AI Article Synopsis

  • Joint attention is a key deficit in autism that affects the development of social-communication skills.
  • A 10-week training program was conducted to teach joint attention to children with autism, assessing changes in non-targeted social-communication behaviors.
  • Post-training, improvements were seen in areas like social initiations, positive emotions, imitation, play, and spontaneous speech, suggesting joint attention training can enhance various related skills in young children with autism.

Article Abstract

Joint attention may be a core deficit in autism which underlies the abnormal development of later emerging social-communication behaviors. Given this theory, researchers have suggested that teaching young children with autism to engage in joint attention may lead to collateral increases in other non-targeted social-communication behaviors. In this study, children with autism participated in a 10-week joint attention training program and collateral changes in non-targeted behaviors were assessed. Following participation in the intervention, positive collateral changes were observed in social initiations, positive affect, imitation, play, and spontaneous speech. Results support the hypothesis that teaching joint attention skills leads to improvement in a variety of related skills and have implications for the treatment of young children with autism.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10803-006-0108-zDOI Listing

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