Figurative language processing in autism spectrum disorders: A review

Author:

Lampri Stella1,Peristeri Eleni2ORCID,Marinis Theodoros3,Andreou Maria1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech and Language Therapy University of Peloponnese Kalamata Greece

2. Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, School of English Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

3. Department of Linguistics University of Konstanz Konstanz Germany

Abstract

AbstractImpairments in the broader domain of pragmatics are considered to be a defining feature of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). A challenging aspect of pragmatic competence is the ability to process nonliteral language. Interestingly, previous studies in figurative language comprehension in ASD have demonstrated conflicting results regarding participants' performance. The main scientific debate focuses on the underlying skills which facilitate processing of nonliteral speech in ASD. Namely, Theory of Mind (ToM), language abilities and Executive functions (EFs) are regarded as factors affecting autistic individuals' performance. This review addresses figurative language comprehension in ASD in light of the above three interpretive accounts. We reviewed data from recent studies in this field concluding that autistic children indeed encounter systematic difficulties in the processing of non‐literal language. Moreover, only ToM and verbal skills were found to correlate the most with figurative language comprehension in ASD. Notably, we found that differences related to research methodology and tasks' properties may have led to discrepancies between studies' results. Finally, we argue that future studies should encompass in their experimental design figurative comprehension tasks with minimal linguistic demands and also measures of ToM, verbal ability and EFs in order to shed more light in the independent contribution of those skills to the processing of nonliteral language in ASD.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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