ORAL LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN: THE IMPORTANCE OF SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL PRECURSORS Kimberly...
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Transcript of ORAL LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN: THE IMPORTANCE OF SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL PRECURSORS Kimberly...
ORAL LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN: THE IMPORTANCE OF SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL PRECURSORS
Kimberly Frazier Baker, PhD, CCC-SLPUniversity of Arkansas
Intersubjectivity
In typically developing children, intersubjectivity emerges in infancy and toddlerhood , as evidenced by sharing affect, following and initiating joint attention, imitation, understanding others preferences and intentions ( Trevarthen & Hubley , 1978; Meltzoff , 1995; Tomasello , 1998, Hubley, Meltzoff, Tomasello)
“Self-Other Mapping” The newborn is not a “social isolate” these
skills provide a bridge connecting self and other.
Intersubjectivity starts with:
Sharing affect Joint Attention Imitation
Shared Affect
Mother tickles and the infant laughs, mother is ready to tickle again, waiting for a smile, the infant smiles, mother tickles and the infant laughs again, and so on
Joint Attention
Joint Attention is the process of sharing one’s experience of observing an object or event, by following gaze or pointing gestures.It is critical for social development, language acquisition, cognitive development.
The infant points to a toy, when looking to mother, mother takes the toy naming it, and gives it to the infant, who gives it back, and so on
The infant points to a doll, when looking to mother, mother takes the doll, saying ‘‘Let’s comb her hair’’, the infants looks for the comb, gives it to mother, and so on
Joint Attention
“If I’m looking at something, I’m thinking about it”
Games such as “I spy”
Imitation
Impairment in the ability to imitate another person’s movements
Mirror neurons Baby imitation studies Imitation training is an integral part of
many treatment program from ABA to Floortime.
Meltzoff, 1977
“Infants between 12 and 21 days of age can imitate both facial and manual gestures; this behavior cannot be explained in terms of either conditioning or innate releasing mechanisms. Such imitation implies that human neonates can equate their own unseen behaviors with gestures they see others perform”
Meltzoff, 1977
Meltzoff – Imitation
Deficits in imitation keeps the child from developing the “like-me” sense and thus the child cannot use imitation as a means for developing internal self/other correspondences for affect and mind.
Imitation Games
Infants love imitation games Reciprocal imitative games provide the
infant with special information about how they are like other people and how others are like them.
Mirror Neurons Mirror neurons are brain cells in the
premotor cortex. First identified in monkeys in the early
1990s neurons fire both when a monkey performs
an action itself and when it observes another living creature perform that same action
Thought to be involved in higher order cognitive processes such as LANGUAGE
Helps us decode the intentions of others and develop empathy.
1st Birthday
Video research TDC will look at others for reassurance
when cake is placed before them Children later diagnosed with ASD will
not
Theory of Mind
The ability to predict and explain human behavior in terms of mental states such as intentions, emotions, desires, beliefs and states of knowledge and ignorance (Astington, 1993)
Cognitive skill that typically develops around age 4-5yrs.
Around ages 3-5 children start making links between the behavior of others and their beliefs, intentions, and desires.
Understanding of words such as know, forget, remember, guess
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hbQJms8F3x8&feature=PlayList&p=5543A1C13BBAAE02&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=90
First/Second Order False Belief Tasks The Sally-Anne Test (Baron-Cohen, 1985) 80% of ASD answered incorrectly- 86%
with Downs answered correctly What a person thinks about other peoples
thoughts – “Fred believes that Suzie thinks…” (Happe, 1994)
TDC acquires Second order by age 6 What other people think that other people
think about their thoughts (higher order)
Poor Theory of Mind can Affect Social Performance in a Number of Ways Individual may not realize they do not
“fit in” or understand why they don’t Individual may not correctly perceive
situations Individual may misread or miss social
cues/responses of others If individual misses social cues he will
not appropriately act on the social responses of others.
Behaviors which suggest poor theory of mind Comments that embarrass or offend – even if
they are true “ you sure are fat!” Inability to pick up on cues that suggest that
our conversation partner is not interested in what we are saying
Wondering what other people are thinking and knowing that they have thoughts about what we are thinking
Inability to pick-up on facial expressions, body language, prosody
Inability to understand that our behavior affects how other people think and feel about us.
Increasing Perspective-Taking Ability Whole Body Listening Pantomine Using Literature to Teach Social
Awareness Use words such as “think, feel, believe,
hope, wonder”
Executive Functions
Mediated by the prefrontal cortex “allow us to organize our behavior over
time and override immediate demands in favor of longer-term goals” (Dawson & Guare, 2004)
How we plan and execute a goalProcessing information
Planning and organizing tasks
Self-regulation
Monitoring behavior using feedback
Executive Dysfunction
– occurs in: Autism Schizophrenia Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Tourette Syndrome Learning Disability ADHD Conduct Disorder Parkinson’s Disease …and more
Aspects of Executive Functioning Nonverbal Working Memory Verbal Working Memory/Internalized
Speech Regulation of affect, arousal, motivation Problem-Solving Goal-Directed Behavior
Barkley, 2005
Nonverbal Working Memory
Sense of time Schema formation Anticipatory set/hindsight Forethought Complex imitations
Verbal Working Memory/Internalized Speech Rule-governed behavior Reading comprehension Moral reasoning
Regulation of affect, arousal, motivation Emotional control Perspective taking Motivation/persistence
Inhibition
The ability to stop oneself from carrying out a “ready” response when that response is not adaptive
Rogers and Bennetto, 2000
Cognitive Flexibility
Difficulty shifting attentional focus from one stimulus to another or from one idea to another.
Often results in perseveration of thoughts and actions like we see in individuals with frontal brain injury.
Rogers and Bennetto, 2000
Behaviors indicative of executive dysfunction Focus on “special topics” Difficulty with transition between
activities Resistance to change Repetitive language and motor behavior Perseveration
Meltzer, 2007
Working Memory
The simultaneous processing and storage of information during complex cognitive tasks
Big issue with Children with poor EF– affects everyday problem solving
Students need a variety of visual strategies to support sequencing, transitions, and task completion.
By 3rd grade
Curriculum is more challenging and there are greater expectations for students
Students with EF challenges will begin to exhibit frustration, inappropriate behavior, noncompliance and “meltdowns”.
These inappropriate behaviors are not malicious or manipulative but are associated with skill deficits.
Strategies to improve EF (Meltzer) Memorization—When using acronyms to help students memorize information, the
“crazier the phrase,” the better. If a student is non-verbal, then make a cartoon. Cognitive Flexibility—To help students improve cognitive flexibility, work with
riddles and jokes to help students shift between word meanings. In math, students can ask themselves: do I know another way to solve this problem, does this look similar to other problems I have seen, is this problem the same or different from the one before it?
Prioritizing—To help students prioritize information, teach students to listen to the teacher’s intonation during lectures. Also, students can highlight the most important ideas in a text in one color and details in another color.
Notetaking—To help students prioritize and remember information students can take 3-column notes: the first column contains one word that is the core concept, the second column contains the details supporting the concept, the third column contains the strategy the student will use to remember the information. When taking notes from text, students can use a 2-column approach. In the first column, students ask themselves questions about the text, and they put the answers in the second column.
Self-Monitoring and Self-Checking—Helping students check their work requires two processes: 1) Provide explicit checklists for assignments, so students know what to check for, and 2) Help students develop personalized checklists, so they become aware of and check for their most common errors. As a final step, students can make their own acronyms to remind themselves of their personal error traps.
Central Coherence
Definition: The ability to incorporate details into “the big picture”.
Ability to integrate information Poor imagination Restricted interests Repetitive behavior Focus on “the details” – Can’t see the
forest for the trees…Uta Frith (1989)
Central Coherence
Allows us to recognize the correct context for many common
ambiguous words meet-meat Son-sun Sew-so Pear-pair
CEFT (Shah & Frith, 1983)
ASD averaged 21/25 embedded figures
TDC and Children with LD average 15/25
Kanizsa's triangle:
The Ebbinghaus Illusion ( Frith, 2003)
Wechsler Block Design Task (Frith, 2003)
This subtest of the Wechsler is consistently found to be a test that ASD show superior performance relative to the other subtest
Weaknesses Associated with Central Coherence Interpretation of any type of stimuli as
far as obtaining the overall context and meaning
“In her eye was a big tear” vs. “In her dress there was a big tear”– ASD tend to give the most common production of these types of words
Together Weaknesses in TOM, EF, and CC, can result in issues with Pragmatic (Social Language Performance) Conflict Resolution Difficulty repairing miscommunication Negotiating Dealing with sarcasm/irony Presupposition Conversation and narrative discourse http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyMSS
e7cOvA