Pantomimic representation in psychotic children.

F Curcio, E A Piserchia
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

Previous research suggests that verbal deficits among psychotic children may be paralleled by deficits in nonverbal pantomime. However, certain questions such as the level of pantomime exhibited by psychotic children, its susceptibility to modification, and its relation to other symbolic functions have not been systematically examined. To investigate these issues, 24 psychotic children were required to represent absent objects (e.g., toothbrush) via pantomime after receiving verbal instructions or instructions accompanied by a model demonstrating the pantomime. Also, measures of receptive and expressive speech, human figure drawings, and pretend play were obtained. The findings indicated very few complete failures in pantomime; higher pantomime performance when a model was provided although even in this condition most responses consisted of low-level substitutions of a body part in place of the absent object; and significant relationships between pantomime and measures of receptive vocabulary, echolalia, drawing, and play. The relationship of the findings to symbolic functioning in normal children and their relevance to understanding symbolic deficits in psychotic children are discussed.

精神病儿童的手势表现。
先前的研究表明,精神病儿童的语言缺陷可能与非语言哑剧的缺陷并行。然而,某些问题,如精神病儿童表现出的哑剧水平,对修饰的易感性,以及与其他符号功能的关系,尚未得到系统的研究。为了调查这些问题,研究人员要求24名精神病儿童在接受口头指示或附有示范哑剧的模型的指示后,通过哑剧来表现缺席的物体(例如牙刷)。此外,还获得了接受性和表达性语言,人体图形绘画和假装游戏的测量。研究结果表明,很少有哑剧完全失败;当提供一个模型时,更高的哑剧表现,尽管即使在这种情况下,大多数反应包括用身体部位代替缺席的物体的低级替代;以及哑剧和接受性词汇、模仿、绘画和游戏之间的重要关系。研究结果与正常儿童符号功能的关系及其对理解精神病儿童符号缺陷的相关性进行了讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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