2020
DOI: 10.1177/1362361319900594
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Looking or talking: Visual attention and verbal engagement during shared book reading of preschool children on the autism spectrum

Abstract: Visual attention and active engagement during shared book reading are important for facilitating emergent literacy learning during the preschool years. Children on the autism spectrum often show difficulties in language and literacy development, yet research investigating potential indicators of shared book reading engagement, including visual attention and verbal engagement, for this group of preschoolers is currently limited. To better understand the relationship between children’s visual attention and verba… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(146 reference statements)
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“…Other than follow‐in talk literature, only a few studies examined correlations between caregivers' speech acts and child variables. In a book‐reading context, caregivers' book related questions/prompts and explicit teaching were associated with children's concurrent language [Westerveld, Paynter, & Wicks, 2020], and questions/prompts were associated with children's visual attention within the session [Wicks, Paynter, & Westerveld, 2020]. Caregivers also used more clarification techniques if their autistic children had better social interaction skills, used more evocative strategies with children who had fewer behavior problems, and used more feedback strategies for children who scored lower on a pragmatic language assessment [Tipton, Blacher, & Eisenhower, 2017].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other than follow‐in talk literature, only a few studies examined correlations between caregivers' speech acts and child variables. In a book‐reading context, caregivers' book related questions/prompts and explicit teaching were associated with children's concurrent language [Westerveld, Paynter, & Wicks, 2020], and questions/prompts were associated with children's visual attention within the session [Wicks, Paynter, & Westerveld, 2020]. Caregivers also used more clarification techniques if their autistic children had better social interaction skills, used more evocative strategies with children who had fewer behavior problems, and used more feedback strategies for children who scored lower on a pragmatic language assessment [Tipton, Blacher, & Eisenhower, 2017].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, there is a lack of consensus regarding the definition and measurement of engagement across learning tasks for children on the spectrum. In the context of shared book reading, engagement contains several discrete components of joint attention, including sustained visual attention to the storybook, coordinated attention to the adult, and verbal communication related to book content (Richter & Courage, 2017; Wicks et al, 2020). Differences in researchers’ operationalization and measurement of engagement will influence the generalizability of these findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We collected a total of 102 videos (three videos for each of the two book types for 17 participants) and coded for specific study variables. We adapted operational definitions used in this study from existing engagement coding schemas (Adamson et al, 2004; Wicks et al, 2020; Wong & Kasari, 2012) to yield five mutually exclusive engagement states: (a) active engagement, (b) visual engagement, (c) unengaged, (d) disruptive, and (e) uncodable. The active engagement code captured instances when the child was actively involved with the book reading, engaging in reciprocal verbal or nonverbal communication with the reading partner during the book reading session.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, children in both groups looked at the prompt AOIs while viewing the digital storybooks, suggesting F I G U R E 2 Relationships between autism characteristics and prompt types for proportion of fixations to print targets F I G U R E 3 Main effect of autism characteristics on proportion of fixations to picture targets across prompt types that prompting effectively directed their focus of visual attention to these elements. Given characteristic challenges in joint attention and results from our observational study (Wicks et al, 2020), we hypothesized that children with ASD would visually respond less to verbal plus pointing prompts within the storybook stimuli compared to TD peers. Contrary to expectations, both prompt types were similarly effective in directing children's visual attention to print and picture targets across groups.…”
Section: Effects Of Prompting On Children's Focus Of Visual Attentionmentioning
confidence: 99%