Making lighting adjustments to establish new behavioral patterns in a child with autism: A follow-up study.

Emily Piven, Seyed Alireza Derakhshanrad
Author Information
  1. Emily Piven: University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences, St. Augustine, Florida, USA.
  2. Seyed Alireza Derakhshanrad: Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran.

Abstract

Acknowledging the importance of lighting adjustment (a less-studied aspect of the environmental modification), this study showed novel effects of black light conditions, where white objects became part of the foreground of a blackened environment to train a child with autism to master a series of self-care tasks. This follow-up study provided details about how training progressed under black light conditions to teach the child a second task called self-feeding. The process of training self-feeding for this child was undergone after the child mastered the self-care task of toothbrushing. Healthcare practitioners may want to illuminate overlooked aspects of the non-human environment, which may be ignored by children with autism, to stimulate interest in objects following lighting adjustments.

Keywords

References

  1. Am J Occup Ther. 2013 Jul-Aug;67(4):405-12 [PMID: 23791315]
  2. Dev Cogn Neurosci. 2018 Jan;29:151-167 [PMID: 28545994]
  3. PLoS One. 2018 Aug 29;13(8):e0202071 [PMID: 30157207]
  4. Int J Dev Disabil. 2019 Jul 23;66(2):160-168 [PMID: 34141378]

Word Cloud

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