Abstract

Recent research has suggested that temporal sequencing of narrative events might be a domain-general ability that underlies oral narrative capacities. The current study investigated this issue in a group of children with known pragmatic and narrative difficulties, namely Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). We hypothesized (1) that children with ASD (n = 45) would retell narratives of poorer quality than both chronological age-matched (CAM) children and younger children matched on sentence-level language skills (LM), and (2) that nonverbal temporal sequencing skills would uniquely predict individual differences in oral narrative performance in children with ASD. The results show that children with ASD performed poorer on all measures of oral narrative quality compared with the CAM group, and on eight of ten measures compared with the LM group. Thus, our first hypothesis was confirmed, suggesting that narrative difficulties in ASD cannot be fully explained by impaired language. The second hypothesis was only partly confirmed: nonverbal temporal sequencing explained significant or marginally significant variance in some, but not all, aspects of oral narrative performance of children with ASD. These results are discussed from theoretical and clinical/educational perspectives, in relation to the heterogeneity of language skills in ASD and to domain-general features of narrative processing.

Highlights

  • Storytelling was widespread long before literacy emerged

  • Pairwise comparisons showed that the autism spectrum disorder (ASD) group performed significantly poorer than the chronological age-matched (CAM) group (p < 0.001) on all Bus Story Test (BST) scores but at the same level as the LM group on BST Information (p = 1.0) (Fig. 2)

  • We aimed to examine the relation between narrative ability and nonverbal temporal sequencing by identifying explanatory variables for narrative ability in children with ASD using regression analyses

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Storytelling was widespread long before literacy emerged. Narrative ability reflects our ability to dress our thoughts and experiences in words and to convey events using language in communicative situations (Bruner 1986). Narrative capacities are considered to be an important skill to assess in individuals who experience pragmatic language difficulties, such as children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (APA 2013; Baixauli et al 2016; Bruner and Feldman 1993; Miniscalco et al 2007). Eigisti et al 2011; Tager-Flusberg and Joseph 2003) It is not entirely clear whether difficulties with narrating are accounted for by such limitations in language skills at the level of single sentences ( language skills) or if other factors are involved

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call