Sound before meaning: word learning in autistic disorders

Norbury, Courtenay, Griffiths, Helen and Nation, Kate

(2010)

Norbury, Courtenay, Griffiths, Helen and Nation, Kate (2010) Sound before meaning: word learning in autistic disorders. Neuropsychologia, 48 (14).

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Abstract

Successful word learning depends on the integration of phonological and semantic information with social cues provided by interlocutors. How then, do children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) learn new words when social impairments pervade? We recorded the eye-movements of verbally-able children with ASD and their typical peers while completing a word learning task in a social context. We assessed learning of semantic and phonological features immediately after learning and again four weeks later. Eye-movement data revealed that both groups could follow social cues, but that typically developing children were more sensitive to the social informativeness of gaze cues. In contrast, children with ASD were more successful than peers at mapping phonological forms to novel referents; however, this advantage was not maintained over time. Typical children showed clear consolidation of learning both semantic and phonological information, children with ASD did not. These results provide unique evidence of qualitative differences in word learning and consolidation and elucidate the different mechanisms underlying the unusual nature of autistic language

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This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 2010
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/781d9be8-5d2d-833f-0f31-e2fa68f45e0c/2/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleSound before meaning: word learning in autistic disorders
AuthorsNorbury, Courtenay
Griffiths, Helen
Nation, Kate
Uncontrolled Keywordsautism, eye-movements, word learning
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

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Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 29-May-2012 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 29-May-2012


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