Preserved imitation of known gestures in children with high-functioning autism.

ISRN Neurology Pub Date : 2013-08-25 eCollection Date: 2013-01-01 DOI:10.1155/2013/751516
Joana C Carmo, Raffaella I Rumiati, Roma Siugzdaite, Paolo Brambilla
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Abstract

It has been suggested that children with autism are particularly deficient at imitating novel gestures or gestures without goals. In the present study, we asked high-functioning autistic children and age-matched typically developing children to imitate several types of gestures that could be either already known or novel to them. Known gestures either conveyed a communicative meaning (i.e., intransitive) or involved the use of objects (i.e., transitive). We observed a significant interaction between gesture type and group of participants, with children with autism performing known gestures better than novel gestures. However, imitation of intransitive and transitive gestures did not differ across groups. These findings are discussed in light of a dual-route model for action imitation.

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高功能自闭症儿童对已知手势的保留性模仿。
有研究表明,自闭症儿童在模仿新奇手势或无目标手势方面尤其欠缺。在本研究中,我们要求高功能自闭症儿童和年龄匹配的发育正常儿童模仿几种类型的手势,这些手势对他们来说可能是已知的,也可能是新奇的。已知的手势要么表达交流意义(即不及物动词),要么涉及物体的使用(即及物动词)。我们观察到,手势类型与参与者群体之间存在明显的交互作用,自闭症儿童对已知手势的模仿优于对新手势的模仿。然而,对非及物手势和及物手势的模仿在不同组别之间并无差异。我们将根据动作模仿的双路径模型对这些发现进行讨论。
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