Purpose: This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of a multicomponent peer-mediated intervention (PMI) on teaching adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) how to show interest in peer conversation partners by asking partner-focused questions about the person, their interests, or their experiences and by making partner-focused comments that positively affirm peer statements or express concern.
Method: A multiple-baseline design across three verbally fluent high school students with ASD was used to assess the effects of the PMI, which involved training peers ( = 10) to support conversation and the students' use of target skills, and training the students to use partner-focused skills with the aid of a self-reflection cue sheet during conversation with trained peers in a high school cafeteria. Ten-minute samples of student-peer conversations were transcribed and analyzed. Generalization with untrained peers was assessed.
Results: The PMI was highly effective in increasing all students' use of partner-focused skills. Gains were maintained by two students in a return-to-baseline condition. Generalization was evident for all students with varied results. Peers and students with ASD perceived the intervention to be beneficial.
Conclusions: This study adds to the limited research showing that PMI can be used in high school settings to improve target conversational skills and provides preliminary evidence that PMI can successfully address an underresearched pragmatic language difficulty (i.e., introducing and maintaining topics of conversation of relevance and interest to conversation partners) common among adolescents with ASD. These findings invite replication to extend generality and assess the impact of the intervention on peer relationships. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.16915663.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2021_JSLHR-21-00150 | DOI Listing |
Int J Lang Commun Disord
December 2024
Department of Clinical Speech and Language Studies, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Background: Individuals with dementia have communication limitations resulting from cognitive impairments that define the syndrome. Whereas there are numerous cognitive assessments for individuals with dementia, there are far fewer communication assessments. The Profiling Communication Ability in Dementia (P-CAD) was developed to address this gap.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
December 2024
Department of Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, Tilburg University, the Netherlands.
Making eye contact with our conversational partners is what is most common in multimodal communication. Yet, little is known about this behavior. Prior studies have reported different findings on what we look at in the narrator's face.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
December 2024
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, 5841 S Maryland Ave MC3077, Chicago, IL, 60615, USA.
Rationale: Alcohol is commonly used in social environments and is known to facilitate social behaviors. However, most controlled laboratory studies on alcohol have been conducted in isolated settings, limiting our understanding of its effects on social interactions.
Objectives: The current study was designed to examine the effects of alcohol on dyadic interactions in healthy volunteers (N = 37), with a focus on the influence of the conversation partner's drug state.
JAMA Netw Open
December 2024
School of Social Work, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada.
Importance: Safer supply programs were implemented in Canada to provide pharmaceutical-grade alternatives to the toxic unregulated drug supply. While research shows clinical benefits and reduced overdose mortality among safer supply patients, medication diversion remains a concern.
Objective: To examine provider (prescribing clinicians and allied health professionals) and patient perspectives on diversion of opioids prescribed in safer supply programs.
Disabil Rehabil
December 2024
Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Purpose: To investigate challenges with sexuality experienced by people with neuromuscular diseases and their needs for knowledge and guidance on sexual life to target future rehabilitation services.
Materials And Methods: 11 semi-structured individual interviews with 10 women and one man with neuromuscular diseases. The methodology was Interpretive Description, using the Crip Theory as the theoretical lens to guide the analysis.
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