为什么双语有助于自闭症儿童的功能:基于对称的解释

O. Kosheleva, V. Kreinovich
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摘要

自闭症儿童的一个主要问题是,他们很难切换到不同的状态,切换到不同的活动,而这种切换通常是需要的。研究人员最近表明,双语有助于自闭症儿童的功能:也就是说,双语儿童更容易转向一项新活动。在本文中,我们为这一实证现象提供了一种可能的解释。也就是说,我们表明,一般来说,自闭症意味着难以打破一个状态的对称性,我们描述了这种普遍的重新表述如何确实解释了上述最近发现的现象。什么是自闭症:一个简短的提示。自闭症被定义为“一种发育障碍,其特征是社交互动和沟通困难,行为受限和重复”;例如,[1,7]。研究人员正试图提供帮助。目前,还没有办法完全治愈这种疾病。然而,有许多技术可以帮助一些患者更好地发挥功能——也就是说,使他们更容易切换到新的活动和/或更容易中断重复的行为。双语有帮助吗?有大量证据表明,一般来说,双语能力——即懂两种语言——有助于解决问题;参见[2,3]。由于这一普遍事实,研究自闭症的研究人员决定检查是否可以在自闭症儿童中观察到类似的改善。这有帮助,但为什么呢?这项研究的结果表明,双语能力确实在统计学上显著地帮助双语儿童转换到一项新的活动:平均而言,双语自闭症儿童在这种转换任务上比单语儿童表现得更好。这些结果证实了b[6]中列出的轶事证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why bilingualism helps autistic children function: a symmetry-based explanation
One of the main problems of autistic children is that it is very difficult for them to switch to a different state, to a different activity – and such switches are often needed. Researchers have recently shown that bilingualism helps autistic children function: namely, it is somewhat easier for bilingual children to switch to a new activity. In this paper, we provide a possible explanation for this empirical phenomenon. Namely, we show that, in general terms, autism means difficulty with breaking symmetries of a state, and we describe how this general reformulation indeed explains the above recently discovered phenomenon. 1 Formulation of the Problem What is autism: a brief reminder. Autism is defined as a “developmental disorder characterized by difficulties with social interaction and communication, and by restricted and repetitive behavior”; see, e.g., [1, 7]. Researchers are trying to help. At present, there is no way to completely cure this disorder. However, there are many techniques that help some patients function better – i.e., make it easier for them to switch to a new activity and/or easier to disrupt the repetitive behavior. Can bilingualism help? There is plenty of evidence that, in general, bilingualism – i.e., knowing two languages – helps in problem solving; see, e.g., [2, 3]. Because of this general fact, researchers studying autism decided to check whether a similar improvement can be observed in autistic children. It helps but why? The results of this research [5] show that bilingualism indeed statistically significantly helps bilingual children switch to a new activity: on average, bilingual autistic children performed better on such switching tasks than monolingual ones. These results confirmed anecdotal evidence listed in [6].
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