Pierce K, Schreibman L
Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0109, USA.
J Appl Behav Anal. 1995 Fall;28(3):285-95. doi: 10.1901/jaba.1995.28-285.
Two children with autism were taught to engage in a variety of complex social behaviors using peer-implemented pivotal response training (PRT), a set of procedures designed to increase motivation and promote generalization. Typical peers were taught to implement PRT strategies by modeling, role playing, and didactic instruction. After training, peers implemented the procedures in the absence of direct supervision in a classroom environment. After the intervention, both children with autism maintained prolonged interactions with the peer, initiated play and conversations, and increased engagement in language and joint attention behaviors. In addition, teachers reported positive changes in social behavior, with the largest increases in peer-preferred social behavior. Further, these effects showed generality and maintenance. Implications of these findings are discussed.
两名患有自闭症的儿童通过同伴实施的关键反应训练(PRT)学会了参与各种复杂的社交行为,这是一套旨在增强动机并促进泛化的程序。通过示范、角色扮演和讲授式指导,教会典型发展的同伴实施PRT策略。训练后,同伴在课堂环境中无需直接监督即可实施这些程序。干预后,两名自闭症儿童都与同伴保持了长时间的互动,发起了游戏和对话,并增加了对语言和共同注意行为的参与度。此外,教师报告了社交行为的积极变化,其中同伴偏好的社交行为增加最多。此外,这些效果具有普遍性和持续性。本文讨论了这些研究结果的意义。