Inner speech impairments in autism.

Journal: Journal Of Child Psychology And Psychiatry, And Allied Disciplines
Published:
Abstract

Background: Three experiments investigated the role of inner speech deficit in cognitive performances of children with autism.

Methods: Experiment 1 compared children with autism with ability-matched controls on a verbal recall task presenting pictures and words. Experiment 2 used pictures for which the typical names were either single syllable or multisyllable. Two encoding conditions manipulated the use of verbal encoding. Experiment 3 employed a task-switching paradigm for which performance has been shown to be contingent upon inner speech.

Results: In Experiment 1, children with autism demonstrated a lower picture-superiority effect compared to controls. In Experiment 2, the children with autism showed a lower word-length effect when pictures were presented alone, but a more substantial word-length effect in a condition requiring overt labelling. In Experiment 3, articulatory suppression affected the task-switching performance of the control participants only.

Conclusions: Individuals with autism have limitations in their use of inner speech.

Authors
Andrew J Whitehouse, Murray Maybery, Kevin Durkin
Relevant Conditions

Autism Spectrum Disorder