Social Thinking®, Pseudoscientific, Not Empirically Supported, and Non-Evidence Based: a Reply to Crooke and Winner.

Justin B Leaf, Joseph H Cihon, Julia L Ferguson, Mitchell Taubman, Ronald Leaf, John McEachin
Author Information
  1. Justin B Leaf: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.
  2. Joseph H Cihon: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.
  3. Julia L Ferguson: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.
  4. Mitchell Taubman: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.
  5. Ronald Leaf: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.
  6. John McEachin: Autism Partnership Foundation, 200 Marina Drive, Seal Beach, CA 90740 USA.

Abstract

J. B. Leaf et al. ( 152-157, 2016) wrote a commentary on social thinking (ST), an intervention commonly implemented for individuals diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The authors described what constitutes scientific, pseudoscientific, and antiscientific evidence and contended that ST aligns with the definition of pseudoscience and, to date, is not empirically supported or evidence based. Crooke and Winner ( 403-408, 2016) responded, arguing that ST meets their definition of an evidence-based practice and identifying purported misconceptions and inaccuracies described by J. B. Leaf et al. In the current article, the authors clarify the original arguments, critically evaluate Crooke and Winner's definition of what constitutes evidence-based practice, further evaluate the research on ST, discuss issues regarding how ST is conceptualized, and express concerns about the endorsement and use of an eclectic approach to treating ASD. As this response was written by behavior analysts, it specifically addresses the conceptual consistency of this approach from a behavior-analytic worldview.

Keywords

References

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