Social Skills Clinical Trial
Official title:
Parent-Child Reciprocity and the Effectiveness of a Parent-Assisted Social Skills Training Program for Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorder
Early adolescence marks a significant development in teens' social abilities, shifting from
play to conversation-based activities, and having stronger and more intimate friendships.
Parents contribute to this shift by practicing reciprocal social interaction with their
teens.
For teens with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) this shift in their peers' social abilities
extends their characteristic social deficits even further. Social skills deficits in
individuals with ASD are associated with poor adaptive functioning and increased
psychopathology. Parents play a pivotal role in caring for and tutoring their children with
ASD into adulthood. However, the effect parent-teen reciprocity has on the social skills of
adolescents with ASD has not been tested. Furthermore, whereas parent-child reciprocity
predicted intervention outcome in young children with ASD, no study has examined this effect
in teens with ASD.
The proposed study aims to test these questions using the Program for the Education and
Enrichment of Relational Skills (PEERS), an evidence-based parent-assisted social skills
training program for teens with ASD.
Entering adolescence is a significant milestone in the development of socialization. Same-sex
friendships and "best friends", developed during childhood, become more intensive,
reciprocal, and intimate. In addition, social networks evolve and become more central for
adolescents. Social interaction moves in adolescence from focusing on game playing to
conversation focused interaction. Teens begin to exhibit dialogical skills, including the
capacity to acknowledge others' opinions and emotions; view oneself in someone else's
position; discuss disagreements with empathy while maintaining positive affect; and engage in
a give-and-take, fluent, and non-constricted exchange while maintaining an autonomous stance.
The consolidation of close friendships requires for teens to learn to dialogue joint positive
plans as well as interpersonal conflicts within the relationship. Parents, through their
relationships with their teens, can provide them with opportunities to learn, experience, and
practice the dialogical skills needed for social functioning. Parental contribution to teens'
dialogical skills is possible despite the differences between parent-teen and teen-peers
interactions, since interaction in both kinds of relationships requires reciprocity .
Reciprocity is defined as the capacity to engage in social exchange that integrates inputs
from multiple partners into a unified social event. It involves an ongoing process of
awareness to- and interpretation of- the emotional and interpersonal cues of others, followed
by an appropriate response that enables a smooth continuation of the social interaction.
Parent-child reciprocity is a key element of early social relationships, which sets the
foundation for social collaboration, empathy, and pro-social behavior. Developmental studies
have demonstrated how early parent-child reciprocity predicts social adaptive functioning in
adolescence, whereas intrusive, controlling parenting is associated with poorer social
outcomes, such as affiliations with deviant friends. Adolescents gain from productive
reciprocity with the parent, as it gives them an opportunity to express their individuation
vis-a-vis the parental stance, and to practice important perspective taking, exchanging
information, negotiation, and conflict resolution skills in a secure, enabling environment.
The proposed study aims to examine the effect parent-teen reciprocity has on adolescents with
an Autism Spectrum Disorder. Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neuro-developmental
condition, characterized by social communication deficits and restricted and repetitive
behavior patterns. ASD symptoms vary in severity (e.g. from total lack of social initiative
and extreme difficulty tolerating change, to an awkward social approach and difficulties
adapting behavior do the social context), which may be related to different levels of
functioning. In addition, ASD can involve intellectual impairment and comorbid
psychopathology, that may further hamper independent functioning . Despite positive effects
of early intervention social deficits in ASD persist throughout the lifespan even for higher
functioning individuals .
For many individuals with ASD, adolescence is a particularly troubling period, characterized
by enhanced motivation for social relationships, but at the same time, by increased
realization of the difficulties they encounter when interacting with peers and their lack of
knowledge and experience in friend-making . As they attempt to integrate socially,
adolescents with ASD experience more negative social outcomes (e.g., fewer friends, little
support from classmates, limited involvement in social activities, and increased peer
rejection) compared to adolescents with other developmental disabilities or typically
developing teens. Due to their social-communication deficits as well as their social naivety,
adolescents with ASD are also more exposed to bullying, reflected in high rates of
victimization and perpetration.
Parents play a pivotal role in caring for their child with ASD. Due to the developmental
delays and social isolation of individuals with ASD, parents continue to care for their
children into adolescence and adulthood, often as the only carers . Because of their central
supportive role in their children's lives, research has attempted to highlight parental
factors that may predict the quality of parent-child relationships as well as child outcomes.
Most studies observing such parental factors have focused on parents of toddlers and
preschoolers, associating parental resolution of the child's diagnosis, parental
insightfulness into the experience of the child, and parental sensitivity, with child's
secure attachment. Studies of parents' relationship with their older offspring linked
maternal pessimism to poorer relationships with sons/daughters with ASD , and maternal warmth
and praise with lower levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms in adolescents and
adults with ASD. However, these studies are based on self and parental report rather than on
behavioral observation, and did not examine parent-teen reciprocity.
Examinations of the effects of parent-child reciprocity on children with ASD have mostly
focused on young children. Our own work showed parent-child reciprocity is associated with
improved emotion regulation and lower negative emotionality as well as with increased levels
of oxytocin in children with ASD. On the other hand, controlling, intrusive parenting was
associated with externalizing behavior problems in children and adolescents with ASD.
Parent-child reciprocity has also been shown to predict higher social skills of children with
ASD and to mediate the relation between child's level of functioning and social skills. The
contribution of parent-child reciprocity to the child's intervention related progress has
been addressed in some intervention studies for toddlers and pre-schoolers with ASD ,
revealing parent-child reciprocity mediates the effect of social communication interventions
in this young age group. However, an examination of parentadolescent reciprocity in ASD, as a
predictor of teen outcome is still needed.
The complexity of the parental role in adolescence is greater and more stressful when
parenting teens with ASD . The need for greater parental input into the nature of social
interaction, the new themes of intimacy and sexuality brought upon by puberty, and the
parental wish to protect their teens from exclusion and bullying may bring parents to be more
controlling, and even intrusive in their interaction with their teens . However, as described
above, parent-teen reciprocity is important in developing teens' appropriate social
reciprocity with peers. Hence, the ability of parents to be more reciprocal and less
intrusive in their interaction with their teens is expected to predict teens' social skills
and reciprocity with peers. Furthermore, parent-teen reciprocity is expected to play a part
in the ability of teens and parents to gain from interventions targeting social skills, such
as parent-assisted social skills groups.
PEERS Intervention: Social skills groups are common interventions for people with ASD,
especially those with average to above-average cognitive skills . However, the majority of
social skills training programs have focused on children aged 7-12, and few studies have
examined the benefit of such groups for adolescents with ASD . Furthermore, few Randomized
Controlled Trials (RCTs) have examined the effectiveness of social skills training for those
with ASD. The proposed study aims to conduct the first RCT of a social skills training
program for adolescents with ASD in Israel, using the well-established Program for the
Education and Enrichment of Relational Skills (PEERS). PEERS , is a parent-assisted,
manualized social skills training program for high-functioning adolescents with ASD,
addressing crucial areas of social functioning for adolescents (see methods for a
description). Ecologically valid skills for making and maintaining friends are taught using
psychoeducational and cognitive-behavioral treatment techniques. Parents learn how to be
social coaches to their teens in a separate group, running in parallel to the teens' group.
Teens practice the taught skills in between sessions. Parents, as social coaches, are
expected to supervise their teens' treatment fidelity, and in addition to practice the taught
skills with their teens (e.g., running a two-way conversation, noticing the others'
non-verbal cues, etc.). In North America, PEERS has been evaluated using RCTs, with its
efficacy established for improving a variety of social skills in adolescents, including
social skills knowledge, social responsiveness, social communication, social cognition,
social awareness, social motivation, assertion, cooperation, and responsibility . PEERS
related gains were maintained even 5 years post intervention. PEERS treatment effects have
also been reflected in changes in the social brain as revealed through biomarkers of
treatment outcome using EEG . A first cross-cultural validation study of PEERS in South
Korea, yielded a significant improvement in teens' social skills knowledge, interpersonal
skills, play/leisure skills, and a decrease in teens' autism symptoms and depression, as well
as parents' anxiety. Recently, two preintervention child factors; parental report on teens'
social skills, and teens' self-awareness of their popularity, were found to predict PEERS
intervention outcome. PEERS positive effects on parents' self-efficacy have also been
reported. However, although PEERS relies on parents as social coaches, the effect of
parent-teen reciprocity on PEERS outcome has not been examined. As in everyday life, parents
have a complex role in PEERS: On one hand, supervising their teens' work may call for more
controlling, intrusive parenting. On the other hand, in order to effectively practice the
taught social skills with their teens (and to meet the program's goals), parents and teens
need to reciprocally collaborate. The use of reciprocity and intrusiveness in parent-teen
interaction could therefore mediate the effect of PEERS on teens' social skills. In addition,
since PEERS also teaches parents how to be less intrusive and more reciprocal with their
teens, an improvement in parent-teen reciprocity is expected
;
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