丹麦自闭症谱系障碍青少年成功的被动句理解

IF 2.5 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Pub Date : 2018-03-01 DOI:10.1177/2396941518761239
K. M. Jensen de López, Kristen Schroeder, A. Gavarró
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We compared our findings for adolescents with autism spectrum disorders to those of 15 typically developing Danish-speaking adolescents matched for age and nonverbal reasoning as measured by the Matrix subtest of the WISC-IV/WAIS-IV. We also analyzed associations between passive comprehension and nonverbal reasoning. Results The results showed ceiling effects for both groups on all sentence types indicating that Danish adolescents with autism spectrum disorders do not face problems comprehending passive sentences. However, when considering variation within the autism spectrum disorder group, correct passive comprehension was highly significantly associated with nonverbal reasoning for the autism spectrum disorder group (r = .75), while this was not the case for the typically developing adolescents. Analyses of the few errors produced showed a preference for Theta-role reversal errors in the autism spectrum disorder and the typically developing groups. 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引用次数: 6

摘要

背景和目的自闭症谱系障碍儿童的语言能力差异很大。在本研究中,我们调查了被动句理解,这在自闭症谱系障碍患者中尚未得到充分的探索,在其他临床人群中被发现是延迟的。这项研究首次评估了患有自闭症谱系障碍的丹麦语青少年的语法理解能力。方法15名丹麦语自闭症青少年(平均年龄:14.9岁;年龄范围:13-18岁)参加了一项图片选择任务,评估被动句相对于主动句的理解能力。我们将我们对患有自闭症谱系障碍的青少年的研究结果与通过WISC-IV/WAIS-IV的矩阵子测验测量的15名年龄和非语言推理匹配的典型发展中的丹麦语青少年的研究进行了比较。我们还分析了被动理解和非语言推理之间的联系。结果两组在所有句子类型上的上限效应表明,患有自闭症谱系障碍的丹麦青少年在理解被动句方面没有问题。然而,当考虑到自闭症谱系障碍组的变异时,正确的被动理解与自闭症谱系疾病组的非语言推理高度显著相关(r = .75),而对于典型的发育中的青少年则并非如此。对产生的少数错误的分析表明,在自闭症谱系障碍和典型发育组中,他们更倾向于Theta角色逆转错误。结论患有高功能自闭症谱系障碍的丹麦语青少年在被动句理解方面没有表现出障碍。然而,相关分析表明,对于患有自闭症谱系障碍的青少年来说,被动句子理解与非语言推理有关。我们讨论了如何将这些结果与之前关于自闭症谱系障碍患者被动理解的少数研究相一致。含义我们的研究提供了额外的跨语言证据,证明被动理解对患有高功能自闭症谱系障碍的人来说没有问题。非语言推理和被动句子理解之间关系的发现可能会为临床最佳实践提供信息,因为在非语言推理方面表现不佳的自闭症谱系障碍儿童可能会从额外的接受性语言筛查中受益。
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Successful passive sentence comprehension among Danish adolescents with autism spectrum disorders
Background and aims Language abilities vary greatly across children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). In the present study, we investigate passive sentence comprehension, which has been underexplored among individuals with autism spectrum disorders and found to be delayed among other clinical populations. This study is the first to assess grammatical comprehension among Danish-speaking adolescents with autism spectrum disorders. Methods Fifteen Danish-speaking adolescents with autism (mean age: 14.9 years; age range: 13–18 years) participated in a picture selection task assessing comprehension of passive sentences relative to active sentences. We compared our findings for adolescents with autism spectrum disorders to those of 15 typically developing Danish-speaking adolescents matched for age and nonverbal reasoning as measured by the Matrix subtest of the WISC-IV/WAIS-IV. We also analyzed associations between passive comprehension and nonverbal reasoning. Results The results showed ceiling effects for both groups on all sentence types indicating that Danish adolescents with autism spectrum disorders do not face problems comprehending passive sentences. However, when considering variation within the autism spectrum disorder group, correct passive comprehension was highly significantly associated with nonverbal reasoning for the autism spectrum disorder group (r = .75), while this was not the case for the typically developing adolescents. Analyses of the few errors produced showed a preference for Theta-role reversal errors in the autism spectrum disorder and the typically developing groups. Conclusions Danish-speaking adolescents with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders do not show impairment in passive sentence comprehension. Correlation analyses however show that for adolescents with autism spectrum disorders, passive sentence comprehension is associated with nonverbal reasoning. We discuss how these results can be viewed as consistent with the few previous studies on passive comprehension in individuals with autism spectrum disorders. Implications Our study provides additional cross-linguistic evidence that passive comprehension is not problematic for individuals with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders. The finding of the relationship between nonverbal reasoning and passive sentence comprehension may inform clinical best practices as children with autism spectrum disorders who underperform in measures of nonverbal reasoning may benefit from additional receptive language screening.
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来源期刊
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
12 weeks
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