posted on 2023-08-30, 16:54authored byChris Walton, Charles Antaki, W. M. L. Finlay
Background:
This study argues for displays of affect by people with severe or profound intellectual disabilities to be analysed in the course of everyday interactions with the people who support them.
Method:
Conversation analysis is applied to the affective displays of residents of a social care service for people with severe or profound intellectual disabilities to identify how such displays are taken up and form the basis for further action.
Results:
Three types of orientations to affect are identified: where the cause of the affect is unknown; where there is a proximal cause; and where the proximal cause is a prior action by a member of staff. Staff orient to affect as expressions of both feelings and cognitions, thereby providing the basis for self‐determination.
Conclusions:
Displays of affect are a communicative resource for those with severe or profound impairments and must be studied in situ if they are to inform policy and everyday practice.
History
Legacy Faculty/School/Department
Faculty of Health, Education, Medicine & Social Care
Refereed
Yes
Volume
33
Issue number
5
Page range
876-886
Publication title
Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities