The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria

Eye Contact and AI in ABA Treatment: Session 317 with Francesca degli Espinosa

Nov 29, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Dr. Francesca Degli Espinosa, a behavior analyst focused on eye-looking and autism, redefines eye contact as 'eye-looking.' She emphasizes its importance in social development and early intervention, highlighting how gaze behavior affects learning. Francesca explores the complexities of teaching eye contact and its potential aversiveness for some individuals. She also introduces her Substack, blending behavioral science with narrative fiction, and discusses the role of AI in behavior analysis—both its benefits and risks.
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INSIGHT

Eye-Looking Is A Behavior, Not A Goal

  • Eye contact is better framed as "eye-looking": a behavior that produces contact with eyes as a stimulus.
  • That stimulus can acquire different functions depending on social contingencies and learning history.
INSIGHT

Early Gaze Shapes Developmental Trajectories

  • Early eye-looking shapes a child's social learning trajectory by making social movements predictive and reinforcing.
  • Missing those early contingencies shifts learning toward objects and limits later social and verbal development.
ADVICE

Shape Gaze Within Natural Social Routines

  • Prefer shaping eye-looking within natural social routines rather than teaching a topography with non-social reinforcers.
  • Train parents to use pauses and contingent social play to make eye-looking predictive of interaction.
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