Spectrum Center,

 305 E. 53 St., Manhattan 1-877-4AUTKID

Valerie M.
Dejean vestibular Vestibular Re Integration of the Autistic Child Developmental Model for Autism Autism may be
treated successfully using Vestibular Re-Integration combined with the
Tomatis Method. Valerie Dejean describes her developmental model as
modeled on the theories of Jean Ayres and Alfred A. Tomatis and shows
how the developmental model parallels the progress of human evolution.
Conversely, we are shown how an understanding of human evolution can
provide clues for the treatment of Autism. Valerie Dejean has treated
2000 autistic children in the last 17 years at the Spectrum Center in
Bethesda Maryland, and now New York City.

Valerie Dejean on Autism
(Valerie Dejean is a Tomatis Consultant who treats autistic children)

Early signs of autism


Just Published...Vestibular Re Integration of the Autistic Child
Developmental Model for Autism by Valerie M. Dejean

Buy It Now!

Valerie M.
Dejean vestibular Vestibular Re Integration of the Autistic Child Developmental Model for Autism Autism may be
treated successfully using Vestibular Re-Integration combined with the
Tomatis Method. Valerie Dejean describes her developmental model as
modeled on the theories of Jean Ayres and Alfred A. Tomatis and shows
how the developmental model parallels the progress of human evolution.
Conversely, we are shown how an understanding of human evolution can
provide clues for the treatment of Autism. Valerie Dejean has treated
2000 autistic children in the last 17 years at the Spectrum Center in
Bethesda Maryland, and now New York City. 

Chapter I: The use of the Tomatis Method for children
with Autism and PDD 1
Auditory Training and Autism .....2
What is autism? .....2
Causes of Autism ..3
Description of the onset of Autism/PDD 5
Sensory History .....6
Movement differences in people with Autism 11
Motor Development History .....13
Sensory Defensiveness in children with Autism and PDD .15
Dyspraxia in children with Autism and PDD 17
Auditory Processing Disorders in children with Autism and PDD...18
Level of Processing Disorder 19
Changes with Sound Stimulation ....21
Need for a comprehensive model ....23
Sensory Integration as an Umbrella Model ....24
Valerie M. Dejean ix
Influences on the development of Sensory Integration Theory 26
Sensory Integration .....29
Treatment of Children with sensory integration disorders .33
Assumptions Underlying Treatment 33
Organization of Sensations 34
Case History Questionnaire 36
Case History Progress ReportÑSammy 47
Chapter II: The Tomatis method as a cure for autism ...49
About the Tomatis Method .50
Applications of the Tomatis Method .....50
About Dr. Alfred Tomatis ..51
Origins of the Tomatis Method .53
Occupational Deafness 54
Pilots .54
Opera Singers 55
The Three Laws of the Tomatis Effect ...58
The First Tomatis Law 58
The Second Law .58
The Third LawÑLaw of retention ..59
Control of the Audio-Phonatory Mechanism 60
The Middle Ear Muscles Ant/Physiology 62
Functions of the Middle Ear Muscles ....63
The Role of the Right Ear in Audio-Vocal Control .....66
Vagus is the wanderer, wanders more on the left side. ..68
Research on StutteringÑdelayed feedback ....69
Language and Laterality ....70
Laterality and Control .72
Relationship between Listening and the Body .....73
Ear and the Skin .73
Ear and Bone Conduction 76
Acoustic Geography ....77
Language and Body Image 78
Intra-Uterine Listening 2 ..... 
x Vestibular Re Integration of the Autistic Child
Evolution of Listening .84
Ear as Neurological Organizer ...85
Functions of the Ear ....85
The Ear is not made for hearing 86
The Vestibular Function ....86
Body image and motor planning .....87
Energy ....88
The Cochlea Function 91
Verticality 92
Verticality and Language ...92
Laterality .93
Language and Laterality ....93
Laterality and 40 Million Frenchmen ....96
The Leading Ear .98
The Leading Ear and Stuttering ....100
É the color of their hair and skin .102
Theory of the Three Integrators ....104
Vestibular (Somatic) Integrator .....105
Olfactory Integrator ..107
Visual (Spatial) Integrator .107
Visual IntegratorÑDevelopmentally ...108
Cochlea (Linguistic) Integrator .....109
Gravity ..112
Postural Support .113
The Listening Function ...116
The Birth of Listening .....117
Functions of the Middle Ear ...118
Cranial Nerves of the Middle Ear ..118
Vagus X (Pneumogastric) Nerve ....119
Vagus X (Pneumogastric) Nerve 2 .120
TomatisÕ Theory of Hearing ....120
Steve PorgesÑThe Polyvagal Theory ...121
The Birth of Listening: The MotherÑChild Relationship ....122
Valerie M. Dejean xi
Chapter III: Sensory Integration and Autism 124
What is Sensory Integration? ...125
First Level: Sensory Registration and Regulation. 125
Sensory Registration: Reactivity (Thresholds) ....125
How Does Sensory Integration Relate to My Child? .127
How the Senses Interact ..127
The Distance Receptors: Seeing (vision) and Hearing (audition) ...132
Cochlear (Linguistic) Integrator ....133
Next Level: Motor PlanningÑPraxis ...135
Next Level of Organization and Integration of Sensory Input:
The formation of Perceptual Schema...138
Types of children I see .....140
Section II DyspraxiaÑMotor Planning Disorder 141
How Does Praxis Relate to My Child?
Or What Does Praxis Have to Do with My Child?....143
Symptoms of Dyspraxia ..144
Changes Observed with Tomatis Therapy ...146
The Link between Praxis and Language Development .....148
The Evolution of Language .....149
First Came Episodic Thought..149
Mimetic Culture .150
From Episodic To Mimetic To Symbolic .....151
Symptoms ...152
The link between Praxis and Language 153
Central Auditory Processing ....154
Central Auditory Processing Disorder: Symptoms of CAP ....155
Change in the Auditory Apparatus 158
The Listening Function ...161
Fields of IntelligenceÑa hypothesis.....161
Technical Aspects of Auditory Processing ....163
Prevalence of Autism .165
Comprehensive Model ....169
Parallel evolution .170
xii Vestibular Re Integration of the Autistic Child
Uniquely Human 173
Praxis: A Bridge .175
Adaptive responses ....178
Cognitive Evolution 1 .....179
The Role of Ideation in praxis .179
Ideation as the Link of Praxis with Language .....180
Representation Action and the Development of Symbolic Thought ....183
Patterns of development we can observe in Autism ....188
Mimetic to Symbolic Gestural Communication 191
Mimetic to Metaphorical 193
Tomatis Method and SI Comparison ..195
Incorporation of vocalizations .198
Changes in the Auditory Apparatus .....199
High Speed Phonetic Voco-motor Control Device ....200
ÒThe Voice Can Only Reproduce what the Ear can HearÓ .....200
Hear vs. Listening .....202
Listening Function ....202
Ontogeny Recapitulated Phylogeny ....204
RealityÑSensory Perception ...205
How Does Auditory Processing Relate to My Child? .208
Spectrum Center Method .211
The Key to Communication, Behavior, and Learning Problems,
including Dyslexia.....212
Sensory Integration Dysfunction ...214
Attention and Focus ..215
Kinesthetic Ability ....216
Sensory Defensiveness .....216
Socialization 217
Attention Deficit Disorders (ADD/ADHD) .....217
Sensory Integration and ADD .218
Dr. Alfred Tomatis, Listening, and ADD .....219
Spectrum Center Method .220
Listening Checklist ...224

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Why is my child spinning or watching Wheel of Fortune? by Valerie Dejean

Analyzing the sensory patterns that a child with Autism/PDD presents with will help us  unravel the mysteries of certain behaviors that may otherwise seem abnormal. When we begin to understand that the child is trying to meet a developmental need or may perceive the world in such a radically different manner than we do, then we see that this behavior ist he only thing that makes sense to him.

For example a child that constantly spins himself or objects, may be a child with a severely under-reactive vestibular system, that he is trying to stimulate. We normally get this stimulation through movement. However this child may not receive this normal stimulation adequately through his disordered system, and thus tries to make up for it through intensive movement (spinning). His vestibular system may be so underreactive, that he tries to get this stimulation optic-kinetically through his visual system (spinning objects). Looking at the behavior in this light, rather than trying to extinguish it, we might try to find way to more appropriately provide the child the stimulation he seeks. (For example a swing on a spinner, while batting at dangling objects.) It sounds simple but often a technique like this (meeting the sensory needs of the child) will extinguish a behavior much faster than stopping the behavior forcibly. A child's innate need is often the best lead to follow in treatment. Just because there is abnormality doesn't mean that the child's instincts are wrong.


Understanding the particular sensory sensitivities of a child will help us engage a child with a diagnosis that includes severe relationship problem as its main symptoms. If a child with Autism/PDD is over-reactive to light and sound, a whisper may get his attention. If they are under-reactive, an animated voice with exaggerated facial expressions is what will work.

Difficulties in motor planning, known as dyspraxia (or apraxia) is common in children with Autism/PDD, though it is infrequently recognized. Motor planning or praxis is the ability of the brain to conceive, organize, and carry out a sequence of unfamiliar actions. In dyspraxic syndrome there is a reduced ability to carry out non-learned movements, even though there is adequate motor and conceptual capacity to do so. Praxis is believed to be a single function involving three basic processes: ideation or generating an idea of how one might interact with the environment; motor planning or organizing a program of action; and execution or the actual performance of a motor act.

"my child looked me in the eye for the first time"

Difficulties in motor planning are often the explanation for the increase in frustration the child experiences in the second year. According to Piaget, the child moves from the sensory-motor period (which they haven't mastered adequately) to the operational period at this time. Rather than just experience the world, the child is called upon to master it. Toys become more complex requiring more complex and sequenced motor behavior which they cannot organize. Language also becomes more complex, requiring more complex and sequenced oral motor movements. Motor planning problems affect a child's ability to learn through imitation. They cannot learn through gestural demonstration and much of early childhood learning is done in this manner. Children with motor planning disorders may be able to generate their own plan but cannot follow someone else's. They may seem uncooperative as they cannot perform on demand, (usually for an examiner), tasks their families have seen them do on other occasions.

Integration of sensory information (which sound stimulation can profoundly influence) gives our brain the capacity to learn. It gives us the ability to put it all together, the foundation necessary for more abstract concepts.This integration allows us to perceive red, round, hard, and then develop the concept of apple. This gives the foundation to recognize a picture of an apple. We can then latter recognize and connect the symbols A P P L E to mean apple. We can later become even more abstract and understand the expression "you are the apple of my eye."

Many children with Autism/PDD cannot make the symbolic leap to abstraction.
"They are trapped in a lower level of development. They can spin the wheels on a car yet they cannot pretend to make the car go down the road. This blocks their ability to develop normal cognitive and linguistic structures such as make the car go fast/slow, over/under etc. Their ability to perform may have no proportional relationship with their cognitive level which often is quite intelligent. Again this is a cause for significant frustration and low self esteem."

(Our solution: This is treatable if the practitioner has some sort of method for reorganizing the child's nervous and vestibular system, with an eye to improving motor planning. Valerie Dejean combines the original Tomatis Method with Vestibular Re-Integration to get your child to look you in the eye.)



They are trapped in a lower level of development. They can spin the wheels on a car yet they cannot pretend to make the car go down the road. This blocks their ability to develop normal cognitive and linguistic structures such as make the car go fast/slow, over/under etc. Their ability to perform may have no proportional relationship with their cognitive level which often is quite intelligent. Again this is a cause for significant frustration and low self esteem.

(Our solution: This is treatable if the practitioner has some sort of method for reorganizing the child's nervous and vestibular system, with an eye to improving motor planning. Valerie Dejean combines the original Tomatis Method with Vestibular Re-Integration to get your child to look you in the eye.)

Next: EARLY SENSORY DEVELOPMENT Autism/PDD

(Valerie Dejean)

(Valerie Dejean is a Tomatis Consultant who treats autistic children)