Imitation offers a gateway to relationship. This paper seeks to explore that capacity by describing the therapeutic approach of 'Intensive Interaction'. The research literature on imitation contains relatively little about imitation used in an intervention capacity, concentrating instead on the emergence of imitative abilities during infant and child development. The paper therefore describes the case of a young man with severe autism, for whom Intensive Interaction was successful in bringing him into interpersonal engagement with others. The author provides an account as to why imitation should be so effective in this regard. Overall, the paper aims to stimulate questions about how imitation can best be conceived and studied.
Shared understanding is generated between individuals before speech through a language of body movement and non-verbal vocalisation, expression of feeling and interest made in gestures of movement and voice. Human understanding is co-created in these embodied projects, displayed in serially organised expressions with shared timing of reciprocal actions between partners. These develop in narrative events that build over cycles of reciprocal expressive action in a four-part structure shared by all the time-based arts: "introduction," "development," "climax," and "conclusion." Prelinguistic narrative establishes the foundation of later, linguistic intelligence. Yet, participating in social interactions that give rise to narrative development is a central problem of autism spectrum disorder. In this paper, we examine the rapid growth of narrative meaning-making between a nonverbal young woman with severe autism and her new therapist. Episodes of embodied, shared understanding were enabled through a basic therapeutic mode of reciprocal, creative mirroring of expressive gesture. These developed through reciprocal cycles and as the relationship progressed, complete co-created narratives were formed resulting in shared joy and the mutual interest and trust of companionship. These small, embodied stories enabled moments of coregulated arousal that the young woman had previous difficulty with. These data provide evidence for an intact capacity for non-verbal narrative meaning-making in autism.
This article explores innovative and interactive ways of working with people who have severe learning disabilities, special needs and/or challenging behaviour who, despite the efforts of those who support them, are not able to respond to attempts to interact with them. It examines the possibilities of communicating by using people's own behaviours and outlines how these methods of interaction can be developed into a 'language' which people with these disabilities recognize and find motivating. Entering into a person's world in a way that is not confusing or threatening may allow him/her to move from solitary self-stimulation to shared activity. People with these disabilities will then become aware of a world outside their own (sometimes they are aware of this but are unable to make a connection between what they perceive and themselves), and begin to understand their relationship to it. Surprise is an important element as it shifts attention from the inner space to the source of the intervention. A number of examples illustrate a range of person-centred approaches and the variety of disabilities that may be assisted.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.