Deborah Carr (2003).
Effects of exemplar training in exclusion responding on auditory-visual discrimination tasks with children with autism.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
36, 507-524.
In Experiment 1 with 7 autistic children (3 to 6 years old),
auditory-visual exclusion was tested with four unknown
word--item pairs for each child. One child demonstrated exclusion and
positive learning outcomes unequivocally with the four
auditory-visual relations. Three children demonstrated exclusion,
though inconsistently, and failed to demonstrate positive
learning outcomes. The remaining 3 children failed to demonstrate
exclusion; therefore, the learning outcome test was omitted. The 6 children
who failed to demonstrate exclusion or positive learning
outcomes participated in the second experiment. In Experiment 2, nonreinforced
exclusion trials with four new unknown word--item pairs
were included in trial blocks that also
contained reinforced exclusion trials with the unknown
exemplars from Experiment 1. Five
children demonstrated exclusion with the new word-item pairs,
and 4 of these demonstrated
positive learning outcomes in further tests. One child
demonstrated some limited but inconsistent
improvement in exclusion and was not tested for learning outcomes. The data suggest that
contemporaneous presentation of multiple examples of reinforced exclusion facilitated
nonreinforced exclusion performances and that the resulting reduction in errors was critical in
producing accurate learning outcomes with the new word-item discriminations.
DESCRIPTORS: autism, exclusion-based learning, multiple-exemplar training, generalization