Logo image
Comprehension of transitive and intransitive phrases by autistic, retarded, and normal children
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Comprehension of transitive and intransitive phrases by autistic, retarded, and normal children

M.R. Prior and L.C. Hall
Journal of Communication Disorders, Vol.12(2), pp.103-111
1979
url
Link to Published Version *Subscription may be requiredView

Abstract

Autistic children were compared with retarded and normal control groups in a verbal comprehension task. Subjects were asked to select from four pictures the one that illustrated a two-word intransitive or three-word transitive phrase which was described verbally. Distractor pictures differed from the target picture by one, two, or all three features. Autistic children were poorer in performance than the control groups; however, the hierarchy of difficulty of discrimination was common to all three groups, with transitive phrases more difficult than intransitive phrases. Word type did not affect comprehension for the autistic children, although control children evidenced most difficulty with the verb or middle word. Results are interpreted as supporting the hypothesis that a severe and global language disorder is characteristic of autism.

Details

Metrics

Logo image