20554
Linguistic Aspects of Prosody Is Intact in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders
Objectives: The goal of the present study is to examine whether the linguistic aspects of prosody that are determined by lexical and syntactic features are intact in high-functioning ASD.
Methods: 12 children (10 males, ages 7-17) diagnosed with high-functioning ASD, and 14 typically developing children (8 males, ages 7-16) were tested in an elicited production task. Participants were asked to name one of three pictures on a screen. The pictures were objects and animals which could be labeled with one AP (e.g., “Gorira-dayo” It’s a gorilla), two APs (“Pinku-no doresu-dayo” It’s a pink dress), or three APs (“Pinku-no doresu-no gorira-dayo” It’s a gorilla with a pink dress). Participants’ utterances were recorded, and the minimum, maximum and mean fundamental frequency (F0) of each AP in each utterance were measured. Half of the stimuli consisted of accented words while the other half were unaccented.
Results: In Japanese, the pitch of an utterance drops at each accented word, as shown in Figure 2. Whether this decrease occurred appropriately, pitch ranges were appropriate for each utterance length, and whether or not intonation for accented and unaccented words were appropriately produced were analyzed. The results revealed that there were no differences between ASD and TD in any measurements.
Conclusions: The results revealed that ASD participants’ production of lexical and syntactic aspects of prosody is intact. It suggests that people with ASD are able to produce fundamental prosodic structure, suggesting that their difficulties may lie in using prosody appropriately in interactive communication.
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