Antioch i'11rev

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Counseling Individuals with Asperger’s Who Changes?

description

Slides for Antioch Counseling Class (Autism/Asperger's Certificate Program)

Transcript of Antioch i'11rev

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Counseling Individuals with

Asperger’sWho Changes?

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Today’s Agenda

• Who are you? Why are you here?

• Neurodiversity as the new multiculturalism?

• AS/HFA Described

• Behavioral and Cognitive Approaches

• Language

• Peer Mentoring

• Sex and Dating

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Big Points

• A few good ideas about how to help

• Pathologize vs. Normalize (Consequences)

• Reciprocal Benefits (Does AS help Typicals?)

• Hear the point of view of persons with A.S.

• Contribute our Ideas both locally and globally on Asperger’s

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Politics of Autism

• Leave us alone

• Diagnose and treat! (Autism speaks) http://youtu.be/fsqXDSJZVMY

• Aspergian Culture http://www.aspergianpride.com/

• Asperger’s as a advantage http://autism-culture.com/parents/dont-mourn-for-us/#more-18

• Eliminate Asperger’s? http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123527833

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More Politics

• Does Neurodiversity precede Biodiversity? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wc8dYYxmos

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Local and Global Ideas

• Consider blogging

• Consider twittering

• Mainstream Literature vs. Tribe of Interested Counselors, Educators, Parents

• Post-Modern Point: Your ideas just as important

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Personal Advantages of blogs

• Blogs as Personal Lab Notebooks (ethnography, Anthropology & half-baked ideas)

• Writing helps you think

• Blogs have impact

• Blogs as Resume

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Autism, AS, Blog Impact

• Kathleen Seidel http://www.neurodiversity.com

• Kachina 17 yr. old with Autism http://kla.typepad.com

• Andy Sylvia Keene State College Student and politician with AS

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Antioch ASD Student Blogs

• Hanako Jones http://hanashimonaka.blogspot.com/2009/11/introductions.html

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Creating Online Communities/using tech

• Virtual vs. Real Conferencing (Accomodating social deficits?) http://blip.tv/file/88852

• Kinect http://vimeo.com/27257317

• Recent 60 minutes on Autism Apps http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7385686n

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Asperger’s/HFA

• Who are these kids?

• Who are these adults?

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DSM 5 Proposed Criteria ASD

• http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=94

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DSM IV Diagnostic Criteria for Asperger's

• (I) impairment in social interaction, as manifested by at least two of the following:

(A) marked impairments in the use of multiple nonverbal behaviors such as eye-to-eye gaze, facial expression, body posture, and gestures to regulate social interaction

(B) failure to develop peer relationships appropriate to developmental level

(C) a lack of spontaneous seeking to share enjoyment, interest or achievements with other people, (e.g.. by a lack of showing, bringing, or pointing out objects of interest to other people

(D) lack of social or emotional reciprocity

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DSM (cont.)

• (II) Restricted repetitive & stereotyped patterns of behavior, interests and activities; by at least one of the following:

(A) preoccupation with one or more stereotyped and restricted patterns of interest that is abnormal either in intensity or focus

(B) inflexible adherence to specific, nonfunctional routines or rituals

(C) stereotyped and repetitive motor mannerisms (e.g. hand or finger flapping or twisting, or complex whole-body movements)

(D) persistent preoccupation with parts of objects

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Controversies in Diagnosis: Should

Asperger’s Disappear?• Will The AS diagnosis disappear from NY Ti

mes

• Simon Baron-Cohen’s plea to save AS diagnosis

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Arguments for DSM Change

For:

1. ASD reflects continuum

Against:

1. Don’t know yet if AS is distinct from Autism genetically/biologically

2. Parents/Families have organized around AS label

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Challenge Question

• Your thoughts on changes in diagnostic criteria.

• Do changes simply serve the needs of psychiatry?

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Billy The Kid

• Video clips

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If I could say it in words

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhzgNMTcioM&feature=player_embedded

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Galen Clip I: Breaking down by symptoms

• Halting speech- odd patterning of pauses

• Vocal Intensity- a bit loud…but little variability (prosody)

• Content- no problem with saying he’s working on social skills, “etiquette”

• Rocking-

• Closing-doesn’t say anything

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Galen Clip II: break down

• Halting speech

• Odd content

• Some odd attempts at prosody (we’re working on that)

• Clipped responses: “Food Court, Candy store, arcade”

• Closing-walks out of my room

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Galen’s Deficits: Comments

• 1. Blink- People make fast judgements (so much of our story is about OTHER PEOPLE)…15-30 secs…people rely on intuition…but their intuition is sometimes right and sometimes wrong

BIG Point: We need to coach both the person with AS and their conversational partners.

• Good social skills are a strong predictor of success (e.g., children on playground: questions vs. statements.

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Perspectives

• Doubling a penny

• Power of 10 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fKBhvDjuy0

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Levels of Intervention

Therapist Intervenes

Person with AS/HFA

Community Family

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Know Your Role!

• hub of the wheel for information (a good case mgr)

• consultant on all aspects of a program: educational, ancillary services/ot/pt/adaptive p.e./medical/recreational

• Advocate: Promote ASSETS vs. DEFICITS (e.g., Galen at work---works hard…not good at down time…I play up the “good at work” part); Educational Opportunities!

• Family Therapist- Support, problem solving, consultant, more support

• Contributors to larger discussion about AS/HFA through blogging, community talks, conferences

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Therapy Orientations: CBT vs. Traditional Orientations

• Rogerian Methods: Unconditional Regard; Reflection; Transparent Self (helps AS know they are understood).

• Insight oriented approach limited but ASers had difficult early childhoods which need to be put in perspective; Use the “time tunnel” technique: “What was this like when you were younger?” Billy: Now I understand that many problems were due to AS

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Therapy Orientations (cont)

• Behavioral theory/techniques- Both typical and non-typical individuals benefit from “setting goals” and “building new repertoires of skills” in pragmatic ways.

(e.g., building dating skills involve step-by-step increases in social activites…asking someone out for coffee asking 2 people out for coffee asking one of them out to a movie gradually increasing intimate behaviors…etc.

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Therapy Orientations (cont)

• Cognitive theory- focusing on the details of positive or negative thoughts, pursuing ideas that interfere with progress (e.g., “I can’t do that” or “That’s not me to say things like that.”)

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Challenge Question

• What is your orientation or style in counseling individuals with ASD?

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Direct vs. Indirect Treatments

• In therapy with AS we do both

• E.g., social communication: • Direct speech training (speechmatch)• Social skills training• Social networking via mentoring• Scripts and Social Stories

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Parameters of Speech

• Vocal intensity

• Lengths of pauses

• Lengths of switching pauses

• Lengths of vocalizations

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Matching Speech Patterns

• Vocal Congruence

• Visual Display

• Talking like others do

• Empathy, warmth, understanding

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Teaching Conversational Reciprocity

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Biofeedback for Arrythmias

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Using Audacity

• Free download: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

• My post on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=speechmatch

• Speechmatch Pilot http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAYOhi7uxqM

• Demonstrate Audacity

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D. Githmark & L. Welkowitz, Mensa Rsch. Journal, Fall,

‘09

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iPad App Demo

• Volume, Rhythm, Pitch, Overall % Match

• Neuroplasticity

• Tuning in

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iPad Trial: Normal Control

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Current iPad Study at KSC

• 10 subject with Autism

• 20 hours training

• Experimenters work in teams

• Pre/post conversation recordings

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Point Light Pilot

• Screencast on PointLight

• Pilot study- biomotions lab

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KSC student Katey Wichland Catalogs

ObservationsMale:

• Arms swing outward while they walk. Elbows pointing away from the body, and wrists pointing towards the hips.

• Broader shoulders

• Torso makes the shape of a goblet where the shoulders curve inward towards the hips.

• Hips are narrow

• Men’s hips don’t swing with each step like a woman’s does, causing men to use more force in the calves and knees when walking.

• When trying to picture a man walk, think of a male gorilla and how the shoulders are hunched over, father from the body.

• When nervous, shoulders will move up towards the ears. The more relaxed, the further the shoulders are from the ears.

• Pace is quickened when stressed. Pace slows when relaxed. Longer swing in the arms when relaxed.

• When happy, males tend to have a bounce when they walk, radiating from each footstep.

• When sad, pace is slowed, shoulders are hunched, and the arms do not swing as wide.

• Larger men tend to move slower, elbows are further from the body, and more pressure is put on the knees when walking. Lighter men tend to walk a little faster and have more bounce in their step.

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Wichland Observations Cont.

• When trying to picture a man walk, think of a male gorilla and how the shoulders are hunched over, father from the body.

• When nervous, shoulders will move up towards the ears. The more relaxed, the further the shoulders are from the ears.

• Pace is quickened when stressed. Pace slows when relaxed. Longer swing in the arms when relaxed.

• When happy, males tend to have a bounce when they walk, radiating from each footstep.

• When sad, pace is slowed, shoulders are hunched, and the arms do not swing as wide.

• Larger men tend to move slower, elbows are further from the body, and more pressure is put on the knees when walking. Lighter men tend to walk a little faster and have more bounce in their step.

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Wichland Observations Cont.

• When sad, pace is slowed, shoulders are hunched, and the arms do not swing as wide.

• Larger men tend to move slower, elbows are further from the body, and more pressure is put on the knees when walking. Lighter men tend to walk a little faster and have more bounce in their step.

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Observations by KSC student with diagnosed A.S.

Male:

• Arms wider, legs closer

Male Heavy:

• Slower, less movement from side to side

Male Light:

• Arms closer to the body, walks a lot faster

Male Nervous:

• Faster movement, elbows way up, hands in front of body, “ready to defend himself”, looks nervous in the general gate and how he holds himself

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Katie Wichland Catalogs observations of AS

student• Point_Light_Research.doc

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Challenge Question

• How important is speech style to you in getting along with others? Do certain styles turn you off?

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Social Communication II: Errorless Modeling

• Conversation with prompts http://welkowitz.typepad.com/aspergers_conversations/files/conversation1.mp3

• Conversation without Prompts http://welkowitz.typepad.com/aspergers_conversations/files/conversation1-Revised.mp3

• Behavioral Test (BAT) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBj-QGxdGTI

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Social Communication III: Scripts

Initial Contact Script

Instructions: This is a suggested script for the student’s initial contact with a potential site supervisor. Feel free to use all our part of this script as a guide for this initial conversation.

Student: Hello, my name is _________________. I am a student in the Department of Psychology at Keene State College and I’m calling to speak with you about the possibility of doing a practicum/internship at your agency.

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Social Communication: Children

• poor social reciprocity

- games for increasing back and forth in conversation:• collaborative story telling• using a magic stick (exchange during floor

shifts)• eye contact as punctuation (fun to do!)• Skillstreaming-

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Skillstreaming: Having a Conversation

1. The Greeting

2. small talk

3. big point

4. closing

5. Autopsy

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Reading Faces

• watch videos (stop and chat)

• practice making faces in the office

• Brattleboro face project (KLA)

• Ekman Faces

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More on Decoding others’ emotions

• Use Cartoons!

• Bubbles over characters to infer thoughts and feelings

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Other Social Conversation Interventions

• CBT for SP• ID difficult social situations• ID neg cognitions• Challenge neg cognitions and develop

coping responses• Design exposure/role play• Set Goal• Begin Role-play• Monitor anxiety at 1 min intervals• End Role-play• Review Goal• Cognitive Autopsy

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Challenge Question

• Is there a continuum of ability in decoding emotion in speech and language?

• What common understandings of “how to decode” can we offer others?

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Anthropology

• Ethnography

• Student Center to study college student greetings

• Playgrounds for younger children

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Anthropology II:We study them

• Education is Key (British Video Clip)

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Constructional Approach• Current Accomplishments

• Weekly Goals

• Program Notes

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Managing Emotional Problems: Anger

• Using Visual Guides (e.g., scaling anger)

• Novaco: Cognitive, physiological, behavioral

• 2 Big Cognitive errors

• I’m going to kill Jeremy (interpreting anger)

• Self-monitoring

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CBT

• Depression: Cognitive Therapy

• Depression: Frequency of Pleasant Activities

• Self-Reinforcement

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Today’s Agenda

• Your work

• Trends in Neuroscience

• Special Interests

• Peer mentoring

• Co-morbidity deconstructed

• Sexuality

• Turnaround

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Gina Colby’s Blog!

• http://ginacolby.blogspot.com/

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Important Trends

• Mirror Neurons/Autism conflicting evidence http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2010/05/a-crack-in-the-mirror-neuron-hyp.html

• Unanswered question: Do mirror neuron deficits explain empathy deficits?

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Mirror neurons

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BOd3N20XNC4

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Trends (cont): Oxytocin

• http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/02/100216221350.htm

• Largest Study 13 subjects

• Looked more at upper face vs. lower face

• Discriminated types of games children were playing

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News from Asperger’s Conversations Dec. ‘10

• http://www.welkowitz.typepad.com

(Blue Peninsula by Madge Mckeithen)

http://www.twitter.com/lwelkowi

(more on anthropology: Ask students…pssst: they know the answer)

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Did Disney rip off Welkowitz?

• Speechmatch:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k88peetnAp8

• Wall-E http://adisney.go.com/disneyvideos/animatedfilms/wall-e/games/sayit/

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AS and Oppositional Behavior

• Behavior Chains

• Meeting Special Interests (Hunter Clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1T-zY1DXQk )

• Going With rather than against re: special interests

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Going with Special Interests

• e.g.2 Ben- The Cloud Room…Hey Now Now

• e.g. 3 Billy- sports statistics…

and began a blog about the LA Dodgers this summer

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Death Metal in Norway and Asperger Academic

Success• http://www.npr.org/templates/story/

story.php?storyId=90126955

• Clip of Norwegian Black Metal Band http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4U33U_UyzQ (ability to view disturbing info differently; objectively)

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Perspective Taking

• Are neurotypicals MORE RIGID in thinking due to cultural restraints?

• Are we more likely to “go with the majority” and spurn unusual ideas?

• E.g., medical students and interest in preventative medicine

• E.g., A.S. member of religious family declares his atheism

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Social Networking: Mentoring as Intervention

• The Insider-Outsider Problem

• Challenging the notion that ALL INSIDERS are enemies

• Challenging the notion that ALL INSIDER activities are unethical

• Work to Move AS person to Insider status

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Gaining Insider Status

• Quirky Groups (Drama, Band, Geography, Math)

• Quirky skills (magic; knife throwing) http://bit.ly/gHXWEH

• Hit Your Connectors

• Ask Your Mavens to ID Connectors

• Peer Mentoring

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Peer Mentoring

• Doug Flutie Jr. Grant

• Up to 12 peer mentors at KSC

• ID AS individuals (close connections to Counseling and Disability office)

• Peer Mentors provide support, advice giving, friendship

• Meet regularly; introduce to friends; Networks Expand

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Peer Mentoring: Social Network Development

• Networks serve as buffers against stress

• Networks serve as buffers against depression

• Networks serve as important source of information

• Networks serve as important source of activities

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Peer Mentoring Issues

• Mentors meet regularly to discuss problems

• Confidentiality (Inner vs. Outer Circle)

• Relationship Boundaries

• Handling Difficult Problems

• Ethical Dilemmas

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Reinforcing the Reinforcer

• Volunteers vs. Salaried Workers

• Use of Practicum or Independent Study

• Regular contact (fielding calls; dealing with emergencies)

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Peer Mentoring: Outcome

• Anecdotal Reports: Benefits are clear

• Quality of Life Increases

• Parent testimonials

• School Retention

• Interest in Program

• Service Learning (new!)

• Dana Githmark Clip

• Mike Hayes Clip

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Peer Mentoring: Outcome II

• Seth Clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRwCHp1on-E

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AS and Comorbidity

• People like simple answers: With one diagnosis we can “put people in a box” and we feel better that we have a grasp on the problem and ideas for

• Leads to Prescriptive Approach: Matching Problem with Solution

• Topography vs. Function (Goldiamond)

• Makes Outcome Studies Manageable

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OCD and Comorbidity

• Data from the National Anxiety Screening Day Study:

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder & Co-Morbid Anxiety in A National Screening Sample

Lawrence A. Welkowitz, Ph.D., Keene State College; Elmer Streuning, Ph.D., Columbia University; John Pittman, M.A., Columbia University; Mary Guardino, Freedom From Fear, Staten Island, NY

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Request for More Details on Co-Morbidity

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AS and OCD

A B C

Antecedent BehaviorConsequence

Tension UP Ritual Tension DOWN

(exposed to Washes (Reinforces Ritual) Contaminant)

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AS and OCD: Eg. 2

A B C

Exposed RitualDecreased Tension

To oven

Tension UP Checks Oven Decreased

Tension/Anxiety

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AS and OCD: Treatment

• Exposure with Response Prevention

• Extinction that leads to elimination of ritual behaviors. This is good since:

If not stopped…AS/HFA individuals will fail to resist OCD behaviors in public since they are less tuned in to SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES.

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Issues in treating co-morbid OCD

• May need “coach” to increase motivation

• need to make social consequences of “odd” public behaviors clear

• Reassure pt by discussing difference between OCD and Psychosis

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AS and ADHD

• Lots of overlap…but also lots of differential dx errors due to similar “topography” of behavior:

• e.g. impulsiveness- As pts may “seem” impulsive because they are less likely to respond to social cues/consequences

• inattention- may be due to lack of interest rather than inability to focus…or lack of eye contact may be due to sensory aversion.

• Hyperactivity- may be linked to not understanding the “social demands” in a particular situation.

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AS & Depression

• due to chronic outsider status

• Pts get worse as their AS improves…recognize their social failings; desire insider status but realize how tough it is…may even miss their “splendid isolation.”

• lack of social reinforcement (just think of how much reinforcement a typical person receives throughout the day)…

• lack of social networks which serve as a BUFFER against stress and anxiety

• bullying and teasing (Seligman’s Learned Helplessness…dogs unable to escape shock)

• assaults on self-esteem- low rates of praise

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Treatment Issues: Depression

• Cognitive Therapy helpful

• Lewinshon’s Freq. of Pleasant Events

• Low Rates of Behavior

• Physical Activity

• Help shift AS/HFA individuals from “outsider” to “insider” status (e.g., mentoring, circle of friends, teaching them special skills that other like…such as magic or knife throwing)

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Treatment of Depression cont.

• Err on the side of “reinforcing gains” rather than “focusing on deficits”…heap lots of positives on kids and adults

• encourage friends, spouses, teachers to focus on positives and ignore minor negative behaviors (e.g., “catch me when I’m good”)

• Provide “outs” for kids to escape aversive environments (e.g., escape from crowded hallways where kids get shoved against lockers or bullied)

• SSRI’s or MAOI’s for socially avoidant individuals with high interpersonal sensitivity

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Validation

• Validation Clip

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Clinical Exercise

• Pick any problem or disorder that you have seen (or heard of) that co-occurred with Autism or Asperger’s. How did the two mix? What ideas do you have for therapy?

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Depression and Bullying at College Level

• E.g.s. of college level bullying (dorms, gym, class)

• Team Approach (counseling staff, profs, residential life staff)

• Identify Save Havens

• High Status Mentors as “Protectors” and “Promoters”

• Teaching Assertive Behavior

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AS and psychotic disorders

• “Hallucinations”/”Delusions” may be due to chronic outsider status rather than schizophrenia (Attwood)

• Relentless CBT to treat irrational ideas (e.g., “The FBI told me to ignore what my parent’s say”; “My father is out to get me”)

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CBT for Irrational Thoughts

• Are you sure your father is out to get you?

• Have you ever felt this way before and it turned out that he was not out to get you?

• When did the FBI contact you?

• What were the names of the FBI agents?

• “Is this a highly irrational idea you are experiencing…or is it grounded in reality?”

• Dogged Pursual leads to “revised cognition”

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Schizophrenia Symptoms vs. AS

• Delusions vs. radical thinking (recent story by professor about her brother)

• Paranoid thinking- due to chronic attacks by NT’s?

• Hallucinations vs. “Visions” or highly valued ideas

• negative symptoms: anhedonia, alogia (lack of initiating speech, action, pleasure). Are these due to lack of social connection or does it have “an organic feel”??

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Concrete to Abstract Leap: AS vs. Schizophrenia

• Both groups can not decipher “sayings” or metaphors:

“A rolling stone gathers no moss”

“A stitch in time saves nine”

“Don’t put the cart before the horse”

“I was pouring on the coals on the highway this morning”

“That’s icing on the cake”

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Egs. Of Psychotic-Like Behavior

• e.g. 2 KLA (age 18) “The Easter Bunny will visit my home and scare me)…solved by explaining that the easter bunny is “not real.”

(different from psychotic delusions…can’t explain them away!)

• e.g. 3 Jacob (age 10) and 9/11: The end of MLB!! Me: No, MLB will continue. School staff feared an anxiety/trauma response to 9/11…simply due to misperception (i.e., not a delusion)

• Comment: If reality testing is grossly impaired and doesn’t respond to CBT, then co-morbid psychotic disorder is possibility and anti-psychotic meds should be considered.

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AS and Humour

• Can only understand very obvious humour: e.g., Monty Python

• Counseling Tip: Make communications clear (surface vs. deep structure of language)

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AS and Social Phobia

• SP: Hallmark feature is “Fear of Negative Evaluation”

AS: Often immune to Negative Evaluation

• SP: Social skills can be intact

AS: Poor Social Skills

• SP: Over focusing on social cues and events…e.g., notices people frowning, rolling eyes, etc

AS: Doesn’t look at faces; don’t understand faces

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Social Phobia vs. AS

• Many ASers call themselves “shy” but are they really?

• Misinterpret social inadequacy for social anxiety?

• Become anxious as a result of poor social abilities?

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Treatment for Social Phobia

• SP: focus on certain cognitive errors: • Mind reading• Fortune telling error• overgeneralization

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AS and social problems

• AS: Focus on constructing social behaviors:• Constructional Approach• Exposure to social activities• Basic friendship skills• Some CBT around misconceptions of other

peoples’ intentions

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AS and Oppositional Behavior

• e.g., 1. Colin Age 10 refusing to do math that he feels is “insulting” “repetitive” “too easy”

• e.g., 2 Hunter age 11 with “genius IQ”, slipping on homework compliance

• e.g. 3 Seth (age 20) taking “Gen Ed” classes that are “too easy.”]

• e.g. 3 Annika’s classmate with obsessive interest in spiders

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Prevent ODD with Accomodation

• Must LISTEN and MAKE ARRANGEMENTS for more challenging educational experiences…But schools not geared this way!

• Having kids take advanced courses…

• Make rules clear (rule governed behavior)

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Going with Special Interests

• e.g.2 Ben- The Cloud Room…Hey Now Now

• e.g. 3 Billy- sports statistics…

and began a blog about the LA Dodgers this summer

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Very ODD: When all else fails

• Contingency management

• The List

• The Hook (Contingent access to special interests/activities)

• Computer Addiction

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AS and PTSD

• Effects of Pervasive Bullying and Teasing

• Model for Understanding PTSD:• Classical Conditioning (Associated Stimuli such

as kids, classes, teachers Anxiety)• Operant Conditioning (Escape is reinforced)• Stimulus Generalization (high school

college)• Subjective Meaning of trauma stimuli (AS kid

told that high school kids will follow to college)

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PTSD Treatment: CBT and Exposure to trauma stimuli

• Challenge notions that “all kids are dangerous”

• gradual exposure to non-dangerous kids and school situations

• Safe and secure environments

• on-going monitoring

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AS/HFA and Dichotomous Thinking

• e.g., Collegues complaint about her brother rejecting Church (“Religon is the source of All hatred and violence”)

• e.g. G.’s absolute thinking “My father hates me because he won’t take me to a mall this weekend…and he must be punished”

• e.g., “Joe Lieberman is a Nazi”

• e.g., Andy: “Republicans deserve to die”

• e.g., Patrick Henry: “Give me Liberty, or Give me Death”

• e.g., Luke Skywalker “We must risk our lives to fight Darth Vader and all Evil”

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Treating AS plus PTSD

• Obsessive nature of AS probably makes treatment more difficult

• But argument can be made for effective treatment

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Arguments for treating AS plus PTSD

• Many AS kids have elements of PTSD (90% report some form of bullying or assault…many report sexual assault as well)

• Foa and colleagues rsch. (Annenberg Found. Consensus Reports): CBT for PTSD in Kids effective

• Recent studies by Sofronoff & Attwood: CBT directed toward Anx. Disorders effective, espec. With strong parental involvement!

• Anger MGT helpful because AS kids “lash out” when confronted with trauma-related stimuli…unable to manage emotional stimuli effectively (Amygdala abnormalities?; executive functioning deficits?)- See Attwood Program:

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Clinical Exercise

• Think of a problem you have seen (or heard of) in Autism/Asperger’s that might be helped if the person with autism can “take a different perspective”…think about things differently. How would you go about encouraging a new way of thinking?

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Clinical Exercise

• Think of a problem that you have seen in Autism/Asperger’s that might lend itself to straightforward EXPOSURE therapy (ie., just doing it).

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Behavior Chain

Antecedent

Crisis

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Key to Intervention

• Break chain as early as possible

• Break chain at weakest link

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Behavior Chain II: Meltdown

Wakes up late

Favorite ClothesNot available

Teased on Bus

Loses Homework

MisinterpretsReprimand

Given InstructionTo do “boring”

taskMELTDOWN

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Meltdown Interventions

• Wakes up late

• Favorite clothes not available

• Teased on bus

• Loses homework

• Misinterprets reprimand

• Instructions to do boring task

• MELTDOWN

• Scheduling control

• Deal with sensory issues; use gradual exposure

• Anti-bullying programs

• Organizational training

• Be Clear; avoid sarcasm

• Assess interest in task; go with special interests

• Stay calm; Contain child

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Common Stressors

1. Going Against vs. Going With Special Interests

2. Stimulus Overload

3. Using facial expressions as instructions

4. Physical Proximity

5. Olfactory stimulation

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More Stressors…

6. Ambiguous social situations

7. Intense eye contact (“look at me”)

8. Disrupting pleasant activities

9. Strong criticism

10. Unpleasant Physical Activities

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Clinical Exercise

• Pair off, select a behavior problem, do a Behavior Chain Analysis

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Stigma

• Negative “halo effect”

• Wahl (2002) concluded: Negative attitudes toward persons with SMI evident by 3rd grade.

• Perceptions of Violence

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Reducing Stigma

• Promote Contact (Racism literature: “contact hypothesis”…contact effects strongest when the individuals:• meet as equals• work cooperatively• target person moderately disconfirms a

stereotype (someone who greatly disconfirms a stereotyped is dismissed as “an exception”)

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AS and Sexuality

• Disconnect between AS skills and complexity of sexual activities

• Adolescence and hormonal change

• Lack of social influence leads to “what feels good” versus “what is acceptable”

• Lack of information

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Sexuality: Problems that Arise

• Inappropriate advances

• Stalking like behaviors

• Compulsive masturbation

• Gender identity problems

• Sensory difficulties (light touch vs. moderate touch; soft music vs. loud)

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Sexuality Interventions

• Education

• Problem solving

• Friendship

• Obtaining Consent at Every Level of Intimate Advancement (Antioch Rules for Sexual Activity)

• Monitoring conversations

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Monitoring Conversations/moods

Conversation Monitoring

What I Said What they said What I said

Monitoring Moods

Time Situation 0-10 Mood Rating

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Deep Survival

• Laurence Gonzales on Key Elements of Survival: Link to AS?

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Them vs. Us

• Extending these ideas to “typical” individuals

• Changing our own ways of thinking and Culture to “fit the person with AS” versus “changing the person with AS to fit the culture”

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AS and Culture

• Dominant Culture Forces its views

• Perceived Racism

• How we treat AS individuals reflects the kind of world we want to live in

• How we treat AS individuals reflects our own feelings about our own “inner geek”

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Other Counseling Issues

• Physical Activity

• Being clear

• Assessing Readiness (e.g., to hear about diagnosis; to advance to next step in treatment)

• Teaching how to ask questions

• Using alternative methods of communication

• Meeting out of office

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Challenge Question

• How do you feel about using non-traditional counseling methods?

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Case Study

• Present Your Cases

• How would you incorporate elements of today’s class to these people’s lives?

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Getting Funding

• Changemakers

• Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation

• N.I.H.

• Autism Speaks

• Ben and Jerry’s

• Local Developmental Services (MDS)

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Turnaround

• Anything you would like to say?

• Questions?