Abstract

What does the way that autistic individuals bypass, learn, and eventually master language tell us about humans’ genetically encoded linguistic ability? In this theoretical review, we argue that autistic non-social acquisition of language and autistic savant abilities provide a strong argument for an innate, human-specific orientation towards (and mastery of) complex embedded structures. Autistic non-social language learning may represent a widening of the material processed during development beyond oral language. The structure detection and manipulation and generative production of non-linguistic embedded and chained material (savant abilities in calendar calculation, musical composition, musical interpretation, and three-dimensional drawing) may thus represent an application of such innate mechanisms to non-standard materials. Typical language learning through exposure to the child’s mother tongue may represent but one of many possible achievements of the same capacity. The deviation from typical language development in autism may ultimately allow access to oral language, sometimes in its most elaborate forms, and also explain the possibility of the absence of its development when applied exclusively to non-linguistic structured material. Such an extension of human capacities beyond or in parallel to their usual limits call into question what we consider to be specific or expected in humans and therefore does not necessarily represent a genetic “error”. Regardless of the adaptive success or failure of non-social language learning, it is the duty of science and ethical principles to strive to maintain autism as a human potentiality to further foster our vision of a plural society.

Highlights

  • Psychiatry and Addictology Department, University of Montreal, 2900 Blvd Edouard-Montpetit, CIUSSS-NIM, Riviere-des-Prairies Hospital, 7070 Blvd Perras, Montreal, QC H1E 1A4, Canada

  • We further propose a new perspective on how autism could enlighten our understanding of the ability of innate language acquisition: autism and typical development can provide information about each other [16]

  • The ENHANCED PERCEPTUAL FUNCTIONING model (EPF; [27]) proposes that perception in autism demonstrates higher performance, greater involvement, and more autonomy than that observed in the general population

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Summary

The Nature and Level of Differences in Language Ability among Humankind

The alteration of two central and interrelated human abilities in autism, socialization and language, raises questions about the variability tolerated by the human species [14] Atypical learning and processing of complex information in autism provides information on the level of abstraction, complexity, or versatility of what makes us human in terms of information processing It is the structural properties and the level of complexity, broadly defined, and their successful manipulation by humans that is species-specific. The normocentric constructs forged to account for the material-specific language acquisition of non-autistic children when they are exposed to oral speech (e.g., language acquisition device) may not apply to the same extent to autistic people. Their “material specificity to oral language” has to. Despite its non-conformity to the dominant learning pathways, it may still represent the achievement of the same human function

Autistic Learning of Complex Structures
Veridical Mapping and Autistic “Special Abilities”
Savant Syndrome as an Extreme of Autistic Abilities
The Apparent Heterogeneity of the Language Phenotype in Autism
Pre-Clinical Phase
Atypical Language Progression
Special Skills and Language Follow Similar Development Paths in Autism
The Comparative Approach between Autistic Language and Chomskyan Nativism
Findings
Cortical Reallocation and Idiosyncrasy in Autism in Language-Related Tasks
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