Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Matos, Daniel Carvalho de
Data de Publicação: 2020
Outros Autores: Cordeiro, Neylla Cristina Pereira, Mendes, Bruna Pereira, Carvalho, Ana Vitória Salomão de, Silva, Flor de Maria Araújo Mendonça, Firmo, Wellyson da Cunha Araújo, Matos, Pollianna Galvão Soares de
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Research, Society and Development
Texto Completo: https://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/5268
Resumo: Research in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) investigated the efficiency of receptive and expressive language interventions in learners with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Listener responding by function, feature and class (LRFFC) and intraverbal (FFC) are some types of receptive and expressive language, respectively, which were targets in investigations. The previous literature demonstrated experimentally that teaching intraverbal first is more efficient, in the sense that it produced a better emergence effect of related untaught LRFFC in children with ASD, contrary to the recommendation by a traditional literature, which suggests that receptive skills, such as the LRFFC, should be taught first. The current research had the goal to compare the efficiency of intraverbal and LRFFC training as well, considering the effects on the possible emergence of related untaught repertoire in two children with ASD. The difference from the previous literature was that, during the teaching of LRFFC responses, the tact (labeling) of pictures involved was also taught, considering that this was a recommendation of previous research. The purpose was to assess if tact training would increase the efficiency of LRFFC training. The results showed that both instructional sequences (training LRFFC - probing intraverbal; training intraverbal - probing LRFFC) successfully established emergent responding, regarding the untaught related repertoire for both participants. However, intraverbal training produced emergence of LRFFC to a lesser extent for both. Data were discussed in the sense that tact training during LRFFC training probably increased its efficiency and that preexisting skills, regarding each participant, also influenced the efficiency of teaching.
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spelling Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorderEficiencia de la enseñanza del lenguaje expresivo y receptivo en niños con trastorno del espectro autistaEficiência do ensino de linguagem expressiva e receptiva em crianças com transtorno do espectro autistaTranstorno do espectro autistaIntraverbal FFCLRFFCEnsino de tatosEnsino.Trastorno del espectro autistaIntraverbal FFCLRFFCEnseñanza de tactosEnseñanza.Autism spectrum disorderIntraverbal FFCLRFFCTact trainingTeaching.Research in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) investigated the efficiency of receptive and expressive language interventions in learners with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Listener responding by function, feature and class (LRFFC) and intraverbal (FFC) are some types of receptive and expressive language, respectively, which were targets in investigations. The previous literature demonstrated experimentally that teaching intraverbal first is more efficient, in the sense that it produced a better emergence effect of related untaught LRFFC in children with ASD, contrary to the recommendation by a traditional literature, which suggests that receptive skills, such as the LRFFC, should be taught first. The current research had the goal to compare the efficiency of intraverbal and LRFFC training as well, considering the effects on the possible emergence of related untaught repertoire in two children with ASD. The difference from the previous literature was that, during the teaching of LRFFC responses, the tact (labeling) of pictures involved was also taught, considering that this was a recommendation of previous research. The purpose was to assess if tact training would increase the efficiency of LRFFC training. The results showed that both instructional sequences (training LRFFC - probing intraverbal; training intraverbal - probing LRFFC) successfully established emergent responding, regarding the untaught related repertoire for both participants. However, intraverbal training produced emergence of LRFFC to a lesser extent for both. Data were discussed in the sense that tact training during LRFFC training probably increased its efficiency and that preexisting skills, regarding each participant, also influenced the efficiency of teaching.La Investigación en Análisis de Comportamiento Aplicado (ABA) investigó la eficiencia de las intervenciones de lenguaje receptivo y expresivo en estudiantes con trastorno del espectro autista (TEA). Los oyentes que responden por función, característica y clase (LRFFC) e intraverbal (FFC) son tipos de lenguaje receptivo y expresivo, respectivamente. La literatura anterior demostró que la enseñanza intraverbal primero es más eficiente, en el sentido de que produjo un mejor efecto de emergencia de LRFFC no enseñado relacionado en niños con TEA, contrario a la recomendación de una literatura tradicional, que sugiere que el LRFFC debe enseñarse primero. La investigación actual tenía el objetivo de comparar la eficiencia del entrenamiento intraverbal y LRFFC, considerando los efectos sobre la posible aparición de repertorio no enseñado relacionado en dos niños con TEA. Durante la enseñanza de LRFFC, también se enseñó el tacto de las imágenes, considerando que esto era una recomendación de investigaciones previas. El propósito era evaluar si el entrenamiento de tactos aumentaría la eficiencia del LRFFC. Los resultados mostraron que ambas secuencias de instrucción (entrenamiento LRFFC - sondeo intraverbal; entrenamiento intraverbal - sondeo LRFFC) establecieron la respuesta emergente, con respecto al repertorio relacionado no enseñado para ambos participantes. Sin embargo, el entrenamiento intraverbal produjo la aparición de LRFFC en menor medida. Los datos se discuten en el sentido de que el entrenamiento de tactos durante el entrenamiento LRFFC probablemente aumentó su eficiencia y que las habilidades preexistentes, con respecto a cada participante, también influyeron en la eficiencia de la enseñanza.Pesquisas em Análise do Comportamento Aplicada (ABA) investigaram a eficiência do ensino de linguagem receptiva e expressiva em aprendizes com Transtorno do Espectro Autista (TEA). Respostas de ouvinte por função, característica e classe (LRFFC) e intraverbais FFC são casos de linguagem receptiva e expressiva, respectivamente, que foram alvos de investigações. A literatura prévia demonstrou que o ensino do intraverbal primeiro foi mais eficiente, no sentido de que produziu um melhor efeito de emergência do LRFFC não ensinado relacionado, contrariando a recomendação de uma literatura tradicional, que sugere que habilidades receptivas, tais como o LRFFC, deveriam ser ensinadas primeiro. A presente pesquisa teve a meta de comparar a eficiência do treino de intraverbais e LRFFC também, considerando os efeitos sobre emergência de repertório não ensinado relacionado em duas crianças com TEA. A diferença em relação à literatura prévia foi que, durante o ensino de LRFFC, o tato (nomeação) de figuras envolvidas também foi ensinado. O propósito foi avaliar se o treino de tato aumentaria a eficiência do LRFFC. Os resultados revelaram que ambas as sequências instrucionais (ensino de LRFFC – sonda de intraverbal; ensino de intraverbal – sonda de LRFFC) estabeleceram a emergência no responder, considerando o repertório não ensinado relacionado para ambos os participantes. Entretanto, o ensino de intraverbal produziu emergência do LRFFC em menor grau para ambos. Os dados foram discutidos no sentido de que o treino de tatos, durante o ensino de LRFFC, provavelmente aumentou sua eficiência e de que habilidades pré-existentes também influenciaram a eficiência do ensino. Research, Society and Development2020-06-25info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/526810.33448/rsd-v9i8.5268Research, Society and Development; Vol. 9 No. 8; e104985268Research, Society and Development; Vol. 9 Núm. 8; e104985268Research, Society and Development; v. 9 n. 8; e1049852682525-3409reponame:Research, Society and Developmentinstname:Universidade Federal de Itajubá (UNIFEI)instacron:UNIFEIenghttps://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/5268/4550Copyright (c) 2020 Daniel Carvalho de Matos, Neylla Cristina Pereira Cordeiro, Bruna Pereira Mendes, Ana Vitória Salomão de Carvalho, Flor de Maria Araújo Mendonça Silva, Wellyson da Cunha Araújo Firmo, Pollianna Galvão Soares de Matoshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessMatos, Daniel Carvalho deCordeiro, Neylla Cristina PereiraMendes, Bruna PereiraCarvalho, Ana Vitória Salomão deSilva, Flor de Maria Araújo MendonçaFirmo, Wellyson da Cunha AraújoMatos, Pollianna Galvão Soares de2020-08-20T18:00:17Zoai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/5268Revistahttps://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/indexPUBhttps://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/oairsd.articles@gmail.com2525-34092525-3409opendoar:2024-01-17T09:28:50.290133Research, Society and Development - Universidade Federal de Itajubá (UNIFEI)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
Eficiencia de la enseñanza del lenguaje expresivo y receptivo en niños con trastorno del espectro autista
Eficiência do ensino de linguagem expressiva e receptiva em crianças com transtorno do espectro autista
title Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
spellingShingle Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
Matos, Daniel Carvalho de
Transtorno do espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Ensino de tatos
Ensino.
Trastorno del espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Enseñanza de tactos
Enseñanza.
Autism spectrum disorder
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Tact training
Teaching.
title_short Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
title_full Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
title_fullStr Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
title_full_unstemmed Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
title_sort Efficiency of expressive and receptive language teaching in children with autism spectrum disorder
author Matos, Daniel Carvalho de
author_facet Matos, Daniel Carvalho de
Cordeiro, Neylla Cristina Pereira
Mendes, Bruna Pereira
Carvalho, Ana Vitória Salomão de
Silva, Flor de Maria Araújo Mendonça
Firmo, Wellyson da Cunha Araújo
Matos, Pollianna Galvão Soares de
author_role author
author2 Cordeiro, Neylla Cristina Pereira
Mendes, Bruna Pereira
Carvalho, Ana Vitória Salomão de
Silva, Flor de Maria Araújo Mendonça
Firmo, Wellyson da Cunha Araújo
Matos, Pollianna Galvão Soares de
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Matos, Daniel Carvalho de
Cordeiro, Neylla Cristina Pereira
Mendes, Bruna Pereira
Carvalho, Ana Vitória Salomão de
Silva, Flor de Maria Araújo Mendonça
Firmo, Wellyson da Cunha Araújo
Matos, Pollianna Galvão Soares de
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Transtorno do espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Ensino de tatos
Ensino.
Trastorno del espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Enseñanza de tactos
Enseñanza.
Autism spectrum disorder
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Tact training
Teaching.
topic Transtorno do espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Ensino de tatos
Ensino.
Trastorno del espectro autista
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Enseñanza de tactos
Enseñanza.
Autism spectrum disorder
Intraverbal FFC
LRFFC
Tact training
Teaching.
description Research in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) investigated the efficiency of receptive and expressive language interventions in learners with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Listener responding by function, feature and class (LRFFC) and intraverbal (FFC) are some types of receptive and expressive language, respectively, which were targets in investigations. The previous literature demonstrated experimentally that teaching intraverbal first is more efficient, in the sense that it produced a better emergence effect of related untaught LRFFC in children with ASD, contrary to the recommendation by a traditional literature, which suggests that receptive skills, such as the LRFFC, should be taught first. The current research had the goal to compare the efficiency of intraverbal and LRFFC training as well, considering the effects on the possible emergence of related untaught repertoire in two children with ASD. The difference from the previous literature was that, during the teaching of LRFFC responses, the tact (labeling) of pictures involved was also taught, considering that this was a recommendation of previous research. The purpose was to assess if tact training would increase the efficiency of LRFFC training. The results showed that both instructional sequences (training LRFFC - probing intraverbal; training intraverbal - probing LRFFC) successfully established emergent responding, regarding the untaught related repertoire for both participants. However, intraverbal training produced emergence of LRFFC to a lesser extent for both. Data were discussed in the sense that tact training during LRFFC training probably increased its efficiency and that preexisting skills, regarding each participant, also influenced the efficiency of teaching.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2020-06-25
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
format article
status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/5268
10.33448/rsd-v9i8.5268
url https://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/5268
identifier_str_mv 10.33448/rsd-v9i8.5268
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://rsdjournal.org/index.php/rsd/article/view/5268/4550
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Research, Society and Development
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Research, Society and Development
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Research, Society and Development; Vol. 9 No. 8; e104985268
Research, Society and Development; Vol. 9 Núm. 8; e104985268
Research, Society and Development; v. 9 n. 8; e104985268
2525-3409
reponame:Research, Society and Development
instname:Universidade Federal de Itajubá (UNIFEI)
instacron:UNIFEI
instname_str Universidade Federal de Itajubá (UNIFEI)
instacron_str UNIFEI
institution UNIFEI
reponame_str Research, Society and Development
collection Research, Society and Development
repository.name.fl_str_mv Research, Society and Development - Universidade Federal de Itajubá (UNIFEI)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv rsd.articles@gmail.com
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