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Feng, Hua; Chou, Wan-Chi; Lee, Gabrielle T. – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2017
This study investigated the effects of tact prompts on the acquisition and retention of divergent intraverbal responding to categorical questions involving conditional discriminations. A 6-year-old boy with autism participated in the study. A multiple probe design across behaviors was used. A tact-prompt procedure was implemented. The results…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Stimuli, Responses
Petursdottir, Anna Ingeborg; Aguilar, Gabriella – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2016
Receptive identification is usually taught in matching-to-sample format, which entails the presentation of an auditory sample stimulus and several visual comparison stimuli in each trial. Conflicting recommendations exist regarding the order of stimulus presentation in matching-to-sample trials. The purpose of this study was to compare acquisition…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Males, Receptive Language, Identification
Marshall, Nigel; Shibazaki, Kagari – Music Education Research, 2011
In this paper, we report on two studies carried out to further explore the level of listening and discriminatory abilities present in very young children through the development of an age appropriate methodology. Working with children aged between 3 and 4 years of age, our first study explored the level of performance achieved on a matching task…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Preschool Children, Listening Skills
Cordes, Sara; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Although young infants have repeatedly demonstrated successful numerosity discrimination across large sets when the number of items in the sets changes twofold (E. M. Brannon, S. Abbott, & D. J. Lutz, 2004; J. N. Wood & E. S. Spelke, 2005; F. Xu & E. S. Spelke, 2000), they consistently fail to discriminate a twofold change in number when one set…
Descriptors: Infants, Number Concepts, Discrimination Learning, Visual Discrimination
Nardini, Marko; Atkinson, Janette; Burgess, Neil – Cognition, 2008
In previous studies, children disoriented in small enclosures used room shape, but not wall colors, to find hidden objects. Their reorientation was said to depend solely on a "geometric module" informationally encapsulated with respect to color. We argue that previous studies did not fully evaluate children's use of color owing to a bias in the…
Descriptors: Object Permanence, Geometric Concepts, Color, Infants
Grow, Laura Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Early and intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) is an approach to treating the behavioral deficits and excesses observed in children with autism spectrum disorders. The magnitude of improvement in the overall functioning of children receiving EIBI has stimulated additional research and widespread clinical dissemination through the publication…
Descriptors: Intervention, Autism, Error Patterns, Teaching Methods
Huttenlocher, Janellen; Lourenco, Stella F. – Developmental Science, 2007
Both animals and human toddlers can find an object in a rectangular enclosure after they have been disoriented. They use geometric cues (relative lengths of walls) to discriminate among different corners (e.g. long wall to the left, short to the right). It has been claimed that this ability is "modular", i.e. exclusively geometric. The present…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Geographic Location, Cues, Geometric Concepts
Brannon, Elizabeth M.; Suanda, Sumarga; Libertus, Klaus – Developmental Science, 2007
Time perception is important for many aspects of human behavior, and a large literature documents that adults represent intervals and that their ability to discriminate temporal intervals is ratio dependent. Here we replicate a recent study by vanMarle and Wynn (2006 ) that used the visual habituation paradigm and demonstrated that temporal…
Descriptors: Intervals, Infants, Discrimination Learning, Time Factors (Learning)
Dib, Nancy; Sturmey, Peter – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2007
Discrete-trial teaching is an instructional method commonly used to teach social and academic skills to children with an autism spectrum disorder. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the indirect effects of discrete-trial teaching on 3 students' stereotypy. Instructions, feedback, modeling, and rehearsal were used to improve 3…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Private Schools, Autism, Check Lists
Gomez, Serafin; Lopez, Francisca; Martin, Carmen Banos; Barnes-Holmes, Yvonne; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot – Psychological Record, 2007
The current study consisted of 2 parts, with the same 4 normally developing 4-yr-old children employed across both parts. The primary aim of Part 1 was to replicate previous research on exemplar training and its impact upon the emergence of repertoires of derived symmetry or mutually entailed relations. In this part of the study, the children were…
Descriptors: Young Children, Responses, Child Behavior, Behavior Theories
Marlier, Luc; Schaal, Benoist – Child Development, 2005
Behavioral responses of 3- to 4-day-old newborns to the odors of various human milk (HM) and formula milk (FM) were examined in paired-choice tests. When both stimuli were nonfamiliar, breast-fed, as well as bottle-fed, infants oriented their head and mouthed more vigorously to HM than to FM. When breast-fed infants were exposed to nonfamiliar HM…
Descriptors: Neonates, Discrimination Learning, Infant Behavior, Nutrition
Casasola, Marianella – Child Development, 2005
Two experiments explored how infants learn to form an abstract categorical representation of support (i.e., on) when habituated to few (i.e., 2) or many (i.e., 6) examples of the relation. When habituated to 2 pairs of objects in a support relation, 14-month-olds, but not 10-month-olds, formed the abstract spatial category (i.e., generalized the…
Descriptors: Infants, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Classification, Habituation
Endress, Ansgar D.; Scholl, Brian J.; Mehler, Jacques – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
Recent research suggests that humans and other animals have sophisticated abilities to extract both statistical dependencies and rule-based regularities from sequences. Most of this research stresses the flexibility and generality of such processes. Here the authors take up an equally important project, namely, to explore the limits of such…
Descriptors: Algebra, Cognitive Ability, Generalization, Infants