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Title: Stimulus Control and Language


1
Stimulus Control and Language
2
Why is Understanding Stimulus Control so
Important in Teaching Children with Autism?
  • Because the aim of virtually all instruction is
    to get specific responses to occur reliably under
    particular antecedent stimulus conditions, all
    instructional techniques involve manipulations of
    antecedent stimuli, along with manipulations of
    consequent stimuli (Green, 2001, p. 74)

3
Why is Understanding Stimulus Control so
Important in Teaching Children with Autism?
  • Spradlin and Brady (1999) conceptualized the
    impairments in language and social skills in
    children with autism
  • as limitations in the development of stimulus
    control

4
Social Skill Deficiencies
  • Appear very early in life
  • as young as several months old
  • By 1-year old many showed
  • Less eye contact
  • Imitate less
  • Less likely to point out objects to others
  • Failed to engage in reciprocal games such as
    pat-a-cake and peek-a-boo
  • Less symbolic or make beileve play
  • Less likely to recognize social emotional
    responses in other people

5
Communication Skill Deficits
  • Less likely to
  • demonstrate multiple nonverbal communicative
    behavior such as joint attention
  • Response to names verbal directions
  • More likely to request than label

6
Spradlin and Brady (1999)
  • Proper stimulus control may not develop in
    children with autism because social stimuli do
    not function as reinforcers
  • It has been suggested that the patterns of the
    human face and physical contact serve as primary
    reinforcers for typically developing infants
  • Some children with autism avoid such contact
  • Do faces and hugging not serve as reinforcers
    from infancy?
  • What impact would this have on the development of
    other reinforcers? Social interactions?
    Language?
  • Proper stimulus control may not develop because
    children with autism require more consistent
    relationships between antecedents, responses, and
    consequences

7
Classical Conditioning Limitations
  • Infants developed conditioned responses by
    pairing various social stimuli with stimuli that
    elicited the rooting response.
  • E.g., mothers voice or even footstep
  • Perhaps children with autism fail to develop such
    conditioned responses
  • The natural world is inconsistent in its pairing
    of social stimulus with unconditioned stimuli
  • Perhaps children with autism require more
    consistent pairings than other infants for
    conditioning to occur or may be more likely to be
    conditioned to nonsocial aspects of their
    physical environment.

8
Limitations in Learning Simple Discrimination
  • Perhaps children with autism require that a
    higher percentage of responses in the presence of
    a stimulus be followed by the same consequence,
    if they are to come under the control of that
    stimulus.
  • Might explain why children with autism prefer
    playing with objects than people
  • Contingencies of physical world may be more
    reliable that the contingencies of the social
    world.
  • E.g., child gestures to parent may or may not be
    picked up. Child reaches out for object, always
    results in obtaining object

9
Limitations in Learning Simple Discrimination
  • Overselectivity
  • Lovaas found that children with autism often
    learn to respond to some of the stimulus but not
    to all of the stimulus of a complex stimulus
  • Sunberg Partington (Cond Disc)
  • Truck in the presence of a truck and the spoken
    word truck
  • Typically developing child may respond truck
    in the presence of just a truck after a few
    pairings, a child with autism may learn to only
    response truck in the presence of the spoken
    word

10
Limitations in Learning Simple Conditional
Discrimination
  • Most conventional stimulus control is conditional
  • In the presence of discriminative stimulus a
    specific response will be reinforced only when
    conditional stimuli are present.
  • Typically developing children master this easily
    and their behavior is reinforced for a high
    percentage of response they make in the presence
    of such discriminative stimuli
  • Children with autism fail to make that
    conditional discrimination and may ultimately
    extinguish all responses to the discriminative
    stimuli
  • Social behavior saying come play with me in
    the presence of Mom who is not otherwise engaged.
    Child with autism my try to initiate play all at
    the wrong times and eventually stop trying. Or
    initiate greetings all at the wrong times.

11
Social World
Social contingencies are often inconsistent
ReinforcerBeing held by Mom
SD Mom
Response Reach up
But mom may not always hold you when you reach
up And the way mom looks, smells, sounds, feels,
and holds you may be different
12
Non-social World
  • Contingencies in the nonsocial physical world
    may be more consistent and reliable
  • So may be more easily learned by children with
    autism
  • Might explain why children with autism prefer
    playing with objects over people

Reinforcer Feel object in hand
Response Reach out
SD Object
Getting to hold the object is consistent and the
object is consistently the same
13
Limitations in Stimulus Class Acquisition
  • Written spoken picture
  • Word ? word ? of ?
    actual dog
  • DOG DOG a dog
  • Stimuli are linked by shared function not
    necessarily physical properties
  • Children with autism are limited in their
    development of stimulus classes consisting of
    members without defining physical properties
  • Leads to substantial limitations in language
    development
  • Can imitate speech but that speech might have no
    relation to the objects and events that are
    typically related to that speech
  • Or read but not understand what he is reading

14
Limitations in the Recombination of Minimal
Stimulus-Response Units
  • Much of our behavior involves responding
    appropriately to relatively novel situations
  • Generalized imitation
  • Little similarity between what a child sees and
    the specific stimulus produced by the imitator's
    own behavior
  • Perhaps the development of generalized imitation
    occurs as the development of instruction
    following behavior
  • Multiple exemplar training results in learning a
    number of minimal stimulus response units when
    than may be recombined within the imitator is
    presented a novel combination of responses for
    imitation
  • Children with autism tend to imitate objects
    easier than people
  • Leads to substantial social skill deficit

15
Limitations in the Recombination of Minimal
Stimulus-Response Units
  • Much of our behavior involves responding
    appropriately to relatively novel situations
  • Following a verbal instruction
  • By 2, most children can follow 3-word directions
  • Made on the basis of conditional discriminations
  • Children who can recombine units will be more
    effective because they have the appropriate
    word-object and word-action equivalences.
  • Recombinations of conditional discriminations and
    equivalences classes may be limited in children
    with autism
  • Child can complete complex chains of behavior if
    the chains were invariant but would fail to
    perform a series of responses on the basis of a
    novel instruction.

16
Use of Operant Teaching Methods
  • Of course we can teach children with autism by
    establishing stimulus control by structuring
    consistent relations between specified stimuli
    behavior and consequences

17
Procedures to Overcome Basic Reinforcers Problems
  • Classical conditioning and building motivational
    systems

18
Basic Discrimination Training Procedures
  • Establishing attending skills and eye contact
    through prompting and reinforcement
  • What type of prompts??

19
Establishing New Forms of Conditional Stimulus
Control
  • Imitation
  • Direction following

20
Establishing New Forms of Conditional Stimulus
Control
  • Identity matching (single mode)
  • Visual visual
  • Auditory auditory
  • Arbitrary matching (multimodal)
  • Visual auditory
  • Auditory visual

21
Teaching Recombination of Stimulus-Response Units
  • Teach direction following to promote
    recombination's
  • Give me, go get, put on
  • Plane, paper, coat
  • Test for generalization of any give me, go get,
    and put on instruction

22
Concept Formation
  • Complex stimulus control that results in
  • Generalization within a class of stimuli and
  • Discrimination between classes of stimuli

23
Stimulus Class (Cooper et al., 2007)
  • AKA Concept
  • Set of stimuli that occasion a common response

These would probably be in the same stimulus
class for most people
24
Types of Stimulus Classes (Fields Reeve, 2000)
  • Perceptual Class
  • Stimuli in the set share some physical
    characteristics
  • Examples dogs, flowers, children, chairs, cars,
    etc.
  • Relational Class
  • Stimuli in the set characterize some abstract
    relationship
  • Example examples of bigger than,
    same/different
  • Equivalence Class
  • Stimuli do NOT share any physical characteristics
    (Stimuli go together just because society says
    so)
  • Example numeral 1 written one spoken WUN
  • Fields, L., Reeve, K. F. (2000). Synthesizing
    equivalence classes and natural categories from
    perceptual and relational classes. In J. C.
    Leslie, D. Blackman (Eds.). Experimental and
    applied analysis of human behavior (pp. 59-84).
    Reno, NV Context Press.

25
Equivalence Classes Definition
  • a finite group of physically disparate stimuli
    (no perceptual similarity)
  • stimuli become related solely as a function of
    teaching (Fields, Adams, Buffington, Yang,
    Verhave, 1996 Fields, Reeve, Adams, Brown,
    Verhave, 1991 Sidman Tailby, 1982 Sidman,
    1994)
  • Emergence of accurate responding to untrained and
    nonreinforced stimulus-stimulus relations
  • Following the reinforcement of responses to some
    stimulus-stimulus relations
  • An equivalence class must contain at least three
    stimuli (but often has many more)

26
Example Stimuli in a 3-Member Equivalence Class
  • Written word
  • Spoken word
  • A picture

DOG
DOG
27
Another Example
CAT
  • Written word
  • Spoken word
  • A picture

CAT
28
Stimulus Equivalence
  • Train
  • Emergent Relations
  • Symmetry B ? A and C?B
  • Transitivity A ? C
  • Equivalence C ? A

DOG
dog
B
C
A
29
Teaching Testing Summary
  • We TAUGHT 2 conditional relations
  • A ? B
  • B ? C
  • We TESTED for 4 EMERGENT (DERIVED) relations
  • B ? A symmetry
  • C ? B symmetry
  • A ? C transitivity
  • C ? A equivalence
  • (Another set of tests for REFLEXIVITY (IDENTITY)
    is often omitted if the learner already has this
    skill in her repertoire A ? A B ? B
    C ? C )

30
Equivalence Class Training Testing Procedures
  • Usually taught and tested with arbitrary
    match-to-sample (MTS)
  • Symbolic notation is used to outline
    training/testing procedures
  • A, B, C, N represent each of the disparate
    stimuli that will make up the class
  • 1, 2, 3, etc. notate the number of classes to be
    established
  • Thus, A1 first stimulus in class 1 B3 second
    stimulus in class 3 etc.

31
Training Testing Procedures
  • To establish equivalence classes, at least two
    potential classes must be trained concurrently
  • training establishes both substitutability of all
    stimuli within a particular equivalence class in
    addition to discrimination between classes

32
Training Testing Procedures
  • To establish equivalence classes with three
    members, at least two stimulus-stimulus relations
    must be trained for each potential class
  • Lets consider our DOG and CAT potential
    equivalence classes
  • First train the AB relation (given stimulus A
    select stimulus B)
  • the word DOG (A1) is presented as a sample
  • The positive comparison (Co) would be the spoken
    word dog (B1) (Selection would result in positive
    feedback or reinforcement)
  • the negative comparison (Co-) would be the spoken
    word cat (B2) (Selection would result in
    corrective feedback or no reinforcement)

33
Training AB relation
DOG
A1
DOG
CAT
B1
B2
34
Training Testing Procedures
  • To train the AB relation
  • word CAT (A2) is presented as a sample
  • positive comparison (Co) would be the spoken
    word cat (B2) (Selection would result in positive
    feedback or reinforcement)
  • negative comparison (Co-) would be the spoken
    word dog (B2) (Selection would result in
    corrective feedback or extinction)

35
Training AB relation
CAT
A2
DOG
CAT
B1
B2
36
Training Testing Procedures
  • Once responding is 100 correct, we can conclude
    AB conditional relation has been learned
  • At this point we can either continue training
    more conditional discriminations or we can do our
    first test for an EMERGENT (DERIVED) RELATION (a
    conditional discrimination that emerges with no
    direct training history)
  • If the learner knows that A goes with B, can
    they demonstrate the reverse? (B goes with A)
  • This emergent relation shows SYMMETRY

37
TESTING BA symmetry relation
CAT
B2
CAT
DOG
A1
A2
38
TESTING BA symmetry relation
DOG
B1
CAT
DOG
A1
A2
39
Training Testing Procedures
  • the BA conditional relation is called symmetry
    because the relation is a mirror image or
    reversal of the one directly trained (i.e., AB
    then BA)
  • At this point, we can continue training another
    conditional discrimination
  • Lets train the BC conditional relation

40
Training BC relation
DOG
B1
C2
C1
41
Training BC relation
CAT
B2
C2
C1
42
Training Testing Procedures
  • Once the BC conditional relation is learned, we
    can do our 2nd test for an EMERGENT (DERIVED)
    RELATION
  • If the learner knows that B goes with C, can
    they demonstrate the reverse? (C goes with B)
  • This emergent relation would show a SECOND
    SYMMETRY relation

43
TESTING CB symmetry relation
C1
DOG
CAT
B1
B2
44
TESTING CB symmetry relation
C2
DOG
CAT
B1
B2
45
Training Testing Procedures
  • If CB symmetry TEST responding is 100 correct,
    we can continue testing for another EMERGENT
    (DERIVED) RELATION
  • If the learner knows that A goes with B, and B
    goes with C, can they demonstrate that A goes
    with C?
  • This emergent relation would show a TRANSITIVE
    relation

46
TESTING AC transitive relation
DOG
A1
C2
C1
47
TESTING AC transitive relation
CAT
A2
C2
C1
48
Training Testing Procedures
  • If the AC transitive TEST responding is 100
    correct, we have one last test for another
    EMERGENT (DERIVED) RELATION
  • If the learner knows that A goes with B, and B
    goes with C, can they demonstrate that C goes
    with A?
  • This emergent relation would shows a combination
    of symmetry and transitivity it is called an
    EQUIVALENCE relation

49
TESTING CA equivalence relation
C1
CAT
DOG
A2
A1
50
TESTING CA equivalence relation
C2
CAT
DOG
A2
A1
51
Teaching Testing Summary
  • We TAUGHT 2 conditional relations
  • A ? B
  • B ? C
  • We TESTED for 4 EMERGENT (DERIVED) relations
  • B ? A symmetry
  • C ? B symmetry
  • A ? C transitivity
  • C ? A equivalence
  • (Another set of tests for REFLEXIVITY (IDENTITY)
    is often omitted if the learner already has this
    skill in her repertoire A ? A B ? B
    C ? C )

52
Teaching Stimulus Classes
  • We need to do a better job at this
  • Teach
  • picture ? object ? spoken word
  • Test spoken word sets the occasion for the
    picture to ensure an equivalence class has been
    established

53
Children with Autism Have Difficulty Learning
Concepts (Reeve et al., 2007)
  • May be due to failure to respond to a wide range
    of stimuli
  • If a child only learns dog in the presence of 2
    dogs, then he might not learn the accurate
    concept dog why?
  • May be due to failure to respond to multiple
    components of stimuli
  • If a child only attends to four legs as a feature
    of dog, then he will not learn the accurate
    concept dog why?

54
Overselectivity
  • Children with autism often respond to some parts,
    but not all parts, of a complex stimulus
  • Lovaas, Schreibman, Koegel, and Rehm (1971)
  • When parts of the stimulus were then presented
    alone
  • Typically developing children responded to the
    complex stimulus and single stimuli similarly
  • Children with autism responded primarily to only
    one of the stimuli (it differed across children
    which one)

Reinforcer candy
Response Press lever
55
Limitations in Equivalence Class Acquisition
  • How would this affect language development?
  • Child may be able to imitate speech, but it might
    have no relation to the objects and events
    typically related to it
  • Relationship between dog and dog, but no
    relationship between dog and
  • Or read but not understand what he is reading
  • Relationship between DOG and dog, but no
    relationship between DOG and

56
Jackson, Williams, and Biesbrouck (2006)
  • In general, studies show that people with basic
    language abilities demonstrate equivalence
    relations and those that dont do not
  • It is not known if
  • Language is necessary for the formation of
    equivalence classes OR
  • The formation of equivalence classes plays a role
    in the development of language

57
So, How Should We Teach?
  • There are different ways to present stimuli, but
    research suggests that
  • Simultaneous Discrimination arrangement produces
    faster discrimination and generalization
  • Simultaneous Discrimination Arrangement
  • SD and S? are presented together at same time
  • Successive Discrimination Arrangement
  • SD and S? are presented separately

58
Green (2001)
  • Present the comparisons in an array on a board
    (Velcro!)
  • Begin each trial with having the learner make an
    observing response (look at teacher or point to
    sample)
  • Teach the learner to point rather than put with
    same
  • Have at least 3 comparisons on every trial
  • Present the samples unsystematically. A good
    rule of thumb is dont present the same sample
    more than 2x in a row.
  • Limit the auditory stimulus to the target word
    (i.e., dont say touch, point to)

59
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60
Green (2001)
  • Present each sample equally often.
  • All comparisons should be in the field during
    every trial.
  • Each comparison should be the correct answer for
    only 1 sample.
  • Each comparison should be the incorrect answer
    equally often.
  • The number of comparisons in the field should
    equal the number of samples presented in a block
    of trials.
  • Within a session of trials, a different sample
    should be presented on each trial, but the same
    comparisons should appear on every trial.
  • Each comparison should be the correct response
    for only one sample, and should be the incorrect
    response equally often.
  • The position of the correct comparison should
    vary from trial to trial.
  • Between trials, rearrange the comparison stimuli
    out of sight
  • Use errorless teaching methods (most-to-least
    prompting and prompt fading)

61
Green (2001)
62
References
  • Chavez-Brown, M., Scott, J., Ross, D. (2005).
    Antecedent selection Comparing simplified and
    typical verbal antecedents for children with
    autism. Journal of Behavioral Education, 14,
    153-165.
  • Cooper, J. O., Heron, T. E., Heward, W. L.
    (2007). Applied behavior analysis. Upper Saddle
    River, NJ Pearson Prentice Hall.
  • Fields, L., Reeve, K. F. (2000). Synthesizing
    equivalence classes and natural categories from
    perceptual and relational classes. In J. C.
    Leslie, D. Blackman (Eds.). Experimental and
    applied analysis of human behavior (pp. 59-84).
    Reno, NV Context Press.
  • Green, G. (2001). Behavior analytic instruction
    for learners with autism Advances in stimulus
    control technology. Focus on Autism and Other
    Developmental Disabilities, 16, 72-85.
  • Laraway, S. Snycerski, S., Michael, J., Poling,
    A. (2003). Motivating operations and terms to
    describe them Some further refinements.
    Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 36,
    407-414.
  • Lovaas, O. I., Schreibman, L., Koegel, R.,
    Rehm, R. (1971). Selective responding by
    autistic children to multiple sensory input.
    Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 77, 211-222.
  • Reeve, K. F., Reeve, S. A., Brown, J. L.
    (2007, August). Concept formation in children
    with autism What do we know about it? Paper
    presented at 3rd annual conference of the New
    Jersey Association for Behavior Analysis, Rutgers
    University.
  • Spradlin, J. E., Brady, N. C. (1999). Early
    childhood autism and stimulus control. In P. M.
    Ghezzi, W. L. Williams, J. E. Carr (Eds.),
    Autism Behavior analytic perspectives (pp.
    49-65). Reno, NV Context Press.
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