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Setting Generalization of Question-Asking by Children With Autism
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1997
Year
Language DevelopmentEducationNeurodiversitySocial Communication DisorderChild LanguageExpressive Language DevelopmentCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionAutismApplied Behavior AnalysisBehavioral IssueLanguage StudiesDevelopmental DisorderExpressive VocabularyChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceSocial SkillsDemonstrated GeneralizationSocial Skill TrainingSpecial Education
We examined whether motivational procedures incorporated into teaching question-asking to children with autism, who lack verbal initiations, would result in generalization without additional teaching, prompting, or reinforcement in other settings. Specifically, we assessed whether such children could learn to use questions and whether the spontaneous use of question-asking would generalize across stimuli, settings, and people. All children learned to use questions in relation to items they had previously been unable to label and demonstrated generalization of spontaneous question-asking to new items and to their home environments with their mothers, with concomitant gains in expressive vocabulary. Results were discussed in terms of teaching response strategies, such as question-asking, to promote spontaneous child-initiated social interactions and expressive language development.