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Establishing a Beginner Listener Repertoire via Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training Tiffany M. Bauer MA, BCBA Jessica Korneder MA, BCBA Sally D. Moore MA, BCBA Len Levin, PhD
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Establishing a Beginner Listener Repertoire via Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Mar 19, 2016

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Establishing a Beginner Listener Repertoire via Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training. Tiffany M. Bauer MA, BCBA Jessica Korneder MA, BCBA Sally D. Moore MA, BCBA Len Levin, PhD. Introduction. EIBI curricula adhere to a specific scope and sequence Attending Compliance Matching - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Establishing a Beginner Listener Repertoire via Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Tiffany M. Bauer MA, BCBAJessica Korneder MA, BCBASally D. Moore MA, BCBALen Levin, PhD

Page 2: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Introduction•EIBI curricula adhere to a specific scope

and sequence AttendingComplianceMatchingImitation Listening Manding/Functional Communication

Page 3: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Introduction•More efficient ways to teach have been

developed (i.e. Sidman with stimulus equivalence, and now more recently Greer and Ross)

•With limited time and resources it is important to look at more efficient teaching in early intervention

Page 4: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Introduction•Easier for young children with autism to

learn tasks that incorporate a visual discriminative stimulus than it is for them to learn language comprehension tasks that do not incorporate visual cues

•Greer and Ross (2008) describe a procedure to induce language comprehension or specifically, a listener component of naming repertoire

Page 5: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Listener Component of Naming•Defined as “Learning to respond as a

listener after incidentally hearing a word spoken by another person” (p. 99, Verbal Behavior Analysis)

Page 6: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Listener Component of Naming

“ If the child has the listener component of naming, they will point to the correct stimulus simply because they have heard the word during the matching instruction and not because they received direct instruction for the pointing response” (p. 93, Verbal Behavior Analysis)

Page 7: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Full Naming

“…capacity to acquire a tact (pure or impure) and a listener response by simply hearing another person tact a stimulus” (p. 149, Verbal Behavior Analysis)

Page 8: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Hypothesis•The simultaneous presentation of a vocal

sample (i.e., a tact) and visual sample as part of the discriminative stimulus in a visual, match-to-sample task will increase a learner’s acquisition of untaught receptive and tacting targets

•“Once the child has the listener half of naming, they learning two responses for every one that you teach” (p. 109, Verbal Behavior Analysis)

Page 9: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Established Matching ProtocolsSD Response RepertoireVisual + “Put with same”

Child matches visual to sample

Matching

“Student sits at the table and the teacher sits next to or across from Student. Place two objects on the table, spaced well apart from each other. Hand Student an object that matches one of the items on the table and say, “Put with same” (p. 165, Work In Progress)

Page 10: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Modified Match to Sample

SD Response RepertoireVisual stimulus + Say COW

Child matches picture of COW

Matching

Page 11: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Target Repertoires to Induce Via Matching Protocol

SD Response RepertoireSay COW Child

touches COW

Identify/Listening skills

See COW Child says COW

Tact

Page 12: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participants

•Receiving in home EIBI•Age range: 2.0-2.11 years•At risk for Autism or developmental

delays •Evidence of limited listener repertoire

(e.g. routine instructions with cues)

Page 13: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Method- General Procedure•Baseline all program targets (i.e. both

listener and speaker components of naming) before opening matching program.

•Implement protocol for all targets that were unknown.

•After all targets are mastered via matching, repeat baseline

Page 14: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Method- Teaching Steps

1. Teach 2-3 targets in each step (Field of 3-5)- increase field with mastered targets

2. Random rotate neat and messy array3. Issue just the target label (e.g. “Cow”) as

the SD -Do not use” match”, “put with same”, or any other Sd

4. Teach in standard format: Errorless - EC5. Continue to randomly rotate with

mastered targets throughout teaching

Page 15: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Mock Data Sheet

Page 16: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Teaching

Page 17: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Teaching

Page 18: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Method- Teaching Procedure

•Do not pre-test out of the matching steps

•Before moving on to the next teaching step run 40 trials (days do not matter) with 80% or higher average

•Mastery Criterion: 80% or better across 40 trials

Page 19: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 1

Page 20: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 2

Page 21: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 3

Page 22: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 4

Page 23: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 5

Page 24: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 6

Page 25: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Participant 7

Page 26: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Discussion

• Anecdotally we have had less success inducing the listener and naming response when matching was in maintenance versus matching in acquisition

• When the child has an echoic repertoire there was more success in learning the tacts

Page 27: Establishing a Beginner Listener  Repertoire via  Visual Match-to-Sample Discrimination Training

Discussion

• Non-identical matching is standard in EIBI curriculum

• Under what conditions do we utilize a label SD

versus a “match” SD ?• Develop a decision tree to modify scope and

sequence