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Brief Report: A Comparison of Statistical Learning in School-Aged Children with High Functioning Autism and Typically Developing Peers

✍ Scribed by Mayo, Jessica; Eigsti, Inge-Marie


Book ID
118800165
Publisher
Springer US
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Weight
253 KB
Volume
42
Category
Article
ISSN
1573-3432

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✦ Synopsis


Individuals with autism spectrum disorders have impairments in language acquisition, but the underlying mechanism of these deficits is poorly understood. Implicit learning is potentially relevant to language development, particularly in speech segmentation, which relies on sensitivity to transitional probabilities between speech sounds. This study investigated the relationship between implicit learning and current language abilities in school-aged children with high functioning autism and a history of language delay (n = 17) and in children with typical development (n = 24) using a well-studied artificial language learning task. Results suggest that high functioning children with autism (HFA) and TD groups were equally able to implicitly learn transitional probabilities from a lengthy stimulus stream. Furthermore, task performance was not strongly associated with current language abilities. Implications for implicit learning research in HFA are discussed.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Behaviors of children with high-function
✍ Tristram Smith; Nina Watthen Lovaas; O. Ivar Lovaas πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2002 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 105 KB

## Abstract Children with high‐functioning autistic disorder (HAD) in a comprehensive behavioral treatment program (__n__ = 9, age = 5–7 years) alternated between pairings with a typically developing peer and pairings with a peer who had both autism and developmental delay. All pairings took place