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EvidenceBased Early Intervention

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Title: EvidenceBased Early Intervention


1
Evidence-Based Early Intervention
  • Rebecca Landa, Ph.D., CCC-SLP
  • Director, Center for Autism and Related Disorders
  • Kennedy Krieger Institute
  • landa_at_kennedykrieger.org
  • Cincinnati, Ohio
  • November 7, 2008

2
Overview
  • I. Thinking about learning
  • II. Thinking about how to establish meaning for
    children with ASD
  • III. Data from our NIH-funded STAART early
    intervention study for 2-year-olds
  • IV. Building conceptualization through event
    representations

3
Thinking about learning
4
Learning
Autism Poor generalization, problem seeing
beyond the immediate
Autism Sticky attention, focused on restricted
interests, attention to non-salient details
Supported by a host of cognitive affective
processes
Autism self-absorbed, little excites them
especially within social domain
Autism Concrete, poor gist formation, poor
integration of information (islets of information)
Autism Limited exploration, repetitive
behavior, exploration gets fixated on parts
Autism Hard to establish, hard to sustain,
limited spontaneity
5
Attention to non-salient detail (local vs global
processing)
6
Social Orienting, Response to NV Joint Attention
Cues
Sullivan et al. (2007). Journal of Autism and
Developmental Disorders
7
Also
  • Difficulty sensing and describing own emotion
  • Recognizing emotion in others
  • Decoding facial and gesture cues
  • Regulating own emotional state

8
Self Regulation
9
Attention and Motivation
Exploration, Engagement, Meaning, Opportunity
10
Attention and Motivation
Exploration, Engagement, Meaning, Opportunity
11
Learning is impeded by constraints
12
Dealing with Constraints through Scaffolding
  • Scaffolding
  • Understanding the childs constraints within each
    of the circles
  • Providing external supports through simplifying
    the materials and sequence of events
  • Task analysis
  • Simplifying the options and distance
  • Increasing the salience (shake the toy, make it
    brightly colored, reduce distractions)

13
Scaffolding
Environmental engineering Limited, sensible
options relevant to tx target Objects that make
sense in context, motivating to engage
with Salience CHEESE, Elmos mouth Model red
or green Opportunity to experience it Lingering
(imitate child topic maintenance) Sequence of
meaningful, related events Gesture cues for
target word
14
Dealing with Constraints
  • Scaffolding
  • Making relationships more obvious
  • Visual input augmentation
  • Predictability routines and scripts
  • Prompting
  • Modeling (all or part of the response)
  • Intraverbals
  • Hints (You can say____)
  • Fill in the blank Its a _____
  • Questions
  • I wonder whose turn it is?

15
Instructional Strategies Different ways of
Scaffolding to Optimize Learning
  • Discrete trial
  • Pivotal Response teaching, Milieu teaching
  • Joint Action Routines
  • Engineering of treatment space
  • Visual input augmentation
  • Augmentative communication system (PECS, sign,
    etc.)
  • Sensory-based practices

Lots of technical overlap, but variation in
aspects of implementation that could affect
learning in different ways for different children
16
Discrete Trial Teaching ABC sequence Discriminiti
ve stimulus Adult-chosen task Repeated
trials Task analyzed Reward unrelated to
behavior Disembedded from context Prompt
hierarchy At table
Pivotal Response Teaching ABC sequence Varied
antecedents Chosen-chosen task Interspersed
targets Simplified activities, comm tempt Natural
reward Embedded in context Prompt hierarchy In
natural context
17
More about Learning Insights into what the
child brings to the learning opportunity
18
Features of Typical Development
  • SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT
  • Social responsiveness
  • Social initiation
  • Social reciprocity (affect, imitation)
  • Flexible, adaptive
  • COMMUNICATION
  • Intentionality and initiative
  • Diversity flexibility of form (gesture, sounds,
    words)
  • Spontaneity
  • Integration with gaze and affect and gesture
  • PLAY
  • Purposeful, diverse, directed to others, action
    sequences, symbolic

19
Videoclips, watch for what the child brings to
the learning opportunity
  • What is salient to the child?
  • What does child read in another persons face,
    hands?
  • What is the evidence for flexibility and
    stability of behavior?

20
Seeing these features at 14 months of age
Attention, Motivation, Exploration,
Engagement, Meaning, Opportunity
21
Figuring out what to do with novel objects 8
months old
Watch the experimentation Slow Fast Both
hands Single handed
22
Incidental learninginvolving another person (10
months old)
23
Concept Formation in 14-month-old
  • Attention Awareness of objects and others
    actions on objects, attention shifting, joint
    attention for mapping object labels
  • Motivation and self-regulation
  • Exploration of object (memory, motor planning and
    sequencing skills)
  • Engagement (Imitation of novel actions on objects
    (visual reference,)
  • Meaning visual referencing skills, joint
    attention for mapping object labels and
    integrating this label during engagement with
    object
  • Opportunity

24
Connectivity Building concepts
  • Creating opportunity through context objects
    and relationships
  • Actions on objects
  • Diversity of action
  • Active comparison between multiple exemplars
  • Commonalities across changing exemplars
  • Introduction of novelty
  • Spontaneous social monitoring
  • Your notion of this conceptmine

25
Learning in ASD
26
Learning Process
  • Attention objects, not people
  • Motivation low until object of special interest
    was used
  • Exploration none at first, grab onto the ring
    stacker
  • Engagement watch with scaffolds, then learns to
    wait
  • Meaning none at first, then connects the parts
    of the game and the reward
  • Opportunity realizes the event sequence, begins
    to take part in it, creates more opportunities
    for himself to learn

27
Scaffolds
  • Environmental engineering
  • Salience (drama)
  • Task analysis
  • Proximity
  • Motivating use objects of interest to child
  • Making relationships obvious
  • Moves object to get him to visually track it
    (attention to her head)
  • Routine, repeat the sequence, build the
    expectation (memory and feeling of the movement)
    and awareness that he could elicit his reward
  • Prompts
  • Model ah
  • Gestural cue hands with palms up as though
    expecting to catch the ring

28
How the world sees a child with autism as a
learner
autism
DD
TD
29
Compartmentalizing Development
Language
Motor, Sensory
Social, emotional
Cognition, perception
Discrete trials epochs of de-contextualized
events
30
Calls for instruction embedded within a
meaningful context, designed to facilitate
integration of developmental systems
31
Constructing an Intervention Program to Maximize
Outcomes in Children with ASD
32
Elements
  • Content of the intervention (curriculum, childs
    specific goals)
  • Instructional strategies
  • ABA DTT, PRT, Incidental teaching
  • Sensory social routines
  • Environmental engineering
  • Overarching structure
  • Theme, Unit, Activities, Materials
  • Event representations
  • Core targets
  • Intensity

Integrate these
33
Instruction
34
Instructional Content
35
When we think about treatment goals for ASD in
EI, we think about
  • Getting to speech (match, sort, receptive
    vocabulary ID, vocal and verbal imitation,
    labeling)
  • Readiness to learn (compliance, basic skills)
  • Imitation
  • Play
  • Pre-academics (color, shape, counting)
  • If enlightened, social cognition and social
    affect

36
Lets step back and think about what we are
actually hoping to develop
37
Targeting
  • Aspects of cognition
  • Salience
  • Flexible categories
  • Conceptualization
  • Networked information (multi-modal)
  • Gist formation and integration
  • Grammar
  • Communication social use
  • Literacy (minimize hyperlexia by building a
    strong conceptual base)

38
Core goals
  • Social
  • Initiation
  • Responsiveness (RJA, response to name, response
    to less and less explicit cues)
  • Turn-taking
  • Imitation
  • Affect range and sharing
  • Person recognition
  • Emotion recognition - empathy
  • Showing, sharing

39
Core Goals (I will point these out in videos
later)
  • Language
  • Categories and Concepts
  • Symbols words, gestures, icons, printed words
  • Representing a variety of semantic categories
    (location, agency, objects, verbs, pronouns,
    pointing words)
  • Word combinations and semantic relations
  • Communicative functions
  • Play
  • Objects that go together
  • Functional play
  • Symbolic play
  • Imaginative play

40
Core Goals
  • Self regulation
  • Self entertainment
  • Mood regulation
  • Pre-literacy
  • Awareness of symbol-meaning relationship
  • Rhyming
  • Exposure to books
  • Interact with the reading process
  • Whats a sound, word

41
Key principle
  • System, connectivity, integration, relatedness
  • Continuous flow of interaction and affective
    relatedness
  • Creates problem solving and pattern recognition
    preverbal sense of self
  • Thinker vs memorizer

42
Why? Because this child
  • Will have to use the foundation we build now to
  • Facilitate implicit learning
  • Function in novel situations, deal with
    unpredictability
  • Speed processing
  • Succeed academically
  • Communicate
  • Solve problems
  • Develop friendships

43
Premise
  • We are interested in shoring up an integrated
    developmental system (teach basic skills in a
    strategic way to build conceptualization)
  • Inseparable cognitive, social, language, motor,
    sensory, perceptual systems
  • Help build cognitive structures based on everyday
    events and their actions within those events
  • forming event representations
  • That is, cognition is shaped and grounded, or
    contextualized by experience

44
How do we accomplish this?
45
Peer into the childs world
  • Objects
  • People
  • Actions
  • Do it again (repetition, predictability,
    surprise)
  • Relationships between objects, people
  • Engagement
  • I can be like you putting it on for size
  • Silly

46
Achievements Intervention Model
  • Overarching goal Build Networks of Meaning
  • Using overall structure of themes
  • Activity-based learning opportunities and
    building cognitive templates for meaning
    sequences and relationships (Routines)
  • Carefully chosen objects affordances for actions
    and relationships

47
Our Intervention Model Some key ingredients
  • Redundancy and novelty (materials, networked
    activities, core vocabulary and action schema)
  • Context
  • Ecological validity (makes sense) (multiple
    exposures)
  • Use of stories to forecast the event sequence and
    illustrate relationships
  • Event representation and daily life (books,
    activities)
  • Comfort zone
  • Speed How to accelerate learning? Working from
    familiar to novel create predictability
    Interactive initiation and responsivity
    (curriculum, materials, activiities)
  • Density/intensity opportunities

48
  • Themes
  • Units
  • Activities
  • Materials

49
Themes
  • Overarching frame for teaching new skills
  • Concepts
  • Actions
  • Ideas
  • Must be relevant to childs world
  • Examples
  • About me (self-other, body parts, getting
    dressed)
  • The community (shopping, post office, fire
    station)
  • Animals (domestic, farm, zoo, aquarium)

50
Units
  • Next level of specificity for contextualizing the
    concepts to be taught
  • Select books for use at this level
  • All books in the unit will be related to the
    theme and expose child to core concepts
    (expressed through words, actions, people,
    objects)

51
Activities
  • Used to engage the child
  • Multiple activities per component of schedule
  • Permits activity-based learning (honing
    attention, integrating modalities, experience
    leads to knowledge)

52
Materials
  • Selected based on relevance to story and your
    ability to extend the core concepts
  • Selected based on affordances and ability to
    motivate the children

53
Objects A Conduit for Building Meaning
54
Affordances
  • What does the object/person afford?
  • The perceptual features and the roles that the
    object/person plays will define these at first.
  • Over time, and with increased flexibility, the
    range of affordances and relationships between
    objects (and people and objects) increases.

55
Consider features of
  • Objects
  • Existing motor patterns with and without objects
  • Motor patterns in imitated movements

56
Routines A conduit for building meaning
57
Routines
  • Sequence of events that are repeated often
  • Become automatic and require little effort to
    perform
  • Consist of actions and/or language
  • Action and language occur in same combination and
    order each time

58
Routines
  • The childs encounter with novelty, outside of
    routines, would be unlikely to lead to learning,
    and may elicit unwanted response (drift of
    attention, tantrum)
  • Routines constitute Language Acquisition Support
    System (Bruner)
  • Routines have acts, act sequences, rules, goals,
    and interchangeable roles

59
Within a familiar routine (well engineered)
Attention Eye contact Spontaneous initiation of
communication Spoken language Shared positive
affect Fun, relaxed Now incorporate words/songs/
gestures to connect meaning to story
60
Routines form the basis for how to cognitively
represent experience with events
61
Event Representations
  • Cognitive structures are formed, based on
    experience, that represent events (mind seems
    predisposed to organize cognitions of experience
    in a particular way)
  • These representations of everyday experience
    forms the basis for cognitive operations (Grocery
    shopping)
  • Over time, representations become more abstract,
    enabling child to perform in novel contexts and
    on novel, abstract tasks with the same
    flexibility as they do in everyday activities.

62
Event Representation Example of expanding play
and then language
63
How are event representations structured?
  • Sequences and relationships, some more temporally
    or causally dependent than others (restaurant
    (formal sit down restaurant vs buffet) vs
    birthday party)
  • This event representation translates into mental
    scripts that we can describe, and this is what
    narratives are based on
  • Script knowledge enables you to operate on
    automatic pilot and concentrate on the novelty

64
Event Representations
  • Made up of slots and categories of event
    information such as
  • Actors (teachers and students)
  • Actions (put belongings in cubby, go to play
    center)
  • Props (cubby, picture, toys, bins)
  • Allows you to mold the event to accomplish your
    teaching aims

65
Building event representation/script
  • Cognitive template for events, encoding social
    and communicative/language sequences
  • Eases cognitive-linguistic load
  • Promotes predictions (anticipation) and
    socially appropriate behavior
  • Constrain the possibilities, and hence,
    facilitate appropriate behavior
  • Memory aids do this then this or say this, and
    then that will happen

66
Every experience is a moving force. Its value
can be judged only on the ground of what it moves
toward and into (Dewey, 1976).
67
Evidence-based InterventionandInsights into
systematic integration of intervention ingredients
68
KKI EI Study Unique Features
  • Early in life
  • Developing conceptualization (motivation,
    attention, meaningful context for interpersonal
    synchrony)
  • Integration of instructional methods
  • Highly explicit teaching to establish prime new
    skills
  • More implicit teaching to
  • Peers
  • Fostering parental responsivity Parent training,
    including focus on wellness and hope, reading
    their children, insights into the dynamic of
    ones behavior on another, skill acquisition
    (creating responsivity a milieu of hopefulness)

Thank you NIMH (STAART Center)
69
Unique features possibly active ingredients
  • Directly targeting core deficits
  • Dosage of response opportunities (intensity)
  • Recruitment and retention of motivation,
    attention and engagement
  • Building coherence
  • Themes and continuity across the various
    activities to establish conceptually-based
    knowledge rather than discrete skills
  • Emphasize contextually relevant and socially
    valid application of skills
  • Building a network of concepts, through
    multi-modal experiences to enhance concept
    development
  • Development as an integrated system

70
Possibly Active Ingredients
  • Theme-based Intentionally selected stimuli to
    build category and concept formation through
    interactions between perceptual, conceptual,
    linguistic, motor, and social systems
  • Careful selection of stimuli Object affordances,
    multiple exemplars, simple to complex (with
    scaffolding to foster processing and engagement)
  • Engineered environment highlight salient
    information, promote interaction
  • Motivating built on child interests and
    activities

71
Possibly Active Ingredients
  • Routines-based learning
  • Sensory social routines Modulated sensory input,
    motivating
  • Other interaction routines Carefully dosed
    redundancy (automaticity) novelty
    predictability
  • Active engagement (motor, attention) and
    contingency
  • Lingering (give the time for
  • response)

72
This type of intervention promotes generalization
73
Key Developmental Issues
  • Affect/motivation
  • Initiation
  • Flexibility
  • Integration
  • Attention to salience
  • Diversity
  • Frequency

74
Organizing Instruction
  • Systematic infusion of teaching strategies into
    instruction
  • Systematic targeting of intervention goals

75
Language Targets
  • Selecting a core vocabulary
  • Because learning of words and expressions depends
    on ones pre-existing concepts, core concepts
    figure importantly in childrens word learning
    (see Bloom, 2000).
  • Build a foundation of integrated meaning,
    coherence, flexibility of thought and minimize
    teaching isolated skills

76
Opportunity for balance
  • Dosing opportunities to develop independence in
    meaningful activity
  • Dosing 11 and group instruction

77
Parents
  • Parent Collaboration Empowerment
  • Weekly parent trainings
  • Daily communication with parents
  • Weekly parent observation day
  • Written progress reports
  • Communication with community EI providers
  • Monthly home visits

78
Data Processing
  • Rigorous and Multiple Data Collection Systems
  • Pre Post-program testing
  • Assessment Evaluation Programming System (AEPS)
    assessment at entry, mid, and conclusion of
    program
  • On-line data collection by teachers
  • Time-sampled behavioral coding via videotapes

79
Similarities across treatment conditions
  • Dosage 10 hours per week, 6 months duration
  • Weekly parent training
  • Base Curriculum (except IS targets)
  • Class schedule
  • Amount of 11 vs group
  • Treatment methodology
  • Continuum of adult-imposed structure DTT, PRT
  • Environmental engineering
  • Assessment schedule (pre-tx post-tx 6-month
    follow-up daily and monthly data acquisition
    systems)

80
Treatment context
  • Center-based
  • Combined with home
  • Variety of learning opportunities
  • Opportunities for initiation and role shifting
  • Opportunities for connecting meaning
  • Opportunities for social cognition
  • Opportunities for social communication
  • Opportunities for self-regulation and monitoring
    self (alone and with peers)

81
A closer look at the ingredients
  • Themes
  • Active engagement of children
  • Engineered environment
  • Scaffolding and continuum of explicit to implicit
    learning opportunities (mixture of methods)
  • Motivating
  • Routines and predictability
  • Event representations
  • Core targets/deficits
  • Stimuli that afford targeted learning
  • Visual input and output augmentation

82
Themes Foundation for connecting meaning
through repeated experience linked to context
83
Theme FallUnit Pumpkins Activities
SearchingMaterials Pumpkins, bats, containers,
hiding places
Book
84
Targeting Core Deficits
85
Core Vocabulary and Motor
  • Apple
  • Pumpkin
  • Bat
  • Cat
  • Look
  • Give
  • In
  • Put
  • Big, little
  • Reach
  • Give
  • Point

Allows us to build a generative linguistic
system Noun Verb (agent action) Verb Noun
(action object) Location
86
Core Communicative Intents
  • Affirm
  • Reject
  • Show
  • Inform
  • Greet
  • Request
  • Call (the attention of)

87
Core Social
  • Initiation
  • Responsivity
  • Imitation
  • Turn-taking
  • Giving
  • Role shifting
  • Face processing
  • Affect sharing
  • Self regulation

88
Careful Selection of Objects
89
Multiple Exemplars
Real, pretend Big, little Hard,
soft Container Beanbag Carve-able Fits in
container
90
Object affordances
Plastic pumpkin Look in Put in Swing with
handle Hide behind Hide things in Light it
up Carry-all, storage House Musical instrument
91
Routines and event representation
92
(No Transcript)
93
Schedule
  • Free time
  • Greeting
  • Circle (attendance, prep for book, book with
    related search activities)
  • Art
  • DTT
  • Independent work time
  • Generalization and priming
  • Event representation prep Social story
  • Outside (generalization activities, act out
    event)
  • Snack
  • Play (wash pumpkins)
  • Circle

94
Building concept of pumpkins into existing Joint
Action Routines-Greetings
Treatment targets Face processing Intentional
behavior Goal directedness Social
giving/directedness Planning Working memory Joint
attention
Active Ingredients Active engaging with
peers Salient stimuli Theme core
concepts Scaffolds Modeling, showing, input
augmentation (picture)
95
Generalizing
Targeting Core Deficits Response to
JA Attention to social Face processing Matching Sa
lience Goal-directed behavior Learning to
point Communicative Intent label, identify
Active ingredients Theme concept Routine Active
engagement of children Scaffolding (positioning,
modeling, physical guidance) Salient stimuli
96
Activities
Look! Pumpkin!! Johnny, Get
pumpkin Opportunity for child to ask Whats
that? _________________ Once the bat is out,
play routine (sensory Whoosh) is created. Then
each child whooshes peer next to them,
experiencing the role of initiator and
receiver Prepped for finding the bat that will
appear in the story.
97
More experience with pumpkins
Gaining hands-on experience with pumpkins Small v
big Containment (in) Action experience
98
Teaching event representations through literacy
Attention Language RJA Gesture Consciousness of
self Category formation
99
Notice the information flow topic maintenance,
relevance, meaning
Is that a pumpkin? No (gesture denying the
false assumption) What is it? Its a cat Notion
of surprise Open and find (object permanence) Get
the cat Match (discrimination, category formation)
100
Connecting book to environment
Extending the concept beyond the book Initiating
and following JA Communicative intents Locatives G
esture Emotion context Search and find
101
By now, exposure to Bat in pumpkin Whats
that? Whoosh game with bat Bye Bats Bat in
story Wheres bat? IJA to shutters on wall
open them and bat is inside. Get bat label,
experience, go away (disappearance) See bat in
book once more
102
Infusing thematic principles throughout all
activitiesArt
Purposive behavior Visuo-spatial Face
organization Use of environmental cues to
learn (implicit learning)
103
Sensory-based gross motor and shared affect
activity
104
Building the concept at various discriminative
levels (DTT)
105
Table Time
106
Transferring cognitive concepts through
play-Object Permanence
107
Preparing for participation in an everyday
activity using an event representation
108
Were going to the pumpkin patch
109
First, we will go for a wagon ride
110
I will get in the wagon
111
Incorporating experiences on the concept object,
(protoverbs) pumpkin down
112
Outside
RJA Planful search Goal oriented
behavior IJA Sequence of behavior
113
Actions on Objects in PlaySequencing, diversity
of actions
114
Final conceptual formation Five Little
Pumpkins
115
Summary and Conclusions
116
Provocative Questions
  • Is this early alteration in the social mind,
    integrated with cognitive and language growth,
    going to fundamentally alter learning processes
    in toddlers with ASD?
  • Is there a critical event in development that
    triggers a shift in trajectory of development?
  • What type of stimulation can awaken a
    developmental shift in severely mentally retarded
    children, or children whose attention,
    perceptual, and sensory systems are severely
    impaired?
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