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Wikipedia

Howard Shane

Howard C. Shane is director of the Autism Language Program and Communication Enhancement Program at Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts,[1] former director of the Institute on Applied Technology,[2] and associate professor at Harvard Medical School. He is internationally known for his research and development of augmented and alternative communication systems to support the communication needs of people with neuromuscular disorders, autism and other disabilities.[3][4]

Howard C. Shane
Shane at Boston Children's Hospital
Born
Leominster, Massachusetts
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Massachusetts at Amherst
Occupation(s)Speech pathologist, researcher, author, professor
Medical career
FieldSpeech pathology
InstitutionsCenter for Communication Enhancement at Boston Children's Hospital
Sub-specialtiesCommunication enhancement for the disabled
Websitechildrenshospital.org/researchers/howard-shane

Education edit

Shane graduated from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 1969 with a B.A. in sociology.[5] He went on to earn an M.A. in speech pathology and audiology in 1972 (also from the University of Massachusetts)[5] and a PhD in speech pathology in 1975 from Syracuse University.[3] He completed a doctoral fellowship in 1975 at the Mayo Clinic.[3][5][6][4]

Career edit

 
Howard Shane – 2014

Shane began his career as an assistant professor of communication sciences at the University of Vermont in Burlington, Vermont (1975–1977).[6] He served as associate professor at Emerson College, Department of Communication Studies, (1977–1995), and visiting associate professor for the University of Massachusetts (1985–1990).[6] Shane was an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School's Department of Otology and Laryngology (1986–1995) before becoming an associate professor (1996–present).[3][6] Shane is also a professor of communication science and disorders at MGH Institute of Health Professions (1997–present).[5] In 1977, Shane was appointed associate scientist of otolaryngology at Boston Children's Hospital.[3][6]

Also in 1977, Shane was appointed the director of speech pathology and audiology at the Developmental Evaluation Clinic[6] at Children's Hospital Boston.[1] and held that position until 1991. In 1985, he was appointed director of the Communication Enhancement Center (CED), the augmentative communication program, at Boston Children's Hospital. In 2005, he assumed leadership of the Center for Communication Enhancement (which encompassed the old CEC and five other programs), a role he continues to hold as of February 2016.[3][6]

For his lifetime achievements at Boston Children's Hospital, Shane was awarded the Center for Communication Enhancement's inaugural Directorship Chair in 2015. The endowed Chair, which will be named for him in future, is funded by the Boston Children's Hospital Otolaryngologic Foundation.[7]

"Whether it be wheelchair mounted computers, finger-touch computer screens, voice banking prior to a procedure that takes away a child's ability to speak, or computer software applications, Dr. Shane has enabled thousands of children to communicate with the world around them."

— Michael J. Cunningham, Otolaryngologist-in-Chief and the Gerald B. Healy Chair in Pediatric Otolaryngology at Boston Children's Hospital[7]

Communication and technology edit

Shane has spent much of his career researching and developing assistive technologies that support children and adults, including Stephen Hawking,[8][9][10] whose ability to communicate in spoken or written language forms is "limited by autism, cerebral palsy, language disorders, spinal cord injuries, or neuromuscular diseases."[10] The systems have become so refined that a person does not need dexterity to activate a computer on their own and select letters, words or pre-programmed phrases from a screen. Small muscle movements suffice. Finger twitches, head nods and eye blinks, as well as the spoken voice for those with that ability, are all that is required for individuals to communicate independently.[10][11]

If we can find some movement a person can control to use the computer, then we're on our way.

— Howard Shane[10]

Touch 'N Speak edit

In 1983,[6] Shane directed a program through his Institute on Technology to create technology solutions for students at Boston College. Other team members included Allen Field from Boston Children's Hospital [citation needed], Katharyn Dawson, a speech and language pathologist, and Don Ricciato, principal of the school. The team was dedicated to designing and implementing teaching tools to assist people who were unable to speak in their efforts to communicate. The school worked with students whose ages ranged from 10 to 25 and who exhibited a wide range of neurological, physical and intellectual challenges.[1]

This collaboration led to the creation of Touch 'N Speak, a software program that allowed students to use movement (i.e., of an elbow or head), to activate touch-sensitivity keyboards to access pre-programmed messages and activate a vocal mechanism.[1] This also marked the first time that a computer (an Apple IIe) was successfully mounted on a wheelchair.[12] Ground-breaking at the time, this was one of the first innovations in the field of "augmentative communication," recognized as a valid form of communication by the American Speech–Language–Hearing Association in 1981.[1]

Microsystems Software edit

In 1989, Shane consulted with the programmers of Microsystems Software Inc., a company owned by Richard and Deborah Gorgens to develop software packages to assist people with disabilities in their efforts to participate in the workplace. The result was HandiWare, a collection of computer programs that ran on IBM-compatible PCs and sought to assist people with "physical impairments, visual impairments and those individuals requiring computer-aided speech."[13] HandiChat, targeted for people with speech impairments, allowed individuals to type on a keyboard and have their words spoken through a DECtalk speech synthesizer. HandiWord, a "word prediction program", was responsive to individuals' most frequently used words and finished spelling out words based on the first few letters. At the time these programs were being introduced, the Americans with Disabilities Act was newly enacted. Communication technologies like HandiWare enabled individuals who had not worked in 10–15 years because of their communication difficulties return to and become productive members of the work place.[2][13][14]

Starbright World edit

In 1995, a computer-generated play world called Starbright World was made available to the children's hospital, as well as other hospitals in New York, Pittsburgh and California, that allowed patients to connect through cyberspace. Starbright World, an interactive network financed by Steven Spielberg, was intended to help patients with serious and chronic illnesses escape in the world of play and, if desired, connect with others facing the same kind of diagnosis and treatment. Initially, access to Starbright World relied on a child's ability to use a mouse or type on a keyboard. Shane and his team worked to find alternate navigation techniques for children whose motor skills were impaired or for those who did not yet have the required computer skills.[15]

Monarch School edit

In 2002, the Monarch School for Autism, in Shaker Heights, Ohio, began a collaboration with Boston Children's Hospital, and MGH Institute of Health Professionals to support children with autism in their use of communication and development of life skills. The Monarch School for Autism, an intensive one-one-one, language-enrichment program, was the first of its kind in Ohio, serving only children with autism whose needs are often under-served in the public school system. At the time, Shane had more than 30 years experience assisting people with autism and, as a result, had developed computer software specifically designed to "boost verbal communication skills" using visual information. The focus of the collaboration, headed by Shane, was to develop a curriculum using the software and other complimentary technologies reliant on visual cuing that could serve as a model for educational programs throughout the U.S.[16]

We're giving them [students with autism] the ability to express themselves through a medium that is an effective one for them and to reduce the frustration associated with their difficulties in communicating.

— Howard Shane [16]

Visual Immersion System edit

Shane led a team to develop the Visual Immersion System (VIS), a visual curriculum to support the communication needs of people with disabilities.[17] The curriculum makes use of communication technology, including the iPad, which allows people with autism to engage in visual activities that aid in the development of language skills.[18] The effectiveness of the program is currently under study, with clinical evidence "still emerging," but, as Shane states, "the excitement and interest in these technologies exist because they are working."[19]

QuickPic AAC edit

With Christina Yu (Boston Children's Hospital) and Human–computer interaction scientist Mauricio Fontana de Vargas, Shane created the first artificial intelligence augmentative and alternative communication application for autistic users. QuickPic greatly accelerates the generation of vocabulary sets relevant to a given image, a useful tool used by speech language pathologists to teach grammar.[20]

Facilitated Communication edit

Facilitated Communication (FC), popularized in the early 1990s in the United States by Douglas Biklen,[21] is an alleged communication technique in which the facilitator (usually a parent, educator, or caregiver) holds the hand, shoulder or arm of a person with disabilities in order to type on a paper letter board or mechanical keyboard.[22]

In an interview with Susan Gerbic, Shane says that he first learned of FC in Sweden, when he attended an International Society for Augmentative and Alternative Communication (ISAAC) conference where Rosemary Crossley gave a speech.[23] He questioned claims from promoters that individuals with severe disabilities, some as young as 5 or 6 years old, without formal training in reading or written language could produce messages that included "perfectly spelled sentences" and whether or not the communications were originating from the children or the adult facilitators.[21][24] On the 1993 Frontline show, Prisoners of Silence, produced by Jon Palfreman, Shane questioned the sophistication of the sentences being typed using FC. Students, with the help of facilitators, were typing out grammatically correct and accurately spelled sentences that, according to Shane, held "insights that go far beyond their years."[25] Proponents maintained that these children learned language and written language skills by being "immersed in language-rich environments."[25]

Already versed in communications technology that allowed people with autism and a wide range of physical disabilities to communicate independently and without someone else's touch,[25][26] Shane criticized FC as "bogus nonsense"[27] and "a complete waste of time."[28]

"It (Facilitated Communication) is not an accepted clinical practice and many associations have written it off because of its unreliability."

— Howard Shane[24]

Shane became involved with FC further when he was called as an expert witness in a court case. The parents were accused of sexual abuse through facilitator Janyce Boynton who using FC with their autistic child.[29][23] Shane established simple double-blind protocols to test the validity of the message and determine authorship of the messages. The results indicated that not only was the child incapable of typing out the messages, the content produced was based on facilitator's knowledge of the materials presented.[22][25] In Facilitated Communication: The Clinical and Social Phenomenon,[30] Shane outlines a "wide range of tasks and procedures," that practitioners can use to establish the source of the facilitated messages.[31] Since that first court case, Shane has continued to serve as an expert witness with the results, to date, always the same.[24][32][33][34] Rather than support people with autism in their efforts to communication, FC, according to Shane is "hurtful and harmful" and deprives "children of their right to independently communicate."[35] Facilitator Boynton, realizing she had been the one doing the communication pressured her school administration to err on the side of caution and end the practice of FC. Over the years Shane kept in touch with Boynton and continued to encourage her to speak out about FC.[29]

Shane believes that FC messages originate from facilitators who "subconsciously guide the hands and fingers of people they are assigned to help."[22][25][32] via the ideomotor phenomenon.[36] With regard to the ideomotor phenomenon and FC, the facilitators become so absorbed in the typing process, they are unaware of their own movements while holding onto their disabled communication partner. Shane stated on Prisoners of Silence:

You can't be a one-finger typist and not look at the keyboard. You just can't get oriented. You don't have a home position. And when you watch children who are F/C – facilitated communication – users, they may not be looking at the language board, but the facilitators are not taking their eyes off it. They're fixed on it.[25]

Critics of Shane's stance on FC claim that testing is unfair to the person with disabilities who, they claim, might exhibit test anxiety or "freeze in their ability to respond."[21]

Donald P. Oswald, who reviewed The Facilitated Communication: Clinical and Social Phemenon,[30] praised the book for its "valuable perspectives on the FC story," citing chapters written by Jon Palfreman, Gina Green, Wolf Wolfensberger, Barry Prizant, and Shane that provide a "preliminary retrospective of the FC fad in the United States," but criticized the book for its sometimes "dispassionate discourse." He wrote:

The authors in this work occasionally reveal the personal distress they have experienced and as a result, at times the tone of their writing is defensive or aggressive. Nonetheless, this book offers valuable perspectives on the FC story and, depending on the reader's personal position, will stimulate, enlighten and, at times, enrage.[31]

Supporters of FC state that often people start out using a facilitator and eventually learn to type without physical support. Shane responded by saying '"If someone’s going to be a typist, they don’t need somebody to facilitate them."'[37]

Memberships and appointments edit

  • SpecialNeedsWare Advisory Board (Chair, 2012)[17]
  • Director, Model Autism Program (MAP), Boston Public Schools (2006)[6]
  • Director, Clinical and Research Liaison, Monarch School for Autism (2002)[16]

Conferences and summits edit

  • Panelist with Matthew Goodwin, director of clinical research at MIT Media Lab and co-director of the Autism Technology Initiative at MIT, at the Third Annual Summit on Autism, hosted by Kids Institute for Development and Advancement (KiDA), University of California. Topic: technological advancements and their impact on autism. (September 17, 2011)[38][39]
  • Behavior Analysis Association of Michigan (BAAM) Conference, Eastern Michigan University, keynote speaker: "Using Technology to Educate Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Do Professionals Get a Passing Grade?" (2009)[40]
  • The Herbert J. and E. Jane Oyer Annual Lecture on Communication Disorders and Human Development, Michigan State University. Topic: applying the visual strengths of person on the autism spectrum to communication intervention. (2008)[41]

Awards and honors edit

  • Frank R. Kleffner Lifetime Clinical Career Award (2019), conferred on November 22, 2019 at the annual America Speech-Language-Hearing Foundation Founders Breakfast in Orlando, Florida[42]
  • Award for Significant Contributions to the fields of public health and science (2017), presented by the School of Public Health and Sciences at UMassAmherst[4]
  • Honors of ASHA Award (2007), presented by the American Speech–Language–Hearing Association[43]
  • Teacher of the year, MGH Institute of Health Professions (2002)[6]
  • Goldenson Award for Innovations in Technology, presented by the United Cerebral Palsy Association (2000)[3][4]
  • American Speech–Language–Hearing Association (fellow since 1989)[44]
  • Kleffner Clinical Achievement Award for Technology, Massachusetts Speech-Language-Hearing Association (1995)[6]
  • Pioneer Award for technology in clinical practice, Massachusetts Federation of the Council for Exceptional Children (1993)[6][4]
  • Finalist for technology innovation, Smithsonian Institution Computerworld (1989)[6]

Select books edit

  • Unsilenced: A Teacher's Year of Battles, Breakthroughs, and Life-Changing Lessons at Belchertown State School (2021) [45]
  • Enhancing Communication For Individuals With Autism, with Jennifer S. Abramson, Kara Corley, Holly Fadie, Suzanne Flynn, Emily Laubscher, Ralf Schlosser, and James Sorce. Foreword by Connie Kasari. (2015)[46]
  • Visual Language in Autism, with Sharon Weiss-Kapp (2007)[47]
  • The Children's Hospital Guide to Your Child's Health and Development, with Margaret A. Kenna and Alan D. Woolf (2001)[48]
  • Facilitated Communication: The Clinical and Social Phenomenon (Editor) (1994)[30]

Select articles edit

  • The Persistence of Fad Interventions in the Face of Negative Scientific Evidence: Facilitated Communication for Autism as a Case Example, with Scott O. Lillienfeld, Julia Marshall, and James T. Todd (2015)[49]
  • Applying Technology to Visually Support Language and Communication in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders, with Emily Laubscher, Ralf Schlosser, Suzanne Flynn, James Sorce, and Jennifer Abramson (2012)[50]
  • Using AAC Technology to Access the World, with Sarah Blackstone, Gregg Venderheiden, Michael Williams, and Frank DeRuyter (2012)[51]
  • Animation of Graphic Symbols Representing Verbs and Prepositions: Effects on Transparency, Name Agreement, and Identification," with Ralf Schlosser, James Sorce, Rajinder Koul, Emma Frances Bloomfield, and Lisa Debrowski (2011)[52]
  • There Isn't Always an App for That!, with Jessica Gosnell and John Costello (2011)[53]
  • Use of a Visual Graphic Language System to Support Communications for Persons on the Autism Spectrum, with M. O'Brien, and James Source (2009)[54]
  • Electronic Screen Media for Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Results of a Survey, with Patti Ducoff Albert (2008)[55]
  • Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Effect, with Cheryl A. Burgess, Irving Kirsch, Kristen L. Niederauer, Steven M. Graham, Alyson Bacon (1998)[36]
  • An Examination of the Role of the Facilitator in "Facilitated Communication," with Kevin Kearns (1994)[22]
  • Selection of Augmentative Communication Systems: American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (1985)[56]
  • Decision Making in Early Augmentative Communication System Use (1981) [57]
  • Election Criteria for the Adoption of an Augmentative Communication System: Preliminary Considerations, with Anthony S. Bashir (1980) [58]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Coons, Phyllis (March 31, 1985). "Handicapped students learn to talk with computers; BC campus school pioneers in teaching high-tech communication". Boston Globe. No. Third Edition. Boston, MA. p. B98.
  2. ^ a b O'Brien, Timothy L. (October 8, 1993). "A PC Revolution: Aided by computers, many of the disabled form own businesses". Wall Street Journal. No. Eastern Edition. New York, NY. p. A1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Shane, Howard C. "Research and Innovation". Boston Children's Hospital. Boston, MA. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e "School of Public Health and Health Sciences to honor alumni award recipients Howard Shane and Efosa Guobadia". UMassAmherst School of Public Health and Sciences. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Amherst. August 28, 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d "Howard Shane, PhD, CCC-SLP". mghihp.org. Boston, MA: MGH Institute of Health Professions. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Howard Shane Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). mghihp.edu. Boston, MA: MGH Institute of Health Professions. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  7. ^ a b (PDF). Harvard Otolaryngology. 13 (1): 5. Spring 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  8. ^ Lasalandra, Michael (October 8, 1999). "Hawking pays visit to special children". Boston Herald. Boston, Massachusetts. p. 003.
  9. ^ Graham, Jordan (March 15, 2018). "Physicist Hawking a 'human dynamo'". Boston Herald. Boston, Massachusetts. Retrieved 26 May 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d Saltus, Richard (October 8, 1999). . Boston Globe. No. Third Edition. Boston, MA. p. A.1. Archived from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  11. ^ Lasalandra, Michael (October 8, 1999). "Hawking pays visit to special children". The Boston Herald. Boston, MA. p. 003.
  12. ^ . Boston Children's Hospital. Boston, MA. Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  13. ^ a b Gorgens, Debra C. (September 15, 1989). "Microsystems Software announces new HandiWARE products". Business Wire. p. 1.
  14. ^ "Technology opens up the world for America's 43 million disabled". Austin American Statesman. Austin, Texas. December 1990. p. H1.
  15. ^ Saltus, Richard (November 9, 1995). . Boston Globe. No. City Edition. Boston, MA. p. 36. Archived from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  16. ^ a b c Zeltner, Brie (October 8, 2002). "School for the autistic is part of new study". The Plain Dealer. No. Final Edition. Cleveland, OH. p. B.1.
  17. ^ a b "SpecialNeedsWare and Harvard's Boston Children's Hospital to launch language methodology for autism". PR Newswire. February 4, 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  18. ^ Davis, Marion (April 4, 2011). "For some doctors, the iPad is claiming a key spot next to the stethoscope". Boston Globe. Boston, MA. p. B.5. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  19. ^ o'Brien, Chris (April 30, 2013). "Autism applications for iPads proliferate: families turn to Apple for social lessons, finding friendly businesses and more". Daily Press. Newport News, VA. p. A.8.
  20. ^ Lutz, Amy S.F. (23 February 2024). "Autism App Targets the "Holy Grail" of Communication". Psychology Today. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  21. ^ a b c Kogan, Rick (October 19, 1993). "The FC Movement Treatment for Autism Looks Dim on 'Frontline'". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  22. ^ a b c d Shane, Howard C.; Kearns, Kevin (September 1994). "An Examination of the Role of the Facilitator in "Facilitated Communication"". American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology. 3 (3): 48–54. doi:10.1044/1058-0360.0303.48.
  23. ^ a b Gerbic, Susan. "In Conversation with Janyce Boynton and Dr. Howard Shane". YouTube. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  24. ^ a b c Riechmann, Deb (January 12, 1994). "Rape case tests 'facilitated' messages charges hinge on letters typed by autistic girl, assisted by therapist". Buffalo News. No. City Edition. Buffalo, NY. p. A2. Retrieved 16 January 2016.[dead link]
  25. ^ a b c d e f Palfreman, Jon (October 19, 1993). . Frontline. WGBH Educational Foundation. Archived from the original on 15 January 2016. Retrieved 16 January 2016.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  26. ^ Healy, Michelle (April 7, 2011). "New film gives voice to a nearly silent minority: 'Wretches & Jabberers' profise the autistic who don't speak". USA Today. McClean, Virginia. p. D.3.
  27. ^ Brasier, L.L.; Wisely, John (December 18, 2007). "Abuse case hinges on a keyboard. West Bloomfield: Autistic girl typed dad raped her, aide says". McClatchy-Tribune Business News. Washington, D.C.
  28. ^ Brasier, L.L.; Wisely, John (January 29, 2008). "Autistic girl unable to answer court questions". McClatchy-Tribune Business News. Washington, D.C.
  29. ^ a b Vyse, Stuart (16 November 2018). "An Artist with a Science-Based Mission". CSI. Center for Inquiry. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  30. ^ a b c Shane, Howard, ed. (1994). Facilitated Communication: The Clinical and Social Phenomenon. Singular Publishing Group. ISBN 9781565933415.
  31. ^ a b Oswald, Donald P. (September 1996). "Book Review: Facilitated Communication: The Clinical and Social Phenomenon". Journal of Behavioral Education. 6 (3): 355–357. doi:10.1007/BF02110136. JSTOR 41824137. S2CID 195215616.
  32. ^ a b Martindale, Mike (January 29, 2008). "Sex case hearing to go on: Autistic girl who accused her father of assault fails to answer questions through computer in court Monday". Detroit News. Detroit, Michigan. p. B.2.
  33. ^ "Allegations by FC of Sexual Abuse Have Been Challenged". The Washington Post. No. Final Edition. Washington, D.C. January 17, 1995. p. z.12. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  34. ^ Zirkel, Perry A. (June 1995). "Facilitated Communication of Child Abuse?". The Phi Delta Kappan. 76 (10): 815–817. JSTOR 20405466.
  35. ^ Offit, Paul A. (September 2008). Autism's False Prophets: Bad Science, Risky Medicine, and the Search for a Cure. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-14636-4. JSTOR 107312/offi14636.6.
  36. ^ a b Burgess, Cheryl A.; Kirsch, Irving; Shane, Howard; Graham, Steven M.; Bacon, Alyson (January 1998). "Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Response". Psychological Science. 9 (1): 71–74. doi:10.1111/1467-9280.00013. JSTOR 40063250. S2CID 145631775.
  37. ^ Burke, Michael (2016-04-11). "Why experts say evidence cited by facilitated communication advocates is flawed". The Daily Orange. Syracuse University. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  38. ^ Anonymous (July 12, 2011). "Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter to Keynote KIDA's third Annual Summit on Autism". Business Wire. New York. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  39. ^ Peters, Sarah (July 17, 2011). "Autism summit offers latest answers". McClatchy-Tribune Business News. Washington.
  40. ^ "Past BAAM Conference Keynote and Special Speakers". Ypsilanti, MI: Eastern Michigan University.
  41. ^ . College of Communication Arts and Sciences. Michigan State University. Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  42. ^ "2019 ASHFoundation Awards and Honorees". American Speech-Language-Hearing Foundation. November 25, 2019. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  43. ^ "MGH Institute Provost Alex F. Johnson receives highest honor from American Speech–Language–Hearing Association". Business Wire. New York. November 18, 2013. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  44. ^ "Fellow Recipients of the Association". ASHA.org. American Speech–Language–Hearing Association. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  45. ^ Shane, Howard. "Unsilenced: A Teacher's Year of Battles, Breakthroughs, and Life-Changing Lessons at Belchertown State School". brookespublishing.com. Baltimore, Maryland: Brookes Publishing. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  46. ^ Shane, Howard C.; Abramson, Jennifer S.; Corley, Kara; Fadie, Holly; Flynn, Suzanne; Laubscher, Emily; Schlosser, Ralph; Sorce, James (2015). Enhancing Communication for Individuals with Autism. Baltimore, MD: Brookes Publishing Co. ISBN 978-1-59857-221-6. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  47. ^ Shane, Howard C.; Weiss-Kapp, Sharon (November 1, 2007). . San Diego, CA: Plural Publishing, Inc. ISBN 978-1-59756-063-4. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  48. ^ Kenna, Margaret A.; Shane, Howard C.; Woolf, Alan D. (January 15, 2001). The Children's Hospital Guide to Your Child's Health and Development. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-738-20241-9.
  49. ^ Lilienfeld, Scott O.; Marshall, Julia; Todd, James T.; Shane, Howard C. (February 2, 2015). "The Persistence of Fad Interventions in the Face of Negative Scientific Evidence: Facilitated Communication for Autism as a Case Example". Evidence-Based Communication Assessment and Intervention. 8 (2): 62–101. doi:10.1080/17489539.2014.976332. S2CID 145366255.
  50. ^ Shane, Howard; Laubscher, Emily; Schlosser, Ralf; Flynn, Suzanne; Sorce, James; Abramson, Jennifer (June 2012). "Applying Technology to Visually Support Language and Communication in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders". Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 42 (6): 1228–1235. doi:10.1007/s10803-011-1304-z. PMID 21691867. S2CID 33918002.
  51. ^ Shane, Howard C.; Blackstone, Sarah; Vanderheiden, Gregg; Williams, Michael; DeRuyter, Frank (March 8, 2012). "Using AAC Technology to Access the World". Assistive Technology. 24 (1): 3–13. doi:10.1080/10400435.2011.648716. PMID 22590795. S2CID 21918427.
  52. ^ Schlosser, Ralf; Shane, Howard C.; Sorce, James; Koul, Rajinder; Bloomfield, Emma Frances; Debrowski, Lisa (December 2011). "Animation of Graphic Symbols Representing Verbs and Prepositions: Effects on Transparency, Name Agreement and Identification". Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. 55 (2): 342–358. doi:10.1044/1092-4388(2011/10-0164). PMID 22207700. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  53. ^ Gosnell, Jessica; Costello, John; Shane, Howard (April 2011). "There Isn't Always an App for That!". Perspectives on Augmentative and Alternative Communication. 20: 7–8. doi:10.1044/aac20.1.7.
  54. ^ Shane, H.C.; O'Brien, M.; Sorce, J. (December 2009). "Use of a visual graphic language system to support communication for persons on the autism spectrum". Perspectives on Augmentative and Alternative Communication. 18 (4): 130–136. doi:10.1044/aac18.4.130. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  55. ^ Shane, Howard C.; Albert, Patti Ducoff (September 2008). "Electronic Screen Media for Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Results of a Survey". Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 38 (8): 1499–1508. doi:10.1007/s10803-007-0527-5. PMID 18293074. S2CID 26713115.
  56. ^ Shane, Howard C. (1985). "Selection of Augmentative Communication Systems: American Speech-Language-Hearing Association". In Cherow, Evelyn; Matkin, Noel D.; Trybus, Raymond J. (eds.). Hearing-Impaired Children and Youth with Developmental Disabilities: An Interdisciplinary Foundation for Service. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet College Press. pp. 270–292. ISBN 978-0-913-58097-4.
  57. ^ Shane, Howard C. (1981). "Decision Making in Early Augmentative Communication System Use". In Schiefelbusch, Richard L.; Bricker, Diane D.; Hoyt, Robert (eds.). Early Language: Acquisition and Intervention. Baltimore, MD: University Park Press. pp. 389–425.
  58. ^ Shane, Howard C.; Bashir, Anthony S. (August 1980). "Election Criteria for the Adoption of an Augmentative Communication System: Preliminary Considerations". Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders. 45 (3): 408–414. doi:10.1044/jshd.4503.408. PMID 6447823.

howard, shane, this, article, about, american, doctor, australian, musician, shane, howard, howard, shane, director, autism, language, program, communication, enhancement, program, children, hospital, boston, massachusetts, former, director, institute, applied. This article is about the American doctor For the Australian musician see Shane Howard Howard C Shane is director of the Autism Language Program and Communication Enhancement Program at Children s Hospital in Boston Massachusetts 1 former director of the Institute on Applied Technology 2 and associate professor at Harvard Medical School He is internationally known for his research and development of augmented and alternative communication systems to support the communication needs of people with neuromuscular disorders autism and other disabilities 3 4 Howard C ShaneShane at Boston Children s HospitalBornLeominster MassachusettsNationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of Massachusetts at AmherstOccupation s Speech pathologist researcher author professorMedical careerFieldSpeech pathologyInstitutionsCenter for Communication Enhancement at Boston Children s HospitalSub specialtiesCommunication enhancement for the disabledWebsitechildrenshospital wbr org wbr researchers wbr howard shane Contents 1 Education 2 Career 3 Communication and technology 3 1 Touch N Speak 3 2 Microsystems Software 3 3 Starbright World 3 4 Monarch School 3 5 Visual Immersion System 3 6 QuickPic AAC 4 Facilitated Communication 5 Memberships and appointments 6 Conferences and summits 7 Awards and honors 8 Select books 9 Select articles 10 ReferencesEducation editShane graduated from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 1969 with a B A in sociology 5 He went on to earn an M A in speech pathology and audiology in 1972 also from the University of Massachusetts 5 and a PhD in speech pathology in 1975 from Syracuse University 3 He completed a doctoral fellowship in 1975 at the Mayo Clinic 3 5 6 4 Career edit nbsp Howard Shane 2014 Shane began his career as an assistant professor of communication sciences at the University of Vermont in Burlington Vermont 1975 1977 6 He served as associate professor at Emerson College Department of Communication Studies 1977 1995 and visiting associate professor for the University of Massachusetts 1985 1990 6 Shane was an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School s Department of Otology and Laryngology 1986 1995 before becoming an associate professor 1996 present 3 6 Shane is also a professor of communication science and disorders at MGH Institute of Health Professions 1997 present 5 In 1977 Shane was appointed associate scientist of otolaryngology at Boston Children s Hospital 3 6 Also in 1977 Shane was appointed the director of speech pathology and audiology at the Developmental Evaluation Clinic 6 at Children s Hospital Boston 1 and held that position until 1991 In 1985 he was appointed director of the Communication Enhancement Center CED the augmentative communication program at Boston Children s Hospital In 2005 he assumed leadership of the Center for Communication Enhancement which encompassed the old CEC and five other programs a role he continues to hold as of February 2016 update 3 6 For his lifetime achievements at Boston Children s Hospital Shane was awarded the Center for Communication Enhancement s inaugural Directorship Chair in 2015 The endowed Chair which will be named for him in future is funded by the Boston Children s Hospital Otolaryngologic Foundation 7 Whether it be wheelchair mounted computers finger touch computer screens voice banking prior to a procedure that takes away a child s ability to speak or computer software applications Dr Shane has enabled thousands of children to communicate with the world around them Michael J Cunningham Otolaryngologist in Chief and the Gerald B Healy Chair in Pediatric Otolaryngology at Boston Children s Hospital 7 Communication and technology editShane has spent much of his career researching and developing assistive technologies that support children and adults including Stephen Hawking 8 9 10 whose ability to communicate in spoken or written language forms is limited by autism cerebral palsy language disorders spinal cord injuries or neuromuscular diseases 10 The systems have become so refined that a person does not need dexterity to activate a computer on their own and select letters words or pre programmed phrases from a screen Small muscle movements suffice Finger twitches head nods and eye blinks as well as the spoken voice for those with that ability are all that is required for individuals to communicate independently 10 11 If we can find some movement a person can control to use the computer then we re on our way Howard Shane 10 Touch N Speak edit In 1983 6 Shane directed a program through his Institute on Technology to create technology solutions for students at Boston College Other team members included Allen Field from Boston Children s Hospital citation needed Katharyn Dawson a speech and language pathologist and Don Ricciato principal of the school The team was dedicated to designing and implementing teaching tools to assist people who were unable to speak in their efforts to communicate The school worked with students whose ages ranged from 10 to 25 and who exhibited a wide range of neurological physical and intellectual challenges 1 This collaboration led to the creation of Touch N Speak a software program that allowed students to use movement i e of an elbow or head to activate touch sensitivity keyboards to access pre programmed messages and activate a vocal mechanism 1 This also marked the first time that a computer an Apple IIe was successfully mounted on a wheelchair 12 Ground breaking at the time this was one of the first innovations in the field of augmentative communication recognized as a valid form of communication by the American Speech Language Hearing Association in 1981 1 Microsystems Software edit In 1989 Shane consulted with the programmers of Microsystems Software Inc a company owned by Richard and Deborah Gorgens to develop software packages to assist people with disabilities in their efforts to participate in the workplace The result was HandiWare a collection of computer programs that ran on IBM compatible PCs and sought to assist people with physical impairments visual impairments and those individuals requiring computer aided speech 13 HandiChat targeted for people with speech impairments allowed individuals to type on a keyboard and have their words spoken through a DECtalk speech synthesizer HandiWord a word prediction program was responsive to individuals most frequently used words and finished spelling out words based on the first few letters At the time these programs were being introduced the Americans with Disabilities Act was newly enacted Communication technologies like HandiWare enabled individuals who had not worked in 10 15 years because of their communication difficulties return to and become productive members of the work place 2 13 14 Starbright World edit In 1995 a computer generated play world called Starbright World was made available to the children s hospital as well as other hospitals in New York Pittsburgh and California that allowed patients to connect through cyberspace Starbright World an interactive network financed by Steven Spielberg was intended to help patients with serious and chronic illnesses escape in the world of play and if desired connect with others facing the same kind of diagnosis and treatment Initially access to Starbright World relied on a child s ability to use a mouse or type on a keyboard Shane and his team worked to find alternate navigation techniques for children whose motor skills were impaired or for those who did not yet have the required computer skills 15 Monarch School edit In 2002 the Monarch School for Autism in Shaker Heights Ohio began a collaboration with Boston Children s Hospital and MGH Institute of Health Professionals to support children with autism in their use of communication and development of life skills The Monarch School for Autism an intensive one one one language enrichment program was the first of its kind in Ohio serving only children with autism whose needs are often under served in the public school system At the time Shane had more than 30 years experience assisting people with autism and as a result had developed computer software specifically designed to boost verbal communication skills using visual information The focus of the collaboration headed by Shane was to develop a curriculum using the software and other complimentary technologies reliant on visual cuing that could serve as a model for educational programs throughout the U S 16 We re giving them students with autism the ability to express themselves through a medium that is an effective one for them and to reduce the frustration associated with their difficulties in communicating Howard Shane 16 Visual Immersion System edit Shane led a team to develop the Visual Immersion System VIS a visual curriculum to support the communication needs of people with disabilities 17 The curriculum makes use of communication technology including the iPad which allows people with autism to engage in visual activities that aid in the development of language skills 18 The effectiveness of the program is currently under study with clinical evidence still emerging but as Shane states the excitement and interest in these technologies exist because they are working 19 QuickPic AAC edit With Christina Yu Boston Children s Hospital and Human computer interaction scientist Mauricio Fontana de Vargas Shane created the first artificial intelligence augmentative and alternative communication application for autistic users QuickPic greatly accelerates the generation of vocabulary sets relevant to a given image a useful tool used by speech language pathologists to teach grammar 20 Facilitated Communication editFacilitated Communication FC popularized in the early 1990s in the United States by Douglas Biklen 21 is an alleged communication technique in which the facilitator usually a parent educator or caregiver holds the hand shoulder or arm of a person with disabilities in order to type on a paper letter board or mechanical keyboard 22 In an interview with Susan Gerbic Shane says that he first learned of FC in Sweden when he attended an International Society for Augmentative and Alternative Communication ISAAC conference where Rosemary Crossley gave a speech 23 He questioned claims from promoters that individuals with severe disabilities some as young as 5 or 6 years old without formal training in reading or written language could produce messages that included perfectly spelled sentences and whether or not the communications were originating from the children or the adult facilitators 21 24 On the 1993 Frontline show Prisoners of Silence produced by Jon Palfreman Shane questioned the sophistication of the sentences being typed using FC Students with the help of facilitators were typing out grammatically correct and accurately spelled sentences that according to Shane held insights that go far beyond their years 25 Proponents maintained that these children learned language and written language skills by being immersed in language rich environments 25 Already versed in communications technology that allowed people with autism and a wide range of physical disabilities to communicate independently and without someone else s touch 25 26 Shane criticized FC as bogus nonsense 27 and a complete waste of time 28 It Facilitated Communication is not an accepted clinical practice and many associations have written it off because of its unreliability Howard Shane 24 Shane became involved with FC further when he was called as an expert witness in a court case The parents were accused of sexual abuse through facilitator Janyce Boynton who using FC with their autistic child 29 23 Shane established simple double blind protocols to test the validity of the message and determine authorship of the messages The results indicated that not only was the child incapable of typing out the messages the content produced was based on facilitator s knowledge of the materials presented 22 25 In Facilitated Communication The Clinical and Social Phenomenon 30 Shane outlines a wide range of tasks and procedures that practitioners can use to establish the source of the facilitated messages 31 Since that first court case Shane has continued to serve as an expert witness with the results to date always the same 24 32 33 34 Rather than support people with autism in their efforts to communication FC according to Shane is hurtful and harmful and deprives children of their right to independently communicate 35 Facilitator Boynton realizing she had been the one doing the communication pressured her school administration to err on the side of caution and end the practice of FC Over the years Shane kept in touch with Boynton and continued to encourage her to speak out about FC 29 Shane believes that FC messages originate from facilitators who subconsciously guide the hands and fingers of people they are assigned to help 22 25 32 via the ideomotor phenomenon 36 With regard to the ideomotor phenomenon and FC the facilitators become so absorbed in the typing process they are unaware of their own movements while holding onto their disabled communication partner Shane stated on Prisoners of Silence You can t be a one finger typist and not look at the keyboard You just can t get oriented You don t have a home position And when you watch children who are F C facilitated communication users they may not be looking at the language board but the facilitators are not taking their eyes off it They re fixed on it 25 Critics of Shane s stance on FC claim that testing is unfair to the person with disabilities who they claim might exhibit test anxiety or freeze in their ability to respond 21 Donald P Oswald who reviewed The Facilitated Communication Clinical and Social Phemenon 30 praised the book for its valuable perspectives on the FC story citing chapters written by Jon Palfreman Gina Green Wolf Wolfensberger Barry Prizant and Shane that provide a preliminary retrospective of the FC fad in the United States but criticized the book for its sometimes dispassionate discourse He wrote The authors in this work occasionally reveal the personal distress they have experienced and as a result at times the tone of their writing is defensive or aggressive Nonetheless this book offers valuable perspectives on the FC story and depending on the reader s personal position will stimulate enlighten and at times enrage 31 Supporters of FC state that often people start out using a facilitator and eventually learn to type without physical support Shane responded by saying If someone s going to be a typist they don t need somebody to facilitate them 37 Memberships and appointments editSpecialNeedsWare Advisory Board Chair 2012 17 Director Model Autism Program MAP Boston Public Schools 2006 6 Director Clinical and Research Liaison Monarch School for Autism 2002 16 Conferences and summits editPanelist with Matthew Goodwin director of clinical research at MIT Media Lab and co director of the Autism Technology Initiative at MIT at the Third Annual Summit on Autism hosted by Kids Institute for Development and Advancement KiDA University of California Topic technological advancements and their impact on autism September 17 2011 38 39 Behavior Analysis Association of Michigan BAAM Conference Eastern Michigan University keynote speaker Using Technology to Educate Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders Do Professionals Get a Passing Grade 2009 40 The Herbert J and E Jane Oyer Annual Lecture on Communication Disorders and Human Development Michigan State University Topic applying the visual strengths of person on the autism spectrum to communication intervention 2008 41 Awards and honors editFrank R Kleffner Lifetime Clinical Career Award 2019 conferred on November 22 2019 at the annual America Speech Language Hearing Foundation Founders Breakfast in Orlando Florida 42 Award for Significant Contributions to the fields of public health and science 2017 presented by the School of Public Health and Sciences at UMassAmherst 4 Honors of ASHA Award 2007 presented by the American Speech Language Hearing Association 43 Teacher of the year MGH Institute of Health Professions 2002 6 Goldenson Award for Innovations in Technology presented by the United Cerebral Palsy Association 2000 3 4 American Speech Language Hearing Association fellow since 1989 44 Kleffner Clinical Achievement Award for Technology Massachusetts Speech Language Hearing Association 1995 6 Pioneer Award for technology in clinical practice Massachusetts Federation of the Council for Exceptional Children 1993 6 4 Finalist for technology innovation Smithsonian Institution Computerworld 1989 6 Select books editUnsilenced A Teacher s Year of Battles Breakthroughs and Life Changing Lessons at Belchertown State School 2021 45 Enhancing Communication For Individuals With Autism with Jennifer S Abramson Kara Corley Holly Fadie Suzanne Flynn Emily Laubscher Ralf Schlosser and James Sorce Foreword by Connie Kasari 2015 46 Visual Language in Autism with Sharon Weiss Kapp 2007 47 The Children s Hospital Guide to Your Child s Health and Development with Margaret A Kenna and Alan D Woolf 2001 48 Facilitated Communication The Clinical and Social Phenomenon Editor 1994 30 Select articles editThe Persistence of Fad Interventions in the Face of Negative Scientific Evidence Facilitated Communication for Autism as a Case Example with Scott O Lillienfeld Julia Marshall and James T Todd 2015 49 Applying Technology to Visually Support Language and Communication in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders with Emily Laubscher Ralf Schlosser Suzanne Flynn James Sorce and Jennifer Abramson 2012 50 Using AAC Technology to Access the World with Sarah Blackstone Gregg Venderheiden Michael Williams and Frank DeRuyter 2012 51 Animation of Graphic Symbols Representing Verbs and Prepositions Effects on Transparency Name Agreement and Identification with Ralf Schlosser James Sorce Rajinder Koul Emma Frances Bloomfield and Lisa Debrowski 2011 52 There Isn t Always an App for That with Jessica Gosnell and John Costello 2011 53 Use of a Visual Graphic Language System to Support Communications for Persons on the Autism Spectrum with M O Brien and James Source 2009 54 Electronic Screen Media for Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders Results of a Survey with Patti Ducoff Albert 2008 55 Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Effect with Cheryl A Burgess Irving Kirsch Kristen L Niederauer Steven M Graham Alyson Bacon 1998 36 An Examination of the Role of the Facilitator in Facilitated Communication with Kevin Kearns 1994 22 Selection of Augmentative Communication Systems American Speech Language Hearing Association 1985 56 Decision Making in Early Augmentative Communication System Use 1981 57 Election Criteria for the Adoption of an Augmentative Communication System Preliminary Considerations with Anthony S Bashir 1980 58 References edit a b c d e Coons Phyllis March 31 1985 Handicapped students learn to talk with computers BC campus school pioneers in teaching high tech communication Boston Globe No Third Edition Boston MA p B98 a b O Brien Timothy L October 8 1993 A PC Revolution Aided by computers many of the disabled form own businesses Wall Street Journal No Eastern Edition New York NY p A1 a b c d e f g Shane Howard C Research and Innovation Boston Children s Hospital Boston MA Retrieved 8 December 2015 a b c d e School of Public Health and Health Sciences to honor alumni award recipients Howard Shane and Efosa Guobadia UMassAmherst School of Public Health and Sciences Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Amherst August 28 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2018 a b c d Howard Shane PhD CCC SLP mghihp org Boston MA MGH Institute of Health Professions Retrieved 31 January 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Howard Shane Curriculum Vitae PDF mghihp edu Boston MA MGH Institute of Health Professions Retrieved 31 January 2016 a b Boston Children s Hospital Names Two Endowed Chairs PDF Harvard Otolaryngology 13 1 5 Spring 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Lasalandra Michael October 8 1999 Hawking pays visit to special children Boston Herald Boston Massachusetts p 003 Graham Jordan March 15 2018 Physicist Hawking a human dynamo Boston Herald Boston Massachusetts Retrieved 26 May 2018 a b c d Saltus Richard October 8 1999 Voice of a man who cannot speak from wheelchair Hawking gives disabled reason to hope Boston Globe No Third Edition Boston MA p A 1 Archived from the original on April 10 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Lasalandra Michael October 8 1999 Hawking pays visit to special children The Boston Herald Boston MA p 003 Autism Language Program Research and Development Timeline Boston Children s Hospital Boston MA Archived from the original on 15 February 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2016 a b Gorgens Debra C September 15 1989 Microsystems Software announces new HandiWARE products Business Wire p 1 Technology opens up the world for America s 43 million disabled Austin American Statesman Austin Texas December 1990 p H1 Saltus Richard November 9 1995 A new world for ailing children Computeres allow young patients to meet play on line Boston Globe No City Edition Boston MA p 36 Archived from the original on April 10 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b c Zeltner Brie October 8 2002 School for the autistic is part of new study The Plain Dealer No Final Edition Cleveland OH p B 1 a b SpecialNeedsWare and Harvard s Boston Children s Hospital to launch language methodology for autism PR Newswire February 4 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2015 Davis Marion April 4 2011 For some doctors the iPad is claiming a key spot next to the stethoscope Boston Globe Boston MA p B 5 Retrieved 16 January 2016 o Brien Chris April 30 2013 Autism applications for iPads proliferate families turn to Apple for social lessons finding friendly businesses and more Daily Press Newport News VA p A 8 Lutz Amy S F 23 February 2024 Autism App Targets the Holy Grail of Communication Psychology Today Retrieved 25 March 2024 a b c Kogan Rick October 19 1993 The FC Movement Treatment for Autism Looks Dim on Frontline Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b c d Shane Howard C Kearns Kevin September 1994 An Examination of the Role of the Facilitator in Facilitated Communication American Journal of Speech Language Pathology 3 3 48 54 doi 10 1044 1058 0360 0303 48 a b Gerbic Susan In Conversation with Janyce Boynton and Dr Howard Shane YouTube Retrieved 22 November 2022 a b c Riechmann Deb January 12 1994 Rape case tests facilitated messages charges hinge on letters typed by autistic girl assisted by therapist Buffalo News No City Edition Buffalo NY p A2 Retrieved 16 January 2016 dead link a b c d e f Palfreman Jon October 19 1993 Prisoners of Silence Frontline WGBH Educational Foundation Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2016 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Healy Michelle April 7 2011 New film gives voice to a nearly silent minority Wretches amp Jabberers profise the autistic who don t speak USA Today McClean Virginia p D 3 Brasier L L Wisely John December 18 2007 Abuse case hinges on a keyboard West Bloomfield Autistic girl typed dad raped her aide says McClatchy Tribune Business News Washington D C Brasier L L Wisely John January 29 2008 Autistic girl unable to answer court questions McClatchy Tribune Business News Washington D C a b Vyse Stuart 16 November 2018 An Artist with a Science Based Mission CSI Center for Inquiry Retrieved 22 March 2019 a b c Shane Howard ed 1994 Facilitated Communication The Clinical and Social Phenomenon Singular Publishing Group ISBN 9781565933415 a b Oswald Donald P September 1996 Book Review Facilitated Communication The Clinical and Social Phenomenon Journal of Behavioral Education 6 3 355 357 doi 10 1007 BF02110136 JSTOR 41824137 S2CID 195215616 a b Martindale Mike January 29 2008 Sex case hearing to go on Autistic girl who accused her father of assault fails to answer questions through computer in court Monday Detroit News Detroit Michigan p B 2 Allegations by FC of Sexual Abuse Have Been Challenged The Washington Post No Final Edition Washington D C January 17 1995 p z 12 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Zirkel Perry A June 1995 Facilitated Communication of Child Abuse The Phi Delta Kappan 76 10 815 817 JSTOR 20405466 Offit Paul A September 2008 Autism s False Prophets Bad Science Risky Medicine and the Search for a Cure Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14636 4 JSTOR 107312 offi14636 6 a b Burgess Cheryl A Kirsch Irving Shane Howard Graham Steven M Bacon Alyson January 1998 Facilitated Communication as an Ideomotor Response Psychological Science 9 1 71 74 doi 10 1111 1467 9280 00013 JSTOR 40063250 S2CID 145631775 Burke Michael 2016 04 11 Why experts say evidence cited by facilitated communication advocates is flawed The Daily Orange Syracuse University Retrieved 13 April 2016 Anonymous July 12 2011 Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter to Keynote KIDA s third Annual Summit on Autism Business Wire New York Retrieved 7 December 2015 Peters Sarah July 17 2011 Autism summit offers latest answers McClatchy Tribune Business News Washington Past BAAM Conference Keynote and Special Speakers Ypsilanti MI Eastern Michigan University The Herbert J and E Jane Oyer Annual Lecture College of Communication Arts and Sciences Michigan State University Archived from the original on 11 September 2015 Retrieved 8 December 2015 2019 ASHFoundation Awards and Honorees American Speech Language Hearing Foundation November 25 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 MGH Institute Provost Alex F Johnson receives highest honor from American Speech Language Hearing Association Business Wire New York November 18 2013 Retrieved 7 December 2015 Fellow Recipients of the Association ASHA org American Speech Language Hearing Association Retrieved 27 January 2016 Shane Howard Unsilenced A Teacher s Year of Battles Breakthroughs and Life Changing Lessons at Belchertown State School brookespublishing com Baltimore Maryland Brookes Publishing Retrieved 30 November 2021 Shane Howard C Abramson Jennifer S Corley Kara Fadie Holly Flynn Suzanne Laubscher Emily Schlosser Ralph Sorce James 2015 Enhancing Communication for Individuals with Autism Baltimore MD Brookes Publishing Co ISBN 978 1 59857 221 6 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Shane Howard C Weiss Kapp Sharon November 1 2007 Visual Language in Autism San Diego CA Plural Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1 59756 063 4 Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Kenna Margaret A Shane Howard C Woolf Alan D January 15 2001 The Children s Hospital Guide to Your Child s Health and Development Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 738 20241 9 Lilienfeld Scott O Marshall Julia Todd James T Shane Howard C February 2 2015 The Persistence of Fad Interventions in the Face of Negative Scientific Evidence Facilitated Communication for Autism as a Case Example Evidence Based Communication Assessment and Intervention 8 2 62 101 doi 10 1080 17489539 2014 976332 S2CID 145366255 Shane Howard Laubscher Emily Schlosser Ralf Flynn Suzanne Sorce James Abramson Jennifer June 2012 Applying Technology to Visually Support Language and Communication in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 42 6 1228 1235 doi 10 1007 s10803 011 1304 z PMID 21691867 S2CID 33918002 Shane Howard C Blackstone Sarah Vanderheiden Gregg Williams Michael DeRuyter Frank March 8 2012 Using AAC Technology to Access the World Assistive Technology 24 1 3 13 doi 10 1080 10400435 2011 648716 PMID 22590795 S2CID 21918427 Schlosser Ralf Shane Howard C Sorce James Koul Rajinder Bloomfield Emma Frances Debrowski Lisa December 2011 Animation of Graphic Symbols Representing Verbs and Prepositions Effects on Transparency Name Agreement and Identification Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 55 2 342 358 doi 10 1044 1092 4388 2011 10 0164 PMID 22207700 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Gosnell Jessica Costello John Shane Howard April 2011 There Isn t Always an App for That Perspectives on Augmentative and Alternative Communication 20 7 8 doi 10 1044 aac20 1 7 Shane H C O Brien M Sorce J December 2009 Use of a visual graphic language system to support communication for persons on the autism spectrum Perspectives on Augmentative and Alternative Communication 18 4 130 136 doi 10 1044 aac18 4 130 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Shane Howard C Albert Patti Ducoff September 2008 Electronic Screen Media for Persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders Results of a Survey Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 38 8 1499 1508 doi 10 1007 s10803 007 0527 5 PMID 18293074 S2CID 26713115 Shane Howard C 1985 Selection of Augmentative Communication Systems American Speech Language Hearing Association In Cherow Evelyn Matkin Noel D Trybus Raymond J eds Hearing Impaired Children and Youth with Developmental Disabilities An Interdisciplinary Foundation for Service Washington D C Gallaudet College Press pp 270 292 ISBN 978 0 913 58097 4 Shane Howard C 1981 Decision Making in Early Augmentative Communication System Use In Schiefelbusch Richard L Bricker Diane D Hoyt Robert eds Early Language Acquisition and Intervention Baltimore MD University Park Press pp 389 425 Shane Howard C Bashir Anthony S August 1980 Election Criteria for the Adoption of an Augmentative Communication System Preliminary Considerations Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders 45 3 408 414 doi 10 1044 jshd 4503 408 PMID 6447823 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Howard Shane amp oldid 1220916712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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