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Mandel, Natalie R.; Cividini-Motta, Catia; Schram, Jeffrey; MacNaul, Hannah – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2022
This study examined if listener behavior and responding by exclusion would emerge after training 3 participants with autism to tact stimuli. Tacts for 2 of 3 stimuli were directly trained using discrete trial training methodology and were followed by an auditory-visual discrimination probe in which auditory-visual discrimination by naming (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Visual Discrimination, Cues, Auditory Stimuli, Visual Stimuli
Bancroft, Stacie L.; Weiss, Julie S.; Libby, Myrna E.; Ahearn, William H. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2011
We compared variations for teaching a sequence of responses through forward chaining. Seven children who had been diagnosed with autism participated in a comparison of teacher completion (TC) of steps beyond the training step and manually guiding the student (SC) to complete steps beyond the training step. A no-completion (NC) condition, in which…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Training Methods, Psychomotor Skills
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Kodak, Tiffany; Fuchtman, Rashea; Paden, Amber – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2012
We compared the effectiveness of three training procedures, echoic and tact prompting plus error correction and a cues-pause-point (CPP) procedure, for increasing intraverbals in 2 children with autism. We also measured echoic behavior that may have interfered with appropriate question answering. Results indicated that echoic prompting with error…
Descriptors: Autism, Cues, Prompting, Comparative Analysis
Fisher, Wayne W.; Kodak, Tiffany; Moore, James W. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2007
Least-to-most prompting hierarchies (e.g., progressing from verbal to modeled to physical prompts until the target response occurs) may be ineffective when the prompts do not cue the individual to attend to the relevant stimulus dimensions. In such cases, emission of the target response persistently requires one or more of the higher level…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Prompting, Autism, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)