This research investigates whether children with autism learn picture, word and object relations as associative pairs or whether they understand such relations as referential. In Experiment 1, children were taught a new word (e.g. `whisk') repeatedly paired with a novel picture. When given the picture and a previously unseen real whisk and asked to indicate a whisk, children with autism, unlike typically developing peers matched on receptive language, associated the word with the picture rather than the object. Subsequent experiments respectively confirmed that neither a bias for selecting pictures nor perseverative responding accounted for these results. Taken together, these results suggest that children with autism with cognitive difficu...
In Experiment 1, 24-month-old toddlers were taught a new word (whisk) through the labeling of a pict...
Five experiments investigated the importance of attentional and social cues in word learning, the re...
Young typically developing children can reason about abstract depictions if they know the intention ...
Previous word learning studies suggest that children with autism spectrum disorder may have difficul...
aut.sagepub.com Some pictures inform viewers about specific objects and events in the world (they ar...
For the first time, this study investigated whether children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and...
Background and aims: Children with autism spectrum condition often have specific difficulties unders...
AbstractBackground Children with autism spectrum disorder(ASD) may require interventions for communi...
In this work, we evaluate the hypothesis that certain individuals on the autism spectrum exhibit a b...
Background: Although understanding picture-referent relations is a very important skill, it is also ...
In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism centered around a reliance on pictorial repr...
Previous studies report that minimally verbal children with autism spectrum disorder show impaired p...
Abstract. In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism cen-tered around a reliance on pic...
Item does not contain fulltextThe present study examined whether atypical visual processing is relat...
Abstract—In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism centered around a reliance on picto...
In Experiment 1, 24-month-old toddlers were taught a new word (whisk) through the labeling of a pict...
Five experiments investigated the importance of attentional and social cues in word learning, the re...
Young typically developing children can reason about abstract depictions if they know the intention ...
Previous word learning studies suggest that children with autism spectrum disorder may have difficul...
aut.sagepub.com Some pictures inform viewers about specific objects and events in the world (they ar...
For the first time, this study investigated whether children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and...
Background and aims: Children with autism spectrum condition often have specific difficulties unders...
AbstractBackground Children with autism spectrum disorder(ASD) may require interventions for communi...
In this work, we evaluate the hypothesis that certain individuals on the autism spectrum exhibit a b...
Background: Although understanding picture-referent relations is a very important skill, it is also ...
In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism centered around a reliance on pictorial repr...
Previous studies report that minimally verbal children with autism spectrum disorder show impaired p...
Abstract. In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism cen-tered around a reliance on pic...
Item does not contain fulltextThe present study examined whether atypical visual processing is relat...
Abstract—In this paper, we develop a cognitive account of autism centered around a reliance on picto...
In Experiment 1, 24-month-old toddlers were taught a new word (whisk) through the labeling of a pict...
Five experiments investigated the importance of attentional and social cues in word learning, the re...
Young typically developing children can reason about abstract depictions if they know the intention ...