Pronoun reversal, the use of you for self-reference and I for an addressee, has often been associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and impaired language. However, recent case studies have shown the phenomenon also to occur in typically developing and even precocious talkers. This study examines longitudinal corpus data from two children, a typically developing girl, and a boy with Asperger's syndrome. Both were precocious talkers who reversed the majority of their personal pronouns for several months. A comparison of the children's behaviors revealed quantitative and qualitative differences in pronoun use: the girl showed 'semantic confusion', using second person pronouns for self-reference, whereas the boy showed a discourse-pragmat...
In several languages, including English and Dutch, children's acquisition of the interpretation of o...
In three experimental conditions, we tested matched children with and without autism (n = 15 per gro...
This study investigated the development and use of English personal pronouns in 3 children with spec...
Pronoun reversals occur when a pronoun is incorrectly mapped to the wrong referent. For example, whe...
Pronoun reversals, saying you when meaning I, in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are ge...
Pronoun reversals occur when a pronoun is incorrectly mapped to the wrong referent. For example, whe...
My project aimed at giving a personal contribution to an important international debate relevant to ...
Pronoun reversal is among the most interesting errors of early child language. It mainly consists in...
Reports an error in "Children with autism spectrum disorder show pronoun reversals in interpretation...
The study of reversals may shed some light on the problems children encounter when they try to use t...
Reports an error in "Children with autism spectrum disorder show pronoun reversals in interpretation...
This study’s aim is to understand how children learn first- and second-person singular pronouns. Man...
International audienceAccording to Elizabeth Bates, the grammar of our natural languages is so perme...
This study’s aim is to understand how children learn first- and second-person singular pronouns. Man...
Abstract We report the first study on pronoun use by an under-studied research population, children ...
In several languages, including English and Dutch, children's acquisition of the interpretation of o...
In three experimental conditions, we tested matched children with and without autism (n = 15 per gro...
This study investigated the development and use of English personal pronouns in 3 children with spec...
Pronoun reversals occur when a pronoun is incorrectly mapped to the wrong referent. For example, whe...
Pronoun reversals, saying you when meaning I, in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are ge...
Pronoun reversals occur when a pronoun is incorrectly mapped to the wrong referent. For example, whe...
My project aimed at giving a personal contribution to an important international debate relevant to ...
Pronoun reversal is among the most interesting errors of early child language. It mainly consists in...
Reports an error in "Children with autism spectrum disorder show pronoun reversals in interpretation...
The study of reversals may shed some light on the problems children encounter when they try to use t...
Reports an error in "Children with autism spectrum disorder show pronoun reversals in interpretation...
This study’s aim is to understand how children learn first- and second-person singular pronouns. Man...
International audienceAccording to Elizabeth Bates, the grammar of our natural languages is so perme...
This study’s aim is to understand how children learn first- and second-person singular pronouns. Man...
Abstract We report the first study on pronoun use by an under-studied research population, children ...
In several languages, including English and Dutch, children's acquisition of the interpretation of o...
In three experimental conditions, we tested matched children with and without autism (n = 15 per gro...
This study investigated the development and use of English personal pronouns in 3 children with spec...