BibSonomy :: bibtex  ::

tag user group author concept BibTeX key search:all search:toby
A blue social bookmark and publication sharing system.
tags · relations · groups · popular
help · blog · about
login · register
toby's BibTeX entry:  

Discrimination skills predict effective preference assessment methods for adults with developmental disabilities

33rd Annual Convention of the Association for Behavior Analysis, 2007.
Authors: Duong Nguyen and May S.H. Lee and C.T. Yu and Jennifer R. Thorsteinsson and Toby L. Martin and Garry L. Martin
Tags: ABLA cv developmental-disabilities discrimination poster preference-assessment presentation video
Abstract: We examined the relationship between three discrimination skills (visual, visual matching-to-sample, and auditory-visual) and four stimulus modalities (object, picture, spoken, and video) in assessing preferences of leisure activities for 7 adults with developmental disabilities. Three discrimination skills were measured using the Assessment of Basic Learning Abilities Test. Three participants mastered a visual discrimination task, but not visual matching-to-sample and auditory-visual discriminations; two participants mastered visual and visual matching-to-sample discriminations, but not auditory-visual discrimination, and two participants showed all three discriminations. The most and least preferred activities, identified through paired-stimulus preference assessment using objects, were presented to each participant in each of the four modalities using a reversal design. The results showed that (1) participants with visual discrimination alone showed a preference for their preferred activities in the object modality only; (2) those with visual and visual matching-to-sample discriminations, but not auditory-visual discrimination, showed a preference for their preferred activities in the object but not in the spoken modality, and mixed results in the pictorial and video modalities; and (3) those with all three discriminations showed a preference for their preferred activities in all four modalities. These results provide partial replications of previous findings on the relationship between discriminations and object, pictorial, and spoken modalities, and also extends previous research to include video stimuli.
| BibTeX  
@misc{ABA2007-380-52,
title = {Discrimination skills predict effective preference assessment methods for adults with developmental disabilities},
author = {Duong Nguyen and May S.H. Lee and C.T. Yu and Jennifer R. Thorsteinsson and Toby L. Martin and Garry L. Martin},
booktitle = {33rd Annual Convention of the Association for Behavior Analysis},
month = {May},
organization = {Association for Behavior Analysis},
type = {poster presentation},
year = {2007},
abstract = {We examined the relationship between three discrimination skills (visual, visual matching-to-sample, and auditory-visual) and four stimulus modalities (object, picture, spoken, and video) in assessing preferences of leisure activities for 7 adults with developmental disabilities. Three discrimination skills were measured using the Assessment of Basic Learning Abilities Test. Three participants mastered a visual discrimination task, but not visual matching-to-sample and auditory-visual discriminations; two participants mastered visual and visual matching-to-sample discriminations, but not auditory-visual discrimination, and two participants showed all three discriminations. The most and least preferred activities, identified through paired-stimulus preference assessment using objects, were presented to each participant in each of the four modalities using a reversal design. The results showed that (1) participants with visual discrimination alone showed a preference for their preferred activities in the object modality only; (2) those with visual and visual matching-to-sample discriminations, but not auditory-visual discrimination, showed a preference for their preferred activities in the object but not in the spoken modality, and mixed results in the pictorial and video modalities; and (3) those with all three discriminations showed a preference for their preferred activities in all four modalities. These results provide partial replications of previous findings on the relationship between discriminations and object, pictorial, and spoken modalities, and also extends previous research to include video stimuli.},
keywords = {ABLA cv developmental-disabilities discrimination poster preference-assessment presentation video }
}