Abstract
Contrastive focus serves to emphasize the importance of a semantic unit in the language string. Children with autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) appear to show difficulties in producing this prosodic marker. This study aimed to identify acoustic correlates related to contrastive focus in children with ASD. Nine francophone children with ASD and nine francophone typically developing (TYP) children produced simple four-word sentences (for example, «C’est une chaise.»: «it is a chair.») in a neutral condition and then in a contrastive focus condition. Ninety-six speech productions were recorded using a system that synchronized acoustic signals with lingual and labial movements. Maximum pitch, mean pitch, and pitch range, as well as maximum and mean sound intensity and duration were investigated. Values for pitch range, maximum and mean sound intensity, and duration were greater in the focus condition than in the neutral condition. Moreover, the differences were significantly greater in TYP children than in ASD children, who did not have increased speech values when switching to the focus mode. This suggests that pitch range, and intensity and duration of sound correlate most with contrastive focus marking in both groups. Yet, it appears that ASD children show less contrastive focus marking than TYP children.
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