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    J Appl Behav Anal. 1989 Fall;22(3):245-59.

    Generalized language learning by children with severe mental retardation: effects of peers' expressive modeling.

    Source

    Department of Communication, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260.

    Abstract

    In this study, we investigated the conditions that contribute to observational learning of generalized language in children with severe mental retardation. Matrix-training strategies were used to teach 6 children with mental retardation to combine known words into two- or three-word utterances consistent with syntactic rules. Subsequently, the children learned two or more unknown words concurrently, inducing word-referent relations consistent with these word order rules. Generalized learning of responses not taught directly was shown to be under experimental control using a multiple baseline design across submatrices. Expressive modeling of only four or five responses was sufficient to promote recombinative generalization in the expressive and receptive modalities. Thus, 95% to 98% of subjects' learning was attributed to generalization processes. This study demonstrates how the efficiency of language training with children with mental retardation might be enhanced by coupling observational learning and matrix-training strategies.

    PMID:
    2793632
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1286177
    Free PMC Article

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