‘But I’d rather have raisins!’: Exploring a hybridized approach to multimodal interaction in the case of a minimally verbal child with autism

Author:

Doak Lauran1

Affiliation:

1. Sheffield Hallam University, UK

Abstract

This article explores a ‘hybridized approach’ to multimodal research drawing on video data of classroom communication involving children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. The focus is a short video of ‘Luke’, aged six, who at snack time declines to request an available food item (carrot, tomato or apple) with the available Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS); instead deploying embodied, idiosyncratic communication including gaze, vocalisation and object manipulation to request raisins. The article explores the potential of a hybridized approach for understanding Luke’s communicative competencies which draws upon the theoretical perspectives of Ethnography of Communication, Conversation Analysis and Multimodal (Inter)Action Analysis; and uses two forms of multimodal transcription (the multimodal matrix and annotated video stills). It is argued that each tradition brings distinct affordances to our understanding of this short interaction and that together they can permit inferences which would not have been possible working with one approach alone.

Funder

Sheffield Hallam University

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference69 articles.

1. American Psychiatric Association (APA) (2013) Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (fifth edition) Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.

2. The Understandability of AAC: A Conversation Analysis Study of Acquired Dysarthria

3. The Picture Exchange Communication System

4. Brewster SJ (2007) Asymmetries of power and competence and implications for AAC: interaction between adults with severe learning disabilities and their care staff. PhD Thesis, University of Birmingham, UK.

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