Effects of Therapy Dogs on Social Behavior in Group Social Skills Instruction With Children With Autism
NCT ID: NCT03873831
Last Updated: 2025-08-12
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
72 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-05-15
2021-04-26
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Our long-term goal is to identify causal mechanisms that may ameliorate the social behavior deficit in autism. The specific goal of this research is to identify the mechanisms involved in the social-enhancing effect of dogs on children with ASD. Our central hypothesis is that therapy dogs have a specific and measurable effect on children's social behaviors. Furthermore, by directly testing a number of significant confounds frequently found in AAI research (novelty effects and the effects of the dog on the therapist), the investigators will rule out alternative hypotheses. It has been suggested that the effects of AAI are partly caused by the novelty of having an animal in a location where animals are not typically seen (such as a classroom) rather than caused by an underlying feature specific to the animal. Additionally, the therapist's potentially altered quality of instruction in response to the presence of a dog in the room has not been previously explored.
The investigators will attain our goal by incorporating therapy dogs into an established group social skills instruction program for children with ASD, using a quasi-experimental, repeated-measures counter-balanced mixed design with physiological and behavioral outcome measures. Furthermore, using a rigorous experimental single-subject design, the investigators will assess the effect of the dogs on therapists. Group social skills instruction interventions based on the principles of applied behavior analysis (ABA) and that target conversational and communication skills have been shown as particularly successful at improving social behavior in individuals with ASD. Despite the beneficial outcomes, any educational interventions, especially those that require social interaction, can be a source of stress for children with ASD, and stress can impact learning and memory. Creating an educational setting that balances the levels of stress is beneficial. Dogs may have a stress-ameliorating effect on the child, thereby allowing social behavior to emerge during the instructional period and enhance the child's ability to learn social skills. Another barrier to effective instruction may be that peer-to-peer contact is perceived as highly aversive to children with ASD. Thus, by providing a non-judgmental therapy dog learning partner, the children may first practice social skills in a safer environment, free from negative feedback.
Aim 1: Identify the mechanism by which dogs increase group social behavior in children with ASD.
The investigators will directly test two complementary hypotheses: (1) stress-ameliorating effect of the dog on the child, and (2) the dog as a non-judgmental learning partner. The investigators predict that the presence of the dog in group social skills instruction program (n = 72 children, with 8 children per group) will not only improve the quantity and quality of social behavior, but also reduce physiological (salivary cortisol, heart rate, and electrodermal activity) and behavioral signs of stress compared to the absence of the dog. The investigators further predict that during therapy sessions with dogs, most of the children's social behavior will be directed towards the dog rather than peers.
Aim 2: Identify if and how repeated exposure to the dog influences social behavior of children with ASD.
The investigators hypothesize that repeated exposure to the therapy dog across sessions will alter 1) the preference to spend time with the dog, as measured by changes in time spent in proximity, and 2) the social-enhancing effects of the dog.
Aim 3: Identify the effects of the dog on the therapist. The investigators hypothesize that during repeated sessions with the dog, therapists (n = 6) will experience less stress (as measured by salivary cortisol, heart rate, and electrodermal activity), engage in more social and affiliative behavior towards the children, and deliver higher quality instruction.
The outcomes of this research will lead to significant enhancements in the current understanding of the mechanism by which dogs increase social behavior in children with ASD.
The innovative combination of methodologies from animal science and ABA therapy is uniquely suited for the determination of the mechanism of the social-enhancement effect of dogs. By measuring both behavioral responses and physiological biomarkers of stress during the intervention, the investigators will determine the mechanism through a rigorous and all-inclusive approach. Furthermore, by directly assessing two key confounding variables, the novelty effect and the effect of the dog on the therapist, the investigators will pave the way for more rigorous research into AAI. Completion of this research will expand our knowledge about the mechanism by which dogs may benefit children with ASD, introduce new intervention methods to provide longer-term benefits for children, and provide a starting point for research into new interdisciplinary technology using animals in ABA-based therapy.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Social Skills Control (A-A)
The children in the "A-A" condition, a true control, will remain without a dog for the full 10 weeks.
Social skills group
The group program is 10 weeks in duration, with 1-hour long sessions once per week. Children will be taught new social skills each week using an established teaching interaction procedure, in which the therapist first describes the target skill, provides a rational and context for the behavior, divides the skill into smaller steps, demonstrates the behavior, and has each learner role-play the skill while providing feedback in the form of praise and tokens and corrective instruction. The last week involves a probe "free-play" session, in which children are assessed in a more naturalistic environment without any corrective feedback from therapists.
Social Skills Dog (A-B)
The "A-B" condition will involve standard instruction for 5 weeks ("A"), followed by 5 weeks of group instruction while a therapy dog is present in the room ("B").
Animal-assisted intervention
The therapy dog is present during the session.
Social skills group
The group program is 10 weeks in duration, with 1-hour long sessions once per week. Children will be taught new social skills each week using an established teaching interaction procedure, in which the therapist first describes the target skill, provides a rational and context for the behavior, divides the skill into smaller steps, demonstrates the behavior, and has each learner role-play the skill while providing feedback in the form of praise and tokens and corrective instruction. The last week involves a probe "free-play" session, in which children are assessed in a more naturalistic environment without any corrective feedback from therapists.
Social Skills Dog (B-A)
The "B-A" condition will be identical, except the first 5 weeks of instruction will include the dog, followed by 5 weeks of standard instruction with no dog.
Animal-assisted intervention
The therapy dog is present during the session.
Social skills group
The group program is 10 weeks in duration, with 1-hour long sessions once per week. Children will be taught new social skills each week using an established teaching interaction procedure, in which the therapist first describes the target skill, provides a rational and context for the behavior, divides the skill into smaller steps, demonstrates the behavior, and has each learner role-play the skill while providing feedback in the form of praise and tokens and corrective instruction. The last week involves a probe "free-play" session, in which children are assessed in a more naturalistic environment without any corrective feedback from therapists.
Interventions
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Animal-assisted intervention
The therapy dog is present during the session.
Social skills group
The group program is 10 weeks in duration, with 1-hour long sessions once per week. Children will be taught new social skills each week using an established teaching interaction procedure, in which the therapist first describes the target skill, provides a rational and context for the behavior, divides the skill into smaller steps, demonstrates the behavior, and has each learner role-play the skill while providing feedback in the form of praise and tokens and corrective instruction. The last week involves a probe "free-play" session, in which children are assessed in a more naturalistic environment without any corrective feedback from therapists.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Children with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
* Children with receptive and expressive language skills
Exclusion Criteria
* Children with a phobia of dogs as reported by a parent or any behavioral signs during the study (crying, withdrawing from dog, body shaking, verbal report, etc.)
* Children with a history of animal mistreatment, abuse, or aggressive behavior toward animals as reported verbally by parents and/or through the screening questionnaire (Children's Attitude and Behaviors towards Animals, CABTA), or any behavioral signs (attempts to swat, hit, pinch, kick or pull the dog's hair) during the study
* Children who have a service animal as reported by the parent
11 Years
17 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
Texas Tech University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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CassiDe Street
Director, HRPP
Principal Investigators
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Wesley H Dotson, PhD, BCBA-D
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Texas Tech University
Locations
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Texas Tech University
Lubbock, Texas, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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Therapy Dogs Group Autism
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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