Picture Exchange Communication System
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) is an evidence-based augmentative and alternative communication method developed in 1985 by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost to enable individuals with autism spectrum disorder and related developmental disabilities, particularly those with minimal verbal skills, to initiate requests and exchanges using picture symbols rather than spoken language.[1][2] It employs a discrete trial training approach derived from applied behavior analysis, progressing through six phases that begin with simple exchanges of a picture card for a preferred item and advance to sentence construction, discrimination among symbols, and commenting on the environment.[1][3] Unlike prompted verbal systems, PECS emphasizes learner-initiated communication to foster functional requesting and reduce reliance on adult cues, making it suitable for early intervention in nonverbal children.[2][4] PECS has been implemented globally across diverse settings, including homes, schools, and clinics, with training protocols requiring minimal specialized equipment—typically laminated picture cards or boards—and brief adult prompting that fades over time.[1] Empirical studies, including meta-analyses of over 200 publications, demonstrate its effectiveness in rapidly increasing communicative initiations, expanding vocabulary through symbol combinations, and, in many cases, facilitating the emergence of spoken words and sentences without explicit verbal training, while also correlating with reductions in problem behaviors like tantrums linked to unexpressed needs.[5][6] Outcomes vary by individual factors such as age and cognitive level, but predictors of success include consistent implementation and generalization across contexts, with evidence supporting its use from toddlerhood through adulthood.[7][5] Defining characteristics include its focus on manding (requesting) as a foundational skill, avoidance of vocal prompting to prevent learned helplessness in communication, and adaptability to digital formats, though traditional physical exchanges remain core to building motor and social skills.[2][8]History and Development
Origins and Initial Creation
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) was developed in 1985 by Andy Bondy, Ph.D., a behavior analyst, and Lori Frost, M.S., CCC-SLP, a speech-language pathologist, at the Delaware Autistic Program.[9] [10] This initiative addressed observed gaps in communication training for preschool children with autism spectrum disorder and related developmental disabilities, who often failed to initiate interactions under traditional verbal prompting or adult-directed methods.[10] [2] Bondy and Frost designed PECS to prioritize learner-initiated exchanges, wherein individuals select and hand over picture symbols representing desired items or actions to a communicative partner, receiving reinforcement in return without adult prompts that could inadvertently maintain dependency.[10] The system's core rationale stemmed from applied behavior analysis principles, particularly B.F. Skinner's analysis of verbal behavior, focusing on functional communication as a reinforced operant to foster spontaneous requesting and reduce reliance on echoed or prompted responses.[10] Initial trials targeted preschoolers, using laminated picture cards depicting high-preference reinforcers like snacks or toys to establish the exchange process in natural environments such as classrooms.[9] [11] Early refinement involved iterative testing at the Delaware program, with Bondy presenting preliminary concepts at conferences in 1987 and 1988 before collaborative documentation with Frost in subsequent years, confirming rapid acquisition of basic requesting skills in non-verbal learners.[10] This creation marked a shift toward augmentative systems emphasizing autonomy over imitation, setting the foundation for structured phases that built from simple exchanges to sentence construction.[2]Publication and Early Adoption
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) protocol was first formally described in a 1994 article by Andrew S. Bondy and Lori A. Frost in the journal Focus on Autistic Behavior, outlining its development and initial implementation for teaching functional communication to nonverbal individuals with autism.[10] This publication built on the system's origins in 1985 at the Delaware Autistic Program, where Bondy and Frost observed limitations in traditional prompting methods and initiated picture-based exchanges to promote learner-initiated requests.[12] The accompanying PECS Training Manual, first published in 1994 by Pyramid Educational Consultants (founded by Bondy and Frost to disseminate the approach), provided detailed implementation guidelines and became a key resource for practitioners. An updated second edition appeared in 2002, incorporating refinements based on early field experiences.[13] Early adoption occurred primarily within autism-focused educational programs in the United States, starting with preschoolers at the Delaware Autistic Program, where PECS demonstrated rapid gains in spontaneous requesting behaviors.[9] By the mid-1990s, it had expanded to public school settings; for instance, Bondy and Frost reported in 1994 that 20 of 27 entering preschoolers in one program had prior PECS exposure, reflecting growing integration into special education curricula.[14] International interest emerged soon after, with trainings and certifications through Pyramid facilitating uptake in clinical and home-based interventions, though empirical validation lagged behind initial dissemination.[15]Theoretical Foundations
Behavioral and Developmental Principles
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) is fundamentally rooted in B.F. Skinner's analysis of verbal behavior, which conceptualizes communication as operant behavior shaped by reinforcement contingencies rather than innate cognitive structures.[1][2] This framework prioritizes teaching functional verbal operants, beginning with the mand—requesting a reinforcer to satisfy a motivation—using pictures as the initial response form to bypass vocal limitations in learners with autism or related developmental disabilities.[16] Applied behavior analysis (ABA) principles underpin the methodology, employing positive reinforcement to contingently deliver desired items or activities upon successful exchanges, thereby establishing a direct causal pathway from communicative act to outcome and increasing response probability through repeated pairings.[17] Prompting hierarchies, including physical guidance and gestural cues, are systematically faded to promote independence, while errorless learning procedures and immediate correction minimize frustration and extinction bursts, ensuring skill acquisition without reliance on verbal prompts that could foster dependency.[1] Developmentally, PECS structures communication training to approximate milestones in typical language acquisition, commencing with concrete, tangible requests to capitalize on learners' existing motivations for edibles or toys, then expanding to abstract discrimination, sentence formulation ("I want X"), and non-requesting functions like commenting or responding.[2] This progression fosters generalization across communicators, settings, and stimuli by incorporating variable reinforcement schedules and multiple exemplars, addressing common deficits in joint attention and social initiation observed in autism.[17] Unlike traditional prompting-dependent interventions, PECS mandates learner initiation from Phase I, theoretically enhancing intrinsic motivation and reducing escape-motivated problem behaviors by providing an efficient alternative to maladaptive actions like tantrums, as reinforced communication supplants less effective strategies.[1] Empirical observations indicate that this approach can evoke collateral vocalizations in approximately 40-60% of trained learners, attributed to the motivational salience of mands and paired exposure to spoken models during exchanges, though speech emergence remains variable and not guaranteed.[2]Distinction from Traditional Prompting Methods
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) fundamentally diverges from traditional prompting methods, such as those employed in discrete trial training (DTT), by prioritizing learner-initiated exchanges over adult-directed responses. In conventional prompting approaches, training typically involves an adult presenting a discriminative stimulus—such as a question or object—and delivering graduated prompts (e.g., verbal cues, gestures, or physical guidance) to evoke a communicative response, with prompts faded over trials to promote independence.[18] However, this structure often results in prompt dependency, where learners hesitate to communicate without adult initiation, limiting generalization to unstructured environments. PECS, by contrast, structures Phase 1 training to reinforce the learner's independent selection and delivery of a picture card to a communicative partner in exchange for a preferred item, using physical prompts only for the mechanical act of exchange rather than for initiating the request itself.[19] This design avoids verbal prompts entirely to prevent dependency and fosters spontaneous manding (requesting) as a functional operant.[20] A core theoretical distinction lies in PECS's focus on building initiator repertoires without requiring prerequisite skills like joint attention, imitation, or response to social bids, which are often assumed in prompting-based methods. Traditional systems, rooted in responder conditioning, may inadvertently reinforce passive waiting for adult cues, potentially exacerbating deficits in proactive communication for individuals with autism spectrum disorder who exhibit low social motivation.[21] PECS circumvents this by leveraging the motivating operation of immediate access to reinforcers, teaching the exchange as a direct pathway to obtain desires, thereby promoting autonomy from the outset. Empirical protocols ensure that once initial physical assistance is faded, the learner discriminates and acts without adult modeling or direction, contrasting with DTT's reliance on repeated adult-led trials.[22] This initiator-centric framework in PECS also mitigates risks associated with prompt hierarchies, such as errorless learning that might mask true acquisition or delay vocal emergence by over-relying on imitative prompts. Studies comparing communication interventions highlight PECS's efficacy in eliciting unprompted requests, particularly for children with limited comprehension of adult-directed prompts, leading to higher rates of functional exchanges in naturalistic settings compared to prompt-faded verbal training alone.[21][23]Protocol Details
The Six Phases
The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) protocol comprises six progressive phases that systematically teach individuals with limited verbal abilities to initiate and expand communicative exchanges using pictures. Developed by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the phases emphasize functional requesting before responding or commenting, employing applied behavior analysis techniques such as physical prompting, reinforcement hierarchies, and error correction without verbal prompts. Progression through phases requires mastery criteria, typically 80-90% independent responding across multiple exemplars, people, and settings to ensure generalization.[1][24] Phase I: How to CommunicateThis initial phase focuses on teaching the learner to approach a communicative partner, select a picture representing a preferred item, and exchange it for reinforcement. Two adults are involved: one as the communicative partner holding the item out of reach, and another as a prompter who physically assists the learner in picking up the picture card and handing it over. No verbal instructions are used; immediate reinforcement follows successful exchanges. Mastery is achieved when the learner independently completes exchanges in 80% of opportunities over three sessions with varied partners and items.[25][1] Phase II: Distance and Persistence
Building on Phase I, this phase promotes generalization by requiring the learner to travel a short distance (e.g., 3-5 feet) to access the picture card before exchanging it. It also fosters persistence by delaying reinforcement, encouraging the learner to seek out the partner if the initial exchange does not yield the item immediately. Prompting is faded gradually, and thin schedules of reinforcement are introduced to build tolerance for non-immediate responses. Criteria include successful exchanges from increasing distances and persistence in at least 80% of trials across sessions.[1][26] Phase III: Picture Discrimination
Here, learners discriminate among multiple pictures to select the specific one corresponding to their desired item, using a PECS communication book with at least two options. Teaching involves simultaneous presentation of correct and distractor pictures, with differential reinforcement for correct selections and error correction procedures like selecting both pictures if incorrect. Sub-phases address scanning and selection errors. Advancement occurs after 90% accuracy in selecting the correct picture from an array of six or more, generalizing across items and environments.[1][27] Phase IV: Sentence Structure
This phase introduces basic sentence formation using a sentence strip: the learner selects "I want" (a pre-printed card), places it on the strip, then adds the picture of the desired item before exchanging the strip with partner. Correspondence training ensures the received item matches the requested picture. Prompts are faded, and sentence starters are expanded (e.g., "I see"). Mastery requires independent sentence construction and exchange in 90% of opportunities, often leading to emergent verbalizations.[1][28] Phase V: Answering Questions
Learners respond to the query "What do you want?" by independently constructing and exchanging a sentence strip. The communicative partner holds the sentence starter card, prompting the learner to select and sequence pictures. This phase reinforces responsive communication skills, with criteria including 90% accurate responses to the question across varied contexts and partners, facilitating transitions to more interactive exchanges.[1][29] Phase VI: Responsive and Spontaneous Commenting
The final phase expands communication beyond requesting to include commenting, both in response to questions like "What do you see?" and spontaneously (e.g., "I see [picture]"). Sentence starters such as "I see" or "It is a" are used, with opportunities for describing actions or attributes. This phase aims at balanced communicative functions, with ongoing monitoring for generalization and potential integration with speech-generating devices. Success is evidenced by varied commenting in natural environments without specific prompts.[1][24]
Implementation Guidelines and Requirements
Implementation of the Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) requires adherence to a structured protocol developed by Pyramid Educational Consultants, including mandatory training for practitioners to ensure fidelity.[9] Certified PECS Level 1 training, typically a 13-hour workshop, covers the theoretical foundations, the six-phase protocol, and practical skills for teaching spontaneous requesting and discrimination through Phases I-IV.[30] Level 2 training extends to advanced commenting, expansion, and implementation strategies for Phases V-VI.[31] Certification involves demonstrating protocol knowledge via examination (90% passing score) and supervised implementation with learners, validating competence beyond basic attendance.[32] Personnel requirements specify at least two trained communicators for Phase I to facilitate physical prompting and reinforcement exchange without verbal prompts that could inadvertently teach imitation rather than initiation.[33] One communicator handles the prompt while the other provides the reinforcer, with roles fading as the learner progresses to independent exchanges.[25] Ongoing supervision by a certified PECS implementer or manager is recommended to monitor progress and adjust for individual needs, particularly in school or home settings where consistency across environments is critical.[34] Materials include laminated picture cards (typically 1-2 inches square for portability), a communication binder or book with Velcro strips for sentence construction in later phases, and access to preferred reinforcers identified via pre-implementation sampling.[35] Pictures must be clear, durable, and individualized to the learner's preferences and motor skills, with backups available to prevent delays.[1] Data collection tools, such as trial logs for exchanges per opportunity and error types, are essential for tracking mastery criteria (e.g., 80-90% independence over sessions) before advancing phases.[36] Preparation involves baseline assessment of the learner's imitation, scanning, and manding skills, alongside reinforcer assessment to select high-motivation items that maintain engagement without satiation.[9] Sessions should occur in natural environments with minimal distractions, starting with short, frequent trials (5-10 per session) to build momentum, emphasizing errorless teaching through most-to-least prompting.[11] Barriers such as inadequate training or resource limitations can undermine outcomes, underscoring the need for institutional support and inter-rater reliability checks during rollout.[36]Empirical Evidence of Effectiveness
Key Studies on Communication Gains
A foundational empirical evaluation of PECS was provided by Charlop-Christy et al. in 2002, involving three nonverbal children with autism spectrum disorder aged 4 to 6 years. All participants acquired Phase 1 exchange skills within an average of 13 sessions, demonstrated generalization across settings and communicators, and showed increases in verbal speech production, with two children emitting novel sentences post-training; social-communicative behaviors also rose, while problem behaviors decreased.[37] In a 2006 randomized controlled trial, Yoder and Stone compared PECS to responsive prelinguistic milieu teaching in 36 preschoolers with autism spectrum disorder, randomly assigning 18 to each intervention for approximately 6 months. The PECS group exhibited significantly greater increases in nonimitative spoken communication acts (effect size d=0.55) and the number of different nonimitative words used (d=0.72) compared to the milieu teaching group, though both interventions boosted requesting behaviors; subgroup analysis indicated stronger speech gains from PECS in children with lower initial verbal ability.[38] Subsequent single-subject studies, such as those by Ganz et al. in 2004, replicated communication gains in manding and initiations for children with developmental disabilities, with participants typically mastering early phases within 10-20 trials and generalizing exchanges to untrained items or environments. These findings underscore PECS's utility in fostering functional requesting, though outcomes varied by individual cognitive and motor profiles.Impacts on Speech and Problem Behaviors
Research on the Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) has yielded mixed evidence regarding its impact on speech development in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). A meta-analysis of 13 studies encompassing 94 effect sizes found a small overall effect on speech outcomes (mean IRD = 0.37, 95% CI [0.22, 0.52]), derived from 5 studies with 28 effect sizes, suggesting modest increases in vocalizations or word use for some minimally verbal participants but high variability (range: -0.51 to 0.91).[39] Another earlier meta-analysis of 11 studies (8 single-subject designs with 18 participants and 3 group studies with 160 total participants) reported small to negative gains in speech production post-PECS training, with limited evidence for maintenance or generalization beyond immediate contexts.) Individual studies have occasionally documented gains, such as increased word counts, phrase length, and complexity in school-aged children after PECS phases emphasizing sentence construction and discrimination.[40] PECS implementation has shown more consistent, though preliminary, benefits in reducing problem behaviors, including aggression, tantrums, self-injury, and noncompliant actions, often attributed to enhanced functional communication alleviating frustration from unmet needs. The Ganz et al. meta-analysis indicated a moderate effect on challenging behaviors (mean IRD = 0.61, 95% CI [0.48, 0.73]), based on 2 studies yielding 10 effect sizes (range: 0.17 to 0.78).[39] A review of 9 single-subject studies (1994–2012) focusing on maladaptive behaviors found reductions in 4 of 7 participants, with inverse relationships to PECS proficiency in cases like decreased grabbing or aggression during requesting tasks.[41] These collateral effects appear stronger in preschool-aged children and those mastering later PECS phases, though data remain limited by small samples and few studies directly targeting behaviors.[39] Outcomes vary by individual factors, including baseline communication severity, cognitive level, and training intensity, with not all children exhibiting speech emergence or behavior reductions despite PECS acquisition.[42] Meta-analyses highlight the need for larger, controlled trials to clarify causal mechanisms and long-term durability, as current evidence relies heavily on single-subject designs prone to individual variability.[43]Meta-Analyses and Long-Term Outcomes
A 2012 meta-analysis of 24 single-subject studies involving 83 participants with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) found PECS produced moderate to large effect sizes for targeted functional communication outcomes (Tau-U = 0.78 overall, with highest gains in preschoolers), alongside smaller but positive effects on untargeted speech production (Tau-U = 0.62) and reductions in problem behaviors (Tau-U = 0.66).[44] [39] The analysis highlighted that PECS training intensity correlated positively with outcomes, with each additional hour of intervention yielding incremental improvements in communication gains, though effects on collateral behaviors like social initiations were inconsistent.[44] An earlier 2010 meta-analysis by Ganz et al., synthesizing data from 10 studies on children aged 1–11 years with ASD, reported PECS as promising for augmenting communication acts but equivocal for speech emergence, with only modest evidence of spontaneous vocalizations across participants; functional requesting improved reliably, but generalization to verbal speech occurred in fewer than half of cases examined.[45] [5] Problem behavior reductions were noted in several included studies, attributed to successful communication replacement, though the meta-analysis emphasized the need for larger randomized controlled trials to confirm causal links beyond single-subject designs.[45] Long-term outcomes remain understudied, with few follow-up investigations beyond immediate post-training periods. A 2014 follow-up study of 10 children with ASD, assessed 12–18 months after completing PECS Phases 1–4, observed sustained improvements in social-communicative skills such as joint attention and turn-taking (p < 0.05 on standardized measures), alongside maintenance of picture-based requesting, suggesting durability for specific targeted behaviors when reinforced consistently.[46] [47] However, a 2023 prospective study tracking 61 children with communication impairments over one year found only 46% achieved successful PECS milestones (e.g., independent exchanges in natural environments), with predictors of persistence including lower initial ASD severity and higher pre-training cognitive scores, indicating variability in long-term generalization without ongoing support.[42]| Outcome Domain | Effect Size (from 2012 Meta-Analysis) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Functional Communication | Tau-U = 0.78 (large) | Strongest in early phases; preschool age optimal.[44] |
| Speech Production | Tau-U = 0.62 (moderate) | Mixed generalization to vocal speech.[44] |
| Problem Behaviors | Tau-U = 0.66 (moderate reduction) | Linked to communication success, not universal.[44] |