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THE ROLE OF RESPONSE DELAY IN IMPROVING THE DISCRIMINATION PERFORMANCE OF AUTISTIC CHILDREN
31
Citations
20
References
1982
Year
Child PsychologyBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceCognitive DevelopmentAutistic ChildrenDiscrimination PerformanceAutismSpecial EducationEducationSocial SciencesBehavioral IssueDevelopmental DisorderResponse Delay RequirementGlobal Developmental DelayPsychologyNeurodiversity
This study investigated the influence of a response delay requirement on the discrimination performance of autistic children. In the context of a multiple baseline design with subsequent repeated reversals, two conditions were compared: a no-response-delay condition, where the child was allowed to make the target response immediately after presentation of the discriminative stimulus versus a response-delay condition, where the target response was permitted three seconds following the discriminative stimulus when the therapist would signal the child to respond. The results showed that the response-delay condition produced higher levels of correct responding than the no-response-delay condition. In addition, teachers in the research setting rated the response-delay procedure to be a practical and effective teaching technique that could be implemented in a classroom setting. The results were discussed in relation to the literature on impulsivity, and were interpreted as indicating that the response-delay procedure provides a valuable technique for teaching autistic children.
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1971 | 1.4K | |
1971 | 495 | |
1976 | 426 | |
1965 | 420 | |
1977 | 272 | |
1971 | 235 | |
1973 | 152 | |
1973 | 88 | |
1972 | 87 | |
1966 | 59 |
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