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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The diagnostic criteria for
autism
have been refined and made more objective since
Kanner
first described the syndrome, so there is now reasonable consistency in how this diagnosis is applied. However, many children do not meet these criteria, yet show some of the features of
autism
. Where language development is impaired, such children tend to be classed as cases of developmental dysphasia (or
specific language impairment
) whereas those who learn to talk at the normal age may be diagnosed as having Asperger's syndrome. It is argued that rather than thinking in terms of rigid diagnostic categories, we should recognise that the core syndrome of
autism
shades into other milder forms of disorder in which language or non-verbal behaviour may be disproportionately impaired.
...
PMID:Autism, Asperger's syndrome and semantic-pragmatic disorder: where are the boundaries? 269 Sep 15
Two groups of children with language disorders--one group with
autism
and one with relatively
specific language impairment
(LI)--and two groups of normal children matched to the disordered groups for mental and receptive language age were asked to act out a series of sentences. Half the experimental sentences were in active voice, and half were the same sentences given in passive voice. Within each set, events described in the sentences were probable, neutral, or improbable. Results revealed that the autistic group made little use of a semantically based probable event strategy for acting out sentences, but were likely to use a syntactically based word order strategy. The LI group was no more likely than the autistic group to use the semantic strategy, and was equally likely to use word order. Both groups resembled normals matched for receptive language age.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 1988 Dec
PMID:Sentence comprehension strategies in children with autism and specific language disorders. 321 92
This study examined the relationship between the development of theory of mind and the development of the belief terms think, know, and guess. Children with
autism
and Asperger syndrome, matched to children with
specific language impairment
and normal development, completed false belief, belief term comprehension, and belief term expression tasks. The autistic group's performance on the false belief, belief term comprehension, and belief term expression tasks was significantly poorer than that of the Asperger, language impaired, and normal groups. Across groups an association was found between false belief and belief term performance. Results support a growing body of literature demonstrating links between the development of theory of mind and communicative competence.
...
PMID:Belief term development in children with autism, Asperger syndrome, specific language impairment, and normal development: links to theory of mind development. 969 Sep 38
It is well established that people with
autism
have impaired face processing, but much less is known about voice processing in
autism
. Four experiments were therefore carried out to assess (1) familiar voice-face and sound-object matching; (2) familiar voice recognition; (3) unfamiliar voice discrimination; and (4) vocal affect naming and vocal-facial affect matching. In Experiments 1 and 2 language-matched children with
specific language impairment
(
SLI
) were the controls. In Experiments 3 and 4 language-matched children with
SLI
and young mainstream children were the controls. The results were unexpected: the children with
autism
were not impaired relative to controls on Experiments 1, 2 and 3, and were superior to the children with
SLI
on both parts of Experiment 4, although impaired on affect matching relative to the mainstream children. These results are interpreted in terms of an unexpected impairment of voice processing in the children with
SLI
associated partly, but not wholly, with an impairment of cross-modal processing. Performance on the experimental tasks was not associated with verbal or nonverbal ability in either of the clinical groups. The implications of these findings for understanding
autism
and
SLI
are discussed.
...
PMID:Voice processing abilities in children with autism, children with specific language impairments, and young typically developing children. 1107 27
A large cohort of 242 children who had been attending infants language units at 7 years of age was followed up when the children were in their final year of primary school. Two hundred (83%) of the children were reassessed at 11 years of age on a wide battery of language and literacy measures, on a test of non-verbal ability, an
autism
checklist and a communication checklist. In total, 89% of children still scored < 1 SD from the mean on at least one test of language and the majority (63%) scored poorly on three or more assessments demonstrating widespread difficulties. Compared with non-verbal abilities at 7 years of age, a large proportion of the cohort also performed poorly on performance IQ subtests (28%). A further 10 children scored highly on a checklist for autistic spectrum disorder. Thus, only 115 (58%) children could be said to meet criteria for
specific language impairment
. A small group of 16 children appeared to have entirely resolved their difficulties. These outcomes and their implications for education and long-term impact of the disorder are discussed.
...
PMID:Follow-up of children attending infant language units: outcomes at 11 years of age. 1134 95
High-functioning children with
autism
were compared with two control groups on measures of anxiety and social worries. Comparison control groups consisted of children with
specific language impairment
(
SLI
) and normally developing children. Each group consisted of 15 children between the ages of 8 and 12 years and were matched for age and gender. Children with
autism
were found to be most anxious on both measures. High anxiety subscale scores for the
autism
group were separation anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder. These findings are discussed within the context of theories of
autism
and anxiety in the general population of children. Suggestions for future research are made.
Autism
2001 Sep
PMID:Anxiety in high-functioning children with autism. 1170 87
An investigation is reported into the story comprehension abilities of four groups of children: those with typical
specific language impairment
(SLI-T), those with pragmatic language impairments who were not autistic (PLI), those with high-functioning
autism
(HFA) and typically developing controls. The story comprehension task required children to answer questions about the literal content of the story, as well as questions involving two types of inferences: text-connecting and gap-filling. The control children outscored the three clinical groups on story comprehension, but the group means of the clinical groups did not differ. However, categorical examination of the data revealed that children with pragmatic difficulties related to HFA were more likely to have specific inferencing deficits. Error analysis suggested that all children could make inferences, but these were not always relevant to the story context. This supports the notion of weak central coherence underlying deficits in inferencing. There were no group differences on story recall. However, there was a strong relationship between story comprehension and recall, in that those who had better comprehension tended to have better recall. It is concluded that comprehension aids recall by enabling the listener to build a more stable mental representation of the story. The pragmatic deficits seen in
autism
compromise this process.
...
PMID:Inferential processing and story recall in children with communication problems: a comparison of specific language impairment, pragmatic language impairment and high-functioning autism. 1220 76
Achieving progress in understanding the cause, nature, and treatment of
autism
requires an integration of concepts, approaches, and empirical findings from genetic, cognitive neuroscience, animal, and clinical studies. The need for such integration has been a fundamental tenet of the discipline of developmental psychopathology from its inception. It is likely that the discovery of
autism
susceptibility genes will depend on the development of dimensional measures of broader phenotype
autism
traits. It is argued that knowledge of the cognitive neuroscience of social and language behavior will provide a useful framework for defining such measures. In this article, the current state of knowledge of the cognitive neuroscience of social and language impairments in
autism
is reviewed. Following from this, six candidate broader phenotype
autism
traits are proposed: (a) face processing, including structural encoding of facial features and face movements, such as eye gaze; (b) social affiliation or sensitivity to social reward, pertaining to the social motivational impairments found in
autism
; (c) motor imitation ability, particularly imitation of body actions; (d) memory, specifically those aspects of memory mediated by the medial temporal lobe-prefrontal circuits; (e) executive function, especially planning and flexibility; and (f) Language ability, particularly those aspects of language that overlap with
specific language impairment
, namely, phonological processing.
...
PMID:Defining the broader phenotype of autism: genetic, brain, and behavioral perspectives. 1234 75
FOXP2 (forkhead box P2) was the first gene characterized in which a mutation affects human speech and language abilities. A common developmental language disorder,
specific language impairment
(
SLI
), affects 6%-7% of children with normal nonverbal intelligence and has evidence of a genetic basis in familial and twin studies. FOXP2 is located on chromosome 7q31, and studies of other disorders with speech and language impairment, including
autism
, have found linkage to this region. In the present study, samples from children with
SLI
and their family members were used to study linkage and association of
SLI
to markers within and around FOXP2, and samples from 96 probands with
SLI
were directly sequenced for the mutation in exon 14 of FOXP2. No mutations were found in exon 14 of FOXP2, but strong association was found to a marker within the CFTR gene and another marker on 7q31, D7S3052, both adjacent to FOXP2, suggesting that genetic factors for regulation of common language impairment reside in the vicinity of FOXP2.
...
PMID:Association of specific language impairment (SLI) to the region of 7q31. 1272 56
The assertive speech acts of children with
autism
(n = 12) and Asperger syndrome (n = 12), individually matched to children with
specific language impairment
(SLI; n = 24) and children with normal development (n = 24) were studied in the context of gently structured conversation. These children also completed the false belief test of theory of mind. The children with
autism
used significantly lower proportions of assertions involving explanations and descriptions than the children with SLI or normal development and significantly lower proportions of assertions involving internal state and explanations than the children with Asperger syndrome. The children with
autism
used a higher proportion of assertions involving identifications than any other group. The assertions of the children with Asperger syndrome were generally not different than those of the children with SLI or normal development except for a higher proportion of assertions involving own internal state. Further analysis of the mental assertions revealed that the children with
autism
and Asperger syndrome predominantly referred to desire and made few references to thought and belief, whereas the children with SLI and those with normal development used a higher proportion of references to thought and belief.
...
PMID:Differences in assertive speech acts produced by children with autism, Asperger syndrome, specific language impairment, and normal development. 1284 36
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