prompt: • Unprompted physical exchange- with open hand prompt • Unprompted physical exchange without open hand prompt

  12. Phase II • Objective: - The student goes to his communication board, pulls the picture off, goes to the adult, releases the picture in adult’s hand, and receives the item. - variety of trainers - no verbal prompt - Variety of pictures, one at a time - reinforcer inventory

  13. Phase II, Distance & Persistence • Only one picture is on/in communication book • Child removes the picture & delivers it for exchange to CP who gradually increases the proximity • Keep close proximity between child & picture • Expand partners, reinforcers, settings • Outcome = generalization across people, places, reinforcers, and distance • May need 2nd person to prompt to get CP’s attention

  14. Phase III • Objective: - The student will request desired items by going to a communication board, selecting the appropriate picture from an array, going to a communication partner, giving the picture, and receiving the item. No verbal prompts Structured & spontaneous trials- 20-30 Add incidental opportunities- 20

  15. Phase III, Discrimination Training • Objective is for child to take the correct picture, take it to CP, and exchange for that item. • Training takes place where the trainer & child are sitting at a table where there are several pictures & items of preferred, non-preferred, & contextually irrelevant ones. • If child gives incorrect picture give that item, if reacts, give picture back, open hand close to the correct picture, give the correct item. • Reduce size of pictures & add variety of shapes and sizes

  16. Phase IV, Sentence Structure • Objective is child to request present & non-present items using a detachable sentence strip, using an “I want…” picture /symbol followed by a picture of the item being requested. • Trainer & child read the sentence • Do not require speech but R+ any approximation • Place item out of reach & R+ the request • Place item out of sight & reinforce the request

  17. Phase V, Answering”What Do You Want?” • Objective: When asked “what do you want”, child uses “I want ……” sentence strip for exchange • The desired item also available • Using zero time delay, trainer prompts child to attach the picture of item on strip and exchange • Gradual Increase of interval • If no eye-contact, prompter needed to gain staff’s attention

  18. Phase 6, Commenting • Objective: Using “I see, hear, feel,…”sentence strip, child will answer different questions or make comments. • Have interesting items available • Don’t use powerful R+, reaching social consequence • Generalize to different items, settings, people • To promote spontaneous comment, replace question with “ohhh”

More Related