Russell J, Jarrold C, Hood B
Department of Experimental Psychology, Cambridge University, United Kingdom.
J Autism Dev Disord. 1999 Apr;29(2):103-12. doi: 10.1023/a:1023084425406.
Many studies have shown that children with autism perform at a much lower level than control subjects on tests of executive functioning, defined as tasks requiring subjects to hold information in mind while suppressing a prepotent response. These tasks have invariably required subjects to (a) follow arbitrary and novel rules and (b) make a nonverbal response. We report that when one of these features is absent, children with autism are not impaired relative to controls. They perform at a similar level to normally developing children on the "tubes" task (containing no arbitrary and novel rules) and on the day/night task (in which the output is verbal). Results are consistent, at least, with the hypothesis that children with autism are challenged by executive tasks because they are unlikely to encode rules in a verbal form.
许多研究表明,在执行功能测试中,自闭症儿童的表现远低于对照组受试者。执行功能测试被定义为要求受试者在抑制优势反应的同时记住信息的任务。这些任务总是要求受试者:(a)遵循任意且新颖的规则;(b)做出非语言反应。我们报告称,当这些特征之一不存在时,自闭症儿童相对于对照组并无受损。在“管道”任务(不包含任意且新颖的规则)和昼夜任务(输出为语言形式)中,他们的表现与正常发育儿童相似。至少,研究结果与以下假设一致:自闭症儿童在执行任务时面临挑战,因为他们不太可能以语言形式编码规则。