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21
A Model of the Production Effect over the Short-Term: The Cost of Relative Distinctiveness
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22
Decoding verbal working memory representations of Chinese characters from Broca's area
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23
Creating a theoretical framework to underpin discourse assessment and intervention in aphasia
Boyle, M.; Botting, N.; Cruice, M.. - : MDPI, 2021
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24
How are signed languages learned as second languages?
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25
A systematic review of language and communication intervention research delivered in groups to older adults living in care homes
Davis, L.; Botting, N.; Cruice, M.. - : Wiley, 2021
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26
The interplay between early social interaction, language and executive function development in deaf and hearing infants
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27
When forgetting fosters learning: A neural network model for Statistical Learning
Endress, A.; Johnson, S.. - : Elsevier, 2021
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28
Effects of semantic plausibility, syntactic complexity and n-gram frequency on children's sentence repetition
Polisenska, K.; Twomey, K. E.; Szewczyk, J.. - : Cambridge University Press, 2021
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29
Home Literacy and Numeracy Environments in Asia
Cheung, S. K.; Dulay, K. M.; Yang, X.. - : Frontiers Media, 2021
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30
Early bilingual experience is associated with change detection ability in adults
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31
FFA and OFA encode distinct types of face identity information
Tsantani, M.; Kriegeskorte, N.; Storrs, K.. - : Society for Neuroscience, 2021
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32
Clocking in on autism: time perception and temporal aspects of communication in autism spectrum disorders
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33
Patient experiences of therapy for borderline personality disorder: Commonalities and differences between dialectical behaviour therapy and mentalization-based therapy and relation to outcomes
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34
A Reference-Dependent Computational Model of Anorexia Nervosa
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35
Beliefs about unobservable scientific and religious entities are transmitted via subtle linguistic cues in parental testimony
McLoughlin, Niamh; Jacob, Ciara; Samrow, Petal. - : Taylor & Francis Online, 2021
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36
Nativeness, Social Distance and Structural Convergence in Dialogue
Chamorro, Gloria; Kim, Christina S.. - : Taylor & Francis, 2021
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37
How set switching affects the use of context-appropriate language by autistic and neuro-typical children
Abstract: Autistic children have difficulties in adapting their language for particular listeners and contexts. We asked whether these difficulties are more prominent when children are required to be cognitively flexible, when changing how they have previously referred to a particular object. We compared autistic (N = 30) with neuro-typical five- to seven-year-olds. Each child participated in two conditions. In the Switch condition the same animal had to be re-described across trials to be appropriately informative (e.g. a participant could appropriately describe a picture as ‘dog’ on one trial but later the participant needed to re-describe the same picture as ‘spotty dog’ to differentiate it from a co-present black dog). In the No-Switch condition no picture needed to be re-described. Nonetheless, the conditions were matched regarding the requirement to use both complex (e.g. spotty cat) versus simple expressions (e.g. horse). Autistic children were more over-informative than peers even prior to the requirement to re-describe an animal. Overall, we found a main effect of the Switch Condition and no interaction with Group. Switching a description hinders the ability of children to be appropriately informative. As autistic children are generally less appropriately informative, the requirement to switch leads to particularly poor performance in autism. Lay abstract The way autistic individuals use language often gives the impression that they are not considering how much information listeners need in a given context. The same child can give too much information in one context (e.g. saying ‘the big cup’ with only one cup present) and too little information in another context (e.g. entering a room and announcing ‘the red one’ when the listener has no prior knowledge regarding what this refers to). We asked whether many autistic children particularly struggle to tailor their language appropriately in situations where this means changing how they have previously described something. That is, if a speaker has recently described an object as ‘the cup’, the need to switch to describing it as ‘the big cup’ could hinder the speaker’s ability to use language in a context-appropriate way.We found that switching descriptions indeed makes it more difficult for children to use language in a context-appropriate way, but that this effect did not play out differently for autistic versus neuro-typical children. Autistic children were, however, less likely to provide a context-appropriate amount of information overall than were neuro-typical peers. The combination of these effects meant that when object re-description was required, autistic children only produced an appropriate description half the time. In contrast, without a requirement to redescribe, autistic children could indeed take listener informational needs into account. Applied professionals should consider whether a requirement to change the way the child has previously said something may hinder a child’s ability to communicate effectively.
Keyword: B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion; BF Psychology; BF41 Psychology and philosophy
URL: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/87297/1/Malkin%20AbbotSmith%202021%20Flexing%20the%20description%20AUTISM%2025%202418.pdf
https://kar.kent.ac.uk/87297/
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/aut
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38
Detecting joint attention events in mother-infant dyads : sharing looks cannot be reliably identified by naïve third-party observers
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39
Collective knowledge and the dynamics of culture in chimpanzees
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40
The psychological reach of culture in animals’ lives
Whiten, Andrew. - 2021
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