Echolalia
Principles for responding to echolalia
- Create opportunities to initiate communication - Determine the function - Use low-constraint interactions - Avoid solely teaching a rote set of "functional" or survival utterances - Practice language use with peers. - Teach quiet behaviors
Non-interactive functions of echolalia examples:
- Immediate- non-focused, rehearsal, and self-regulatory - Delayed- non-focused, situation association, and rehearsal
Gestalt language development "Natural Language Acquisition"
- Six stages of language development - typical language development progression for many people with ASD - begins with pure echolalia/gestalts
Other disorders that can present with echolalia
- Tourette's syndrome - Aphasia - Schizophrenia - Dementia - Catatonia - Epilepsy - Stroke - Language Impairments
Variables Associated with Higher Incidences of Echolalia
- Unstructured or unpredictable situations. - Transitions - Unfamiliar tasks or situations - Difficult or challenging tasks - Contexts that cause anxiety, fear, distress, and/or elation. - Stimuli that were presented in modalities in which the child is hypersensitive (e.g., audition, tactile, kinesthetic, vestibular, and/or visual
Interactive functions of echolalia examples:
- immediate: conversational turn-taking, answering questions, and requesting - delayed: turn taking, providing information, labeling, protest, request, and calling attention
Three echolalia interventions:
1. Cues-Pause-Point 2. Script training and visual cues 3. Differential reinforcement of lower rates
Script Training and Visual Cues
Targets delayed echolalia - Script training uses written out scripts with pictures to help teach a person what is an acceptable communication exchange for a situation - Scripts address a particular social situation - Prompts are gradually faded so the client has to provide more and more of the language of the script on his or her own
Cues-Pause-Point
Targets immediate echolalia - Show cue card and have child say what is on the card - Pause and hold up index finger to indicate "quiet" - Ask question - pause - point to card and ask what is on it - Praise and acknowledge correct reply
What is echolalia?
The socially awkward or inappropriate verbatim repetition of part or all of a previously spoken utterance
T/F: echolalia is most common in children and adults with ASD
True
2 types of echolalia
immediate and delayed
Gestalt
remembering and producing language as a whole unit that has one communicative intention