Mapping the parent experience of echolalia in autism spectrum disorder onto a conceptual taxonomy.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-20 DOI:10.1080/17549507.2023.2244201
Eli G Cohn, Keith R Mcvilly, Matthew J Harrison
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Abstract

Purpose: Echolalia, the repetition of previously heard speech, is prevalent in a variety of neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Within the context of echolalia in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), research and intervention historically assume a clinical standpoint with two opposing paradigms: behaviourism and developmentalism. The literature is largely silent on how those other than researchers and clinicians understand echolalia. This study examined how parents experience echolalia through their children with ASD. The aim of the study was to ascertain if the parental perception of echolalia in ASD aligns with, or offers alternative perspectives to, current clinically-orientated views.

Method: We employed online semi-structured interviews to document the experiences of 126 parents, reflecting on their children with ASD aged 3 to 34 years of age, to determine if the parent experience could be mapped onto existing clinical frameworks, or if they might offer new perspectives. We used hermeneutic phenomenological data analysis in an abductive framework.

Result: Echolalia has predominantly been represented in literature through the perspectives of behaviourism or developmentalism. We found however, that echolalia is a phenomenon that is experienced by parents in a variety of different ways to that of the current clinically-orientated understandings. Such new ways of understanding echolalia that emerged from our analysis include one understanding which is dependent upon how echolalia is heard, and one in which parents are "waiting for echolalia to evolve."

Conclusion: The traditional dichotomous clinical positions do not resonate with all parents, and reliance on these traditional perspectives alone may impact effective engagement with parents and the success of interventions and support strategies. Our findings have implications for future research, the education of clinicians and educators, and the design of support and intervention for those who have echolalia.

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将自闭症谱系障碍中回声缺失的父母经历映射到概念分类学上。
目的:回声症是指重复先前听到的言语,在各种神经和精神疾病中普遍存在。在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)回声症的背景下,研究和干预历来采用两种相反范式的临床观点:行为主义和发展主义。除了研究人员和临床医生之外,文献对回声症的理解基本上是沉默的。这项研究调查了父母如何通过患有自闭症谱系障碍的孩子体验回声。该研究的目的是确定父母对ASD回声的感知是否与当前临床导向的观点一致,或提供了替代观点。方法:我们采用在线半结构化访谈来记录126位父母的经历,反思他们3至34岁患有自闭症谱系障碍的孩子 年龄,以确定父母的经历是否可以映射到现有的临床框架上,或者他们是否可以提供新的视角。我们在溯因框架中使用了解释学现象学数据分析。结果:回声症主要通过行为主义或发展主义的视角出现在文学中。然而,我们发现,回声缺失是一种父母以各种不同方式经历的现象,与目前临床上的理解不同。从我们的分析中出现的理解回声的新方法包括一种取决于如何听到回声的理解,以及父母“等待回声的进化”。结论:传统的二分法临床立场并不能引起所有父母的共鸣,仅依靠这些传统观点就可能影响与父母的有效接触以及干预和支持战略的成功。我们的发现对未来的研究、临床医生和教育工作者的教育以及对回声症患者的支持和干预设计都有意义。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology
International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
16.70%
发文量
73
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology is an international journal which promotes discussion on a broad range of current clinical and theoretical issues. Submissions may include experimental, review and theoretical discussion papers, with studies from either quantitative and/or qualitative frameworks. Articles may relate to any area of child or adult communication or dysphagia, furthering knowledge on issues related to etiology, assessment, diagnosis, intervention, or theoretical frameworks. Articles can be accompanied by supplementary audio and video files that will be uploaded to the journal’s website. Special issues on contemporary topics are published at least once a year. A scientific forum is included in many issues, where a topic is debated by invited international experts.
期刊最新文献
Mapping the parent experience of echolalia in autism spectrum disorder onto a conceptual taxonomy. Using a novel in-mask non-invasive ventilator microphone to improve talker intelligibility in healthy and hospitalised adults. An online survey of clinical practice and confidence in diagnosing acquired apraxia of speech in Cantonese speakers. The PraxiFala Battery: A diagnostic accuracy study. Sex differences in perceived speech intelligibility in patients with facial nerve palsy.
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