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      Using Shaping to Teach Eye Contact to Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

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          Abstract

          The current study used a shaping procedure to teach three preschool-aged children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder to make eye contact with the instructor for a duration of 3 s. Then, eye contact was taught during breaks in instruction. Following the initial intervention, the frequency of reinforcement was decreased while training for generalization across instructors and locations. All three children acquired quick and sustained eye contact, which maintained after 1 month without the need for prompting. This study provides an alternative method for teaching young children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder to make eye contact without the need for prompting; outlines an approach for teaching eye contact when baseline levels of eye contact are severely low and/or the child is actively avoiding eye contact; describes a successful method for thinning the schedule of reinforcement and introducing instructional demands; and recommends a practical technique for gaining attention before delivering an instructional demand.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          (810) 394-0284 , amelia.m.fonger@wmich.edu
          Journal
          Behav Anal Pract
          Behav Anal Pract
          Behavior Analysis in Practice
          Springer International Publishing (Cham )
          1998-1929
          2196-8934
          25 May 2018
          March 2019
          : 12
          : 1
          : 216-221
          Affiliations
          ISNI 0000 0001 0672 1122, GRID grid.268187.2, Western Michigan University, ; 3740 Wood Hall, Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5439 USA
          Article
          PMC6411557 PMC6411557 6411557 245
          10.1007/s40617-018-0245-9
          6411557
          30918788
          59d8a27f-470a-4efa-a612-56700f8eab67
          © Association for Behavior Analysis International 2018
          History
          Categories
          Brief Practice
          Custom metadata
          © Association for Behavior Analysis International 2019

          Shaping,Eye contact,Autism spectrum disorder,Early intervention

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