Advancing imitation and requesting skills in toddlers with Down syndrome.

Res Dev Disabil

Department of Special Education and Literacy, C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, 720 Northern Blvd, Brookville, NY 11548, United States.

Published: February 2012

Drawing upon information about the Down syndrome behavioral phenotype and empirically based intervention strategies, we examined intervention addressing early communication impairments in young children with Down syndrome. Intervention involved multiple opportunities, shaping, prompting, and reinforcement to address both verbal imitation and requesting. Intervention also incorporated the relative strengths in social development characteristic of the Down syndrome behavioral phenotype by focusing on a more social request prior to addressing the more impaired instrumental request, as well as incorporating social consequences. Three of the four toddlers with Down syndrome were taught verbal imitation skills, two of whom generalized to novel sounds. All four toddlers with Down syndrome acquired requesting skills in the form of gaze shifting and vocalizing; three were also taught verbal approximations of requesting words (e.g., "mm" for "more") using imitative prompts. These results contribute to the small, but growing, literature demonstrating behavior analytic interventions informed by an understanding of the Down syndrome behavioral phenotype.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2011.07.018DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the early interactions between infants with Down syndrome and their caregivers, contrasting them with typically developing infants, and highlights that these interactions significantly impact long-term cognitive, emotional, and social development.
  • - A total of 128 dyads (64 with Down syndrome and 64 typically developing) participated, with assessments revealing notable differences in parental sensitivity and engagement during interactions, particularly influenced by the child's gender.
  • - Findings indicate that caregivers of children with Down syndrome tend to be less sensitive and more directive, while these children demonstrate lower attention to caregivers, although girls with Down syndrome received more sensitive care and displayed varying negative emotions compared to boys.
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