Echolalia
Role of SLP
-Lead educational teams. -Facilitate the generalization and maintenance of functional communication skills.
Principles for responding to echolalia
-create opportunities to initiate communication vs. the individual responding to prompts/questions -determine the function or reason for the echolalia to teach functional language taking the place of the echolalia -use low-constraint interactions: limit yes/no questions, wh- questions, and commands -avoid solely teaching a rote set of "functional" survival utterances: teach true symbolic language -practice language use with peers -teach quiet behaviors in the place of non-interactive echolalia or teach to say echolalic utterances quietly
Autism
Echolalia is most common in this disorder
Types of Echolalia
Immediate and delayed: correlated to the time that is between the first utterance and the repeated utterance
Functions of Echolalia
Interactive and Non-interactive
Non-Interactive Echolalia
Not purposeful messages for personal use -Immediate: non-focused, rehearsal, and self-regulatory (don't serve a communicative purpose) -Delayed: non-focused, situational association, and rehearsal (more self stimulatory)
Interactive Echolalia
Purposeful communicating to another person - a way to attempt to interact with another person (doesn't have language skills to come up with a novel response) -Immediate: turn taking, answer questions, requesting -Delayed: turn taking, providing information, labeling, protest, request, calling, affirmation, directive
Variables Associated with Higher Incidences of Echolalia
Situational variables: -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) Interactional variables: -Complex linguistic input -High-constraint linguistic input -Partner's directive interaction style Person-specific variables: -Language comprehension difficulties -Gestalt style of language learning and use
Nonlinguistic vocalizations
Squeals, grunts, or crying which are not echolalia
Script Training
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 Come up with 10 common questions- the cue card is the answer Steps: 1. Show cue card and have child say what is on the card 2.Pause and hold up index finger to indicate "quiet" 3. Ask question - pause - point to card and ask what is on it 4. Praise and acknowledge correct reply
Echolalia
The socially awkward or inappropriate verbatim repetition of part or all of a previously spoken utterance.
Gestalt language development
The style of language learning researchers believe children with Autism follow -Six stages of language development -typical language development progression for many people with ASD -begins with pure echolalia/gestalts
Gestalt
remembering and producing language as a whole unit that has one communicative intention: -word strings that are echoed verbatim -comprehended as a whole message, not individual units -not altered for specific situations
Immediate echolalia
repeated utterance occurs a few seconds or almost immediately after the initial utterance
Palolalia
repeating oneself in a quiet voice or different tone (ex. Brick from the middle)
Delayed Echolalia
the repetition of an utterance occurs more than 2 conversational turns after the initial utterance (more difficult to recognize)
Echolalia may also be present in these disorders
tourette's, aphasia, schizophrenia, dementia, cataconia, epilepsy, stroke, language impairments