Kleinman J, Marciano P L, Ault R L
Davidson College, P.O. Box 1719, Davidson, North Carolina 28036, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2001 Feb;31(1):29-36. doi: 10.1023/a:1005657512379.
Twenty-four high-functioning adults with autism (16 men) who passed a first-order theory-of-mind task and 24 nonautistic adults (10 men) attributed mental states to recordings of various verbal intonations and to photos of people's eyes to assess advanced theory of mind. Participants with autism performed significantly worse than nonautistic participants on both tasks. Thus, the previously described inattention to others' eyes exhibited by adults with autism is not solely responsible for their inability to attribute mental states from eyes, as they also did not correctly attribute mental states from voices. These findings support the view that a core deficit for people with autism lies in their theory of mind, that is, their inability to attribute mental states to others.
24名通过一级心理理论任务的高功能自闭症成年人(16名男性)和24名非自闭症成年人(10名男性),将心理状态归因于各种言语语调的录音以及人们眼睛的照片,以评估高级心理理论。自闭症参与者在这两项任务上的表现均显著差于非自闭症参与者。因此,先前描述的自闭症成年人对他人眼睛的注意力不集中,并非是他们无法从眼睛中推断心理状态的唯一原因,因为他们也不能正确地从声音中推断心理状态。这些发现支持了这样一种观点,即自闭症患者的核心缺陷在于其心理理论,也就是他们无法将心理状态归因于他人。