Sigafoos Jeff, O'Reilly Mark, Seely-York Sue, Edrisinha Chaturi
Department of Special Education, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712-1290, USA.
Res Dev Disabil. 2004 Jul-Aug;25(4):371-83. doi: 10.1016/j.ridd.2003.07.002.
Students with autism and related developmental disabilities who do not speak are often taught to use some type of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) system, such as a voice output communication aid (VOCA). One problem with such devices is that the person may be unable to communicate when the device is not readily accessible. We first taught three nonverbal students with autism to use a VOCA to request access to preferred items. Following this initial acquisition phase, however, none of the students would locate their VOCA when it was not within reach. A least-to-most prompting procedure was implemented to teach the students to locate their AAC device. The effectiveness of this procedure for teaching VOCA location skills was evaluated in a delayed multiple-baseline across subjects design. The results showed that the intervention was effective in teaching the students to locate their AAC device when they needed it to request access to preferred objects. Teaching VOCA location skills may be a useful and necessary component in AAC interventions for some people with developmental disabilities.
不会说话的自闭症及相关发育障碍学生通常会被教导使用某种类型的辅助和替代沟通(AAC)系统,比如语音输出沟通辅助设备(VOCA)。这类设备存在的一个问题是,当设备无法随时使用时,使用者可能就无法进行沟通。我们首先教了三名不会说话的自闭症学生使用VOCA来请求获取他们喜欢的物品。然而,在这个初始习得阶段之后,当VOCA不在够得着的范围内时,没有一个学生会去找到它。于是实施了一种从最少提示到最多提示的程序来教学生找到他们的AAC设备。在一项跨被试延迟多基线设计中评估了该程序教授VOCA定位技能的有效性。结果表明,该干预有效地教会了学生在需要使用VOCA请求获取喜欢的物品时找到它。对于一些发育障碍患者而言,教授VOCA定位技能可能是AAC干预中一项有用且必要的内容。