What Silent Pauses Can 'Tell' Us About the Storytelling Skills of Autistic Children: Relations Between Pausing, Language Skills and Executive Functions.

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Eleni Peristeri, Katerina Drakoulaki, Antonia Boznou, Michaela Nerantzini, Angeliki Gena, Angelos Lengeris, Spyridoula Varlokosta
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Abstract

Silent pauses may serve communicative purposes such as demarcating boundaries between discourse units in language production. Previous research has shown that autistic children differ in their pausing behavior from typically-developing (TD) peers, however, the factors behind this difference remain underexplored. The current study was aimed at comparing the use of silent pauses in the narrative production of autistic children and age-matched TD children, and also to identify possible relations between pausing behavior and the children's language and executive function abilities. According to the study's findings, the autistic children did not differ from their TD peers in the use of grammatical pauses, however, the former tended to produce significantly less syntactically complex narratives than the TD group, which increased the likelihood that the autistic group would pause appropriately at phrasal boundaries. Though we have found low rates of ungrammatical silent pauses and omitted pauses in obligatory discourse contexts across both groups, autistic children with lower cognitive flexibility tended to use more ungrammatical pauses than their peers with higher cognitive flexibility scores. Also, the autistic group tended to omit obligatory silent pauses more often as their narration became more complex. The results demonstrate that syntactic complexity in narrative production modulated autistic children's pausing behavior, and that structurally simple narrations boosted the autistic group's appropriate use of grammatical pauses. The overall findings also demonstrate the importance of studying silent pauses in the narrative discourse of autistic children, and also highlight the links between silent pauses and the children's syntactic and cognitive skills.

Abstract Image

无声停顿能 "告诉 "我们自闭症儿童讲故事的技能:停顿、语言技能和执行功能之间的关系。
无声停顿可用于交际目的,如在语言生产中划分话语单元之间的界限。以往的研究表明,自闭症儿童的停顿行为与典型发育(TD)儿童不同,但这种差异背后的因素仍未得到充分探讨。本研究旨在比较自闭症儿童和年龄匹配的 TD 儿童在叙述中使用无声停顿的情况,并找出停顿行为与儿童的语言和执行功能能力之间可能存在的关系。研究结果表明,自闭症儿童在语法停顿的使用上与 TD 儿童并无差异,但前者在叙事中的句法复杂程度明显低于 TD 儿童,这增加了自闭症儿童在词组界限处适当停顿的可能性。虽然我们发现两组自闭症儿童在强制性话语语境中的无语法停顿和省略停顿率都很低,但认知灵活性较低的自闭症儿童往往比认知灵活性得分较高的同龄人使用更多的无语法停顿。此外,随着自闭症儿童的叙述变得越来越复杂,他们往往会更频繁地省略强制性的无声停顿。研究结果表明,叙述中的句法复杂性会调节自闭症儿童的停顿行为,结构简单的叙述会促进自闭症儿童适当使用语法停顿。总体研究结果还证明了研究自闭症儿童叙事话语中无声停顿的重要性,并强调了无声停顿与儿童句法和认知技能之间的联系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
10.30%
发文量
433
期刊介绍: The Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders seeks to advance theoretical and applied research as well as examine and evaluate clinical diagnoses and treatments for autism and related disabilities. JADD encourages research submissions on the causes of ASDs and related disorders, including genetic, immunological, and environmental factors; diagnosis and assessment tools (e.g., for early detection as well as behavioral and communications characteristics); and prevention and treatment options. Sample topics include: Social responsiveness in young children with autism Advances in diagnosing and reporting autism Omega-3 fatty acids to treat autism symptoms Parental and child adherence to behavioral and medical treatments for autism Increasing independent task completion by students with autism spectrum disorder Does laughter differ in children with autism? Predicting ASD diagnosis and social impairment in younger siblings of children with autism The effects of psychotropic and nonpsychotropic medication with adolescents and adults with ASD Increasing independence for individuals with ASDs Group interventions to promote social skills in school-aged children with ASDs Standard diagnostic measures for ASDs Substance abuse in adults with autism Differentiating between ADHD and autism symptoms Social competence and social skills training and interventions for children with ASDs Therapeutic horseback riding and social functioning in children with autism Authors and readers of the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders include sch olars, researchers, professionals, policy makers, and graduate students from a broad range of cross-disciplines, including developmental, clinical child, and school psychology; pediatrics; psychiatry; education; social work and counseling; speech, communication, and physical therapy; medicine and neuroscience; and public health.
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