Author:
SCHEUFFGEN KRISTINA,HAPPEÉ FRANCESCA,ANDERSON MIKE,FRITH UTA
Abstract
The uneven profile of performance on standard assessments of intelligence and the high
incidence of savant skills have prompted interest in the nature of intelligence in autism. The
present paper reports the first group study of speed of processing in children with autism (IQ 1
SD below average) using an inspection time task. The children with autism showed
inspection times as fast as an age-matched group of young normally developing children (IQ 1
SD above average). They were also significantly faster than mentally handicapped
children without autism of the same age, even when these groups were pairwise matched on
Wechsler IQ. To the extent that IT tasks tap individual differences in basic processing efficiency,
children with autism in this study appear to have preserved information processing capacity
despite poor measured IQ. These findings have implications for the role of general and specific
cognitive systems in knowledge and skill acquisition: far from showing that children with autism
are unimpaired, we suggest that our data may demonstrate the vital role of social insight in the
development of manifest “intelligence.”
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
95 articles.
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