Henderson Heather A, Zahka Nicole E, Kojkowski Nicole M, Inge Anne P, Schwartz Caley B, Hileman Camilla M, Coman Drew C, Mundy Peter C
Department of Psychology, University of Miami, 5665 Ponce de Leon Blvd., 33146 Miami, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2009 Jul;50(7):853-61. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2008.02059.x. Epub 2009 Feb 27.
We examined performance on a self-referenced memory (SRM) task for higher-functioning children with autism (HFA) and a matched comparison group. SRM performance was examined in relation to symptom severity and social cognitive tests of mentalizing.
Sixty-two children (31 HFA, 31 comparison; 8-16 years) completed a SRM task in which they read a list of words and decided whether the word described something about them, something about Harry Potter, or contained a certain number of letters. They then identified words that were familiar from a longer list. Dependent measures were memory performance (d') in each of the three encoding conditions as well as a self-memory bias score (d' self-d' other). Children completed The Strange Stories Task and The Children's Eyes Test as measures of social cognition. Parents completed the SCQ and ASSQ as measures of symptom severity.
Children in the comparison sample showed the standard SRM effect in which they recognized significantly more self-referenced words relative to words in the other-referenced and letter conditions. In contrast, HFA children showed comparable rates of recognition for self- and other-referenced words. For all children, SRM performance improved with age and enhanced SRM performance was related to lower levels of social problems. These associations were not accounted for by performance on the mentalizing tasks.
Children with HFA did not show the standard enhanced processing of self- vs. other-relevant information. Individual differences in the tendency to preferentially process self-relevant information may be associated with social cognitive processes that serve to modify the expression of social symptoms in children with autism.
我们研究了高功能自闭症(HFA)儿童和匹配的对照组在自我参照记忆(SRM)任务中的表现。考察了SRM表现与症状严重程度及心理理论社会认知测试之间的关系。
62名儿童(31名HFA儿童,31名对照组儿童;8 - 16岁)完成了一项SRM任务,他们阅读一系列单词,并判断该单词是描述他们自己的事情、关于哈利·波特的事情,还是包含一定数量的字母。然后他们从更长的列表中识别出熟悉的单词。相关测量指标包括三种编码条件下的记忆表现(d')以及自我记忆偏差分数(d'自我 - d'他人)。儿童完成了《奇怪故事任务》和《儿童眼神测试》作为社会认知的测量指标。家长完成了《社交沟通问卷》(SCQ)和《自闭症症状严重程度问卷》(ASSQ)作为症状严重程度的测量指标。
对照组样本中的儿童表现出标准的SRM效应,即相对于他人参照和字母条件下的单词,他们识别出的自我参照单词明显更多。相比之下,HFA儿童对自我参照和他人参照单词的识别率相当。对于所有儿童,SRM表现随年龄增长而提高,SRM表现的增强与较低水平的社会问题相关。这些关联不能用心理理论任务的表现来解释。
HFA儿童没有表现出对自我与他人相关信息的标准增强处理。优先处理自我相关信息倾向的个体差异可能与有助于改变自闭症儿童社会症状表现的社会认知过程有关。