Deficits, delays, and distractions: An evaluation of symbolic play and memory in children with autism
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Published:1997-03
Issue:1
Volume:9
Page:17-41
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ISSN:0954-5794
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Container-title:Development and Psychopathology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Dev Psychopathol
Author:
MCDONOUGH LARAINE,STAHMER AUBYN,SCHREIBMAN LAURA,THOMPSON SANDRA J.
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to evaluate symbolic-deficit and
memory-deficit hypotheses to account for the cognitive problems seen
in children with autism. Experiment 1 tested imitation, in immediate
and deferred conditions, of familiar actions with different sets of
objects representing the developmental progression from functional to
symbolic play. The results showed that the autism group and both their
receptive language and nonverbal IQ-matched controls imitated familiar
actions with realistic objects (evidence for functional play) and
placeholder objects (evidence for symbolic play) after delays ranging
from 24 hr to 3 weeks. Experiment 2 tested familiar three-step event
sequences in which a placeholder object was substituted for the second
step in half the events. The results showed that the autism group
remembered as many of the actions with the placeholder objects as
their language-matched controls and as many correctly ordered
sequences, a finding that supports a symbolic-delay (rather than
deficit) hypothesis. These results were obtained in highly structured
test situations and sharply contrast with the impairments seen in
children with autism who are observed in naturalistic settings. Two
interpretations of these findings are offered. First, structured test
settings minimize distractions that typically occur in naturalistic
settings that may interfere or disrupt symbolic play in children with
autism. Second, the results are consistent with an executive function
deficit in that the autistic group demonstrated more knowledge in the
test settings than they demonstrate spontaneously in naturalistic
ones.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
37 articles.
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