School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Drakes Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom.
Dev Psychol. 2010 Mar;46(2):391-403. doi: 10.1037/a0017412.
Everyday conditional reasoning is typically influenced by prior knowledge and belief in the form of specific exceptions known as counterexamples. This study explored whether adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD; N = 26) were less influenced by background knowledge than typically developing adolescents (N = 38) when engaged in conditional reasoning. Participants were presented with pretested valid and invalid conditional inferences with varying available counterexamples. The group with ASD showed significantly less influence of prior knowledge on valid inferences (p = .01) and invalid inferences (p = .01) compared with the typical group. In a secondary probability judgment task, no significant group differences were found in probabilistic judgments of the believability of the premises. Further experiments found that results could not be explained by differences between the groups in the ability to generate counterexamples or any tendency among adolescents with ASD to exhibit a "yes" response pattern. It was concluded that adolescents with ASD tend not to spontaneously contextualize presented material when engaged in everyday reasoning. These findings are discussed with reference to weak central coherence theory and the conditional reasoning literature.
日常条件推理通常受到先前知识和信念的影响,表现为特定的例外情况,即反例。本研究探讨了自闭症谱系障碍(ASD;N = 26)青少年在进行条件推理时,是否比典型发育青少年(N = 38)受背景知识的影响更小。参与者接受了经过预先测试的有效和无效条件推理,并提供了不同的可用反例。与典型组相比,ASD 组在有效推理(p =.01)和无效推理(p =.01)上对先前知识的影响明显较小。在二次概率判断任务中,没有发现典型组在前提可信度的概率判断上存在显著差异。进一步的实验发现,结果不能用两组在生成反例的能力上的差异或 ASD 青少年表现出“是”反应模式的任何倾向来解释。研究得出的结论是,在进行日常推理时,ASD 青少年往往不会自发地将呈现的材料语境化。这些发现参考弱中心连贯理论和条件推理文献进行了讨论。