Abstract
BackgroundThere is conflicting evidence regarding whether children with Autism Spectrum Condition (ASC) and intellectual disabilities (ID) follow social pragmatic cues such as a speaker’s eye gaze or pointing towards a novel object to assist mapping a new word onto a new object (e.g. fast mapping). AimsWe test fast mapping from a speaker’s gaze and pointing towards objects in children with ASC and ID with varying chronological and receptive language ages compared with receptive language matched groups of typically developing (TD) children. Methods and ProcedureAcross eight trials, a speaker gazed and/or pointed towards one out of two objects while saying a new word. Pointing was either ‘referential’ (with intention), or ‘incidental’ (without obvious intention). To investigate whether children formed more robust word-to-object links rather than associative word-to-location ones, we reversed the original location of the objects in half of the test trials. Outcomes and ResultsChildren with ASC were as successful as TD children using social cues to form word-to-object mappings. Surprisingly, children with ID did not fast map from referential pointing, or when objects changed location. Conclusions and ImplicationsChildren with ID may use different processes to facilitate word learning compared to TD children and even children with ASC.
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