An analysis of observational learning in autistic and normal children. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • The present investigation studied observational learning in autistic children. Fifteen autistic and 15 normal children watched an adult model engage in a set of behaviors under specific verbal instructions. After observing this situation, the children were tested to determine what they had acquired through observation. The results showed that (1) the majority of the autistic and the youngest normal children acquired only some limited features of the observational situation and (2) chronological age was related to the amount of learning through observation in the normal children but not in the autistics. The deficit that the autistic children showed in observational learning may be related to a failure to discriminate or attend to the total stimulus input presented. Their failure in observational learning can be seen to contribute in a major way to the severely impoverished behavioral repertoires of these children.

published proceedings

  • J Abnorm Child Psychol

author list (cited authors)

  • Varni, J. W., Lovaas, O. I., Koegel, R. L., & Everett, N. L.

citation count

  • 97

publication date

  • March 1979