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Dive into the research topics where Connie Kasari is active.

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Featured researches published by Connie Kasari.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2010

The Co-Regulation of Emotions Between Mothers and their Children with Autism

Amanda Gulsrud; Laudan B. Jahromi; Connie Kasari

Thirty-four toddlers with autism and their mothers participated in an early intervention targeting joint engagement. Across the 24 intervention sessions, any significant distress episode in the child was coded for emotion regulation outcomes including child negativity, child emotion self-regulation, and mother emotion co-regulation. Results revealed that emotion regulation strategies by both mother and child were employed during distress episodes. An effect of intervention was found such that children decreased their expression of negativity across the intervention and mothers increased their emotional and motivational scaffolding. The results of this study indicate a positive effect of an intervention targeting joint engagement on emotion co-regulation outcomes.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2012

Exploring the Social Impact of Being a Typical Peer Model for Included Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Jill Locke; Erin Rotheram-Fuller; Connie Kasari

This study examined the social impact of being a typical peer model as part of a social skills intervention for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Participants were drawn from a randomized-controlled-treatment trial that examined the effects of targeted interventions on the social networks of 60 elementary-aged children with ASD. Results demonstrated that typical peer models had higher social network centrality, received friendships, friendship quality, and less loneliness than non-peer models. Peer models were also more likely to be connected with children with ASD than non-peer models at baseline and exit. These results suggest that typical peers can be socially connected to children with ASD, as well as other classmates, and maintain a strong and positive role within the classroom.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2012

Brief Report: Longitudinal Improvements in the Quality of Joint Attention in Preschool Children with Autism

Kathy Lawton; Connie Kasari

Children with autism exhibit deficits in their quantity and quality of joint attention. Early autism intervention studies rarely document improvement in joint attention quality. The purpose of this study was to determine whether there was a change in joint attention quality for preschoolers with autism who were randomized to a joint attention intervention, symbolic play intervention, or a control group. Quality was defined as shared positive affect during joint attention as well as shared positive affect and utterances during joint attention. Interactions of group and time were found for both types of joint attention quality. During the follow up visits, the joint attention and symbolic play intervention groups produced more of these two types of joint attention quality than the control group.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2016

Isolating active ingredients in a parent-mediated social communication intervention for toddlers with autism spectrum disorder.

Amanda C. Gulsrud; Gerhard Hellemann; Stephanie Shire; Connie Kasari

BACKGROUND Behavioral interventions are commonplace in the treatment of autism spectrum disorders, yet relatively little is known about how and why these interventions work. This study tests the relationship between isolated core components of a packaged social communication intervention and the primary outcome, joint engagement, to better understand how the intervention is affecting change in individuals. METHODS A total of 86 toddlers and their parents were enrolled in the study and randomized to one of two treatments, the joint attention, symbolic play, engagement, and regulation (JASPER) parent-mediated intervention or a psychoeducational intervention. Measures regarding the parents use of intervention strategies were collected before and after the 10-week intervention. Additional measures of child and parent joint engagement were also collected. RESULTS A significant effect of treatment was found for all four of the core strategies of the intervention, favoring a larger increase in the JASPER condition. A hierarchical linear regression revealed several individual predictors of joint engagement, including parent-rated buy-in, interventionist-rated parent involvement, and parental use of strategies. To complement the hierarchical analysis, we also tested the potential mediating effect the strategies may have on the relationship between treatment and joint engagement. Results showed that the strategy of mirrored pacing mediated the relationship between treatment and joint engagement in the positive direction. CONCLUSIONS These results strongly suggest that the mirrored pacing strategy is an active ingredient of the JASPER treatment.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2016

Increasing Responsive Parent-Child Interactions and Joint Engagement: Comparing the Influence of Parent-Mediated Intervention and Parent Psychoeducation.

Stephanie Shire; Amanda Gulsrud; Connie Kasari

Enhancing immediate and contingent responding by caregivers to children’s signals is an important strategy to support social interactions between caregivers and their children with autism. Yet, there has been limited examination of parents’ responsive behaviour in association with children’s social behaviour post caregiver-mediated intervention. Eighty-five dyads were randomized to one of two 10-week caregiver-training interventions. Parent–child play interactions were coded for parental responsivity and children’s joint engagement. Significant gains in responsivity and time jointly engaged were found post JASPER parent-mediated intervention over a psychoeducation intervention. Further, combining higher levels of responsive behaviour with greater adoption of intervention strategies was associated with greater time jointly engaged. Findings encourage a focus on enhancing responsive behaviour in parent-mediated intervention models.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2016

Longitudinal Effects of Adaptive Interventions With a Speech-Generating Device in Minimally Verbal Children With ASD

Daniel Almirall; Charlotte DiStefano; Ya Chih Chang; Stephanie Shire; Ann P. Kaiser; Xi Lu; Inbal Nahum-Shani; Rebecca Landa; Pamela Mathy; Connie Kasari

There are limited data on the effects of adaptive social communication interventions with a speech-generating device in autism. This study is the first to compare growth in communications outcomes among three adaptive interventions in school-age children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) who are minimally verbal. Sixty-one children, ages 5–8 years, participated in a sequential, multiple-assignment randomized trial (SMART). All children received a developmental behavioral communication intervention: joint attention, symbolic play, engagement and regulation (JASP) with enhanced milieu teaching (EMT). The SMART included three 2-stage, 24-week adaptive interventions with different provisions of a speech-generating device (SGD) in the context of JASP+EMT. The first adaptive intervention, with no SGD, initially assigned JASP+EMT alone, then intensified JASP+EMT for slow responders. In the second adaptive intervention, slow responders to JASP+EMT were assigned JASP+EMT+SGD. The third adaptive intervention initially assigned JASP+EMT+SGD; then intensified JASP+EMT+SGD for slow responders. Analyses examined between-group differences in change in outcomes from baseline to Week 36. Verbal outcomes included spontaneous communicative utterances and novel words. Nonlinguistic communication outcomes included initiating joint attention and behavior regulation, and play. The adaptive intervention beginning with JASP+EMT+SGD was estimated as superior. There were significant (p < .05) between-group differences in change in spontaneous communicative utterances and initiating joint attention. School-age children with ASD who are minimally verbal make significant gains in communication outcomes with an adaptive intervention beginning with JASP+EMT+SGD. Future research should explore mediators and moderators of the adaptive intervention effects and second-stage intervention options that further capitalize on early gains in treatment.


Autism | 2016

Friendships in preschool children with autism spectrum disorder: What holds them back, child characteristics or teacher behavior?

Ya-Chih Chang; Wendy Shih; Connie Kasari

Children begin to show preferences for specific playmates as early as the first 2 years of life. Children with autism spectrum disorder have difficulty making friends, even in elementary and middle school. However, very little is known about earlier friendships in children with autism such as preschool friendships. This study examined friendships in preschool children with autism and explored how joint attention contributes to these friendships in mainstream settings. A secondary aim was to determine the extent to which teachers used strategies to facilitate friendship development. The participants were 31 mainstreamed preschool children (ages 2–5 years) with autism spectrum disorder. School observations were conducted individually to capture participants’ interactions with peers and adults during free play. The results indicated that 20% of the participants had friendships at school. Children with friends were more likely than children without friends to be jointly engaged with their peers during free play, and they used higher joint attention skills. Teachers used few friendship facilitating strategies, and more often used behavioral management strategies within the classrooms. Future studies may want to examine the effects of early interventions and/or teacher training on the development of friendships in preschool children with autism spectrum disorder within the school setting.


Archive | 2018

Experimental Designs for Research on Adaptive Interventions: Singly and Sequentially Randomized Trials

Daniel Almirall; Inbal Nahum-Shani; Lu Wang; Connie Kasari

In clinical or educational practice, it is often necessary to use an individually tailored, sequential approach to intervention in order to improve outcomes. Adaptive interventions (also known as dynamic treatment regimens) can be used to guide such sequential intervention decision-making. Adaptive interventions are multicomponent, multistage intervention packages. The multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) is a comprehensive research framework for development, optimization, and evaluation of multicomponent intervention packages, such as adaptive interventions. When working within the optimization phase of MOST, behavioral, biobehavioral, and educational intervention scientists often have important scientific questions about how best to optimize an adaptive intervention. This chapter discusses various types of experimental designs that can be used to optimize an adaptive intervention. In some of these, participants are randomized once over the course of the trial (i.e., singly randomized trials, or SRTs), and in others, participants are randomized at multiple stages (i.e., sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trials, or SMARTs). The choice between SRT and SMART ultimately is driven by the scientific questions that the intervention scientist seeks to answer. Motivated by the development of an adaptive intervention to improve social skills and academic engagement among children with autism, we illustrate these ideas by presenting four example of experimental designs: two examples of a SRT and two examples of a SMART. We present the rationale for each experimental design and the questions each is designed to answer. In doing so, this chapter provides an expanded set of tools that investigators aiming to develop an adaptive intervention can draw from within the MOST optimization phase toolbox.


Autism | 2017

Race, disability, and grade: Social relationships in children with autism spectrum disorders

Gazi F. Azad; Jill Locke; Connie Kasari; David S. Mandell

Race is associated with social relationships among typically developing children; however, studies rarely examine the impact of race on social outcomes for children with autism spectrum disorder. This study examined how race (African American, Latino, Asian, or White) in conjunction with disability status (autism spectrum disorders or typically developing) and grade (grades K–2 or 3–5) affects friendships and social networks. The sample comprises 85 children with autism spectrum disorders and 85 typically developing controls matched on race, gender, age/grade, and classroom (wherever possible). Race, disability, and grade each had an independent effect on friendship nominations, and there was an interaction among the three variables. Specifically, children with autism spectrum disorders who were African American or Latino in the upper elementary grades received fewer friendship nominations than typically developing White children in the lower elementary grades. Only the presence of autism spectrum disorders was associated with social network centrality. Our results also suggested that Latino children with autism spectrum disorders in the upper elementary grades were at the highest risk of social isolation. Implications for re-conceptualizing social skills interventions are discussed.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2012

Play and Joint Attention of Children with Autism in the Preschool Special Education Classroom

Connie Wong; Connie Kasari

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Jill Locke

University of Washington

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Ya-Chih Chang

University of California

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Amanda Gulsrud

University of California

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Wendy Shih

University of California

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