Abstract

Individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have often been reported to have difficulty integrating information into its broader context, which has motivated the Weak Central Coherence theory of ASD. In the linguistic domain, evidence for this difficulty comes from reports of impaired use of linguistic context to resolve ambiguous words. However, recent work has suggested that impaired use of linguistic context may not be characteristic of ASD, and is instead better explained by co-occurring language impairments. Here, we provide a strong test of these claims, using the visual world eye tracking paradigm to examine the online mechanisms by which children with autism resolve linguistic ambiguity. To address concerns about both language impairments and compensatory strategies, we used a sample whose verbal skills were strong and whose average age (7; 6) was lower than previous work on lexical ambiguity resolution in ASD. Participants (40 with autism and 40 controls) heard sentences with ambiguous words in contexts that either strongly supported one reading or were consistent with both (John fed/saw the bat). We measured activation of the unintended meaning through implicit semantic priming of an associate (looks to a depicted baseball glove). Contrary to the predictions of weak central coherence, children with ASD, like controls, quickly used context to resolve ambiguity, selecting appropriate meanings within a second. We discuss how these results constrain the generality of weak central coherence.

Highlights

  • The Weak Central Coherence hypothesis is one of the most important cognitive theories of Autism spectrum disorders (ASD)

  • The Weak Central Coherence theory of autism (Frith, 1989; Happé, 1999; Happé & Frith, 2006) proposes that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have a cognitive style in which processing focuses on specific details, rather than on the synthesis of information with its broader global context

  • We used eye tracking during auditory language processing to understand whether young, highly verbal children with ASD are impaired at using context

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Summary

Introduction

The Weak Central Coherence hypothesis is one of the most important cognitive theories of ASD. In both groups, children gazed at the pictures much more when context meant that they were related This suggests that both groups use context to determine the meanings of ambiguous words, which goes against the predictions of Weak Central Coherence, and suggests that refinement of the theory is necessary. Contrary to the predictions of weak central coherence, children with ASD, like controls, quickly used context to resolve ambiguity, selecting appropriate meanings within a second. The Weak Central Coherence theory of autism (Frith, 1989; Happé, 1999; Happé & Frith, 2006) proposes that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have a cognitive style in which processing focuses on specific details, rather than on the synthesis of information with its broader global context. Detail-focused processing is evidenced by: ASD participants’ superior accuracy in judging the pitch of a tone (Bonnel et al, 2003); their increased ability to pick out embedded figures from a larger drawing (Jolliffe & Baron-Cohen, 1997; Ropar & Mitchell, 2001; Shah & Frith, 1983); and their faster reaction times in visual search tasks

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