An experimental assessment of facilitated communication

Ment Retard. 1993 Feb;31(1):49-59.

Abstract

This report presents a quantitative study of facilitated communication. Participants were 12 people living at an institutional autism program and 9 people who provided them with facilitated communication support. These subjects were the 12 most competent producers of facilitated communication in the program. They were shown pictures of familiar objects and asked to type the names of the objects under three conditions: (a) assisted typing with facilitators unaware of the content of the stimulus picture, (b) unassisted typing, and (c) a condition in which the participants and facilitators were each shown pictures at the same time. In this last condition the paired pictures were either the same or different, and the participant's typing was facilitated to label or describe the picture. These participants were unable to succeed in the tasks without facilitator assistance. On trials when the facilitators and participants had different pictures, the only "correct" labels were for pictures shown to the facilitators and not shown to the participants. This finding demonstrates that the facilitators were unknowingly determining what was typed.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Autistic Disorder / rehabilitation*
  • Communication Aids for Disabled*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Intellectual Disability / rehabilitation*
  • Male
  • Patient Care Team*
  • Pattern Recognition, Visual
  • Social Behavior Disorders / rehabilitation
  • Verbal Learning