Dalton Jennifer C, Crais Elizabeth R, Velleman Shelley L
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Appalachian State University, 730 Rivers Street, 124 Edwin Duncan Hall, Boone, NC 28608, United States.
Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB 7190, 3126 Bondurant Hall, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7190, United States.
J Commun Disord. 2017 Sep;69:27-43. doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2017.06.002. Epub 2017 Jul 1.
This study examined the relationship between joint attention ability and oromotor imitation skill in three groups of young children with and without Autism Spectrum Disorder using both nonverbal oral and verbal motor imitation tasks. Research questions addressed a) differences among joint attention and oromotor imitation abilities; b) the relationship between independently measured joint attention and oromotor imitation, both nonverbal oral and verbal motor; c) the relationships between joint attention and verbal motor imitation during interpersonal interaction; and d) the relationship between the sensory input demands (auditory, visual, and tactile) and oromotor imitation, both nonverbal oral and verbal motor.
A descriptive, nonexperimental design was used to compare joint attention and oromotor skills of 10 preschool-aged children with ASD, with those of two control groups: 6 typically developing children (TD), and 6 children with suspected Childhood Apraxia of Speech (sCAS) or apraxic-like symptoms. All children had at least a 3.0 mean length utterance.
Children with ASD had poorer joint attention skills overall than children with sCAS or typically developing children. Typically developing children demonstrated higher verbal motor imitation skills overall compared to children with sCAS. Correlational analyses revealed that nonverbal oral imitation and verbal motor imitation were positively related to joint attention abilities only in the children with ASD. Strong positive relationships between joint attention in a naturalistic context (e.g., shared story experience) and oromotor imitation skills, both nonverbal oral and verbal motor, were found only for children with ASD. These data suggest there is a strong positive relationship between joint attention skills and the ability to sequence nonverbal oral and verbal motor movements in children with ASD. The combined sensory input approach involving auditory, visual, and tactile modalities contributed to significantly higher nonverbal oral and verbal motor imitation performance for all groups of children.
Verbal children with ASD in this study had difficulties with both the social and cognitive demands of oromotor imitation within a natural environment that demanded cross-modal processing of incoming stimuli within an interpersonal interaction. Further, joint attention and oral praxis may serve as components of an important coupling mechanism in the development of spoken communication and later developing socialcognitive skills.
本研究使用非言语口腔和言语运动模仿任务,考察了三组患有和未患自闭症谱系障碍的幼儿的联合注意能力与口部运动模仿技能之间的关系。研究问题包括:a)联合注意和口部运动模仿能力之间的差异;b)独立测量的联合注意与非言语口腔和言语运动模仿之间的关系;c)人际互动中联合注意与言语运动模仿之间的关系;d)感觉输入需求(听觉、视觉和触觉)与非言语口腔和言语运动模仿之间的关系。
采用描述性非实验设计,比较10名患有自闭症谱系障碍的学龄前儿童与两个对照组儿童的联合注意和口部运动技能:6名发育正常的儿童(TD),以及6名疑似儿童言语失用症(sCAS)或有类似失用症状的儿童。所有儿童的平均语句长度至少为3.0。
总体而言,患有自闭症谱系障碍的儿童的联合注意技能比患有sCAS的儿童或发育正常的儿童差。与患有sCAS的儿童相比,发育正常的儿童总体上表现出更高的言语运动模仿技能。相关分析表明,仅在患有自闭症谱系障碍的儿童中,非言语口腔模仿和言语运动模仿与联合注意能力呈正相关。仅在患有自闭症谱系障碍的儿童中,发现自然情境下(如共同的故事体验)的联合注意与非言语口腔和言语运动模仿技能之间存在强正相关。这些数据表明,患有自闭症谱系障碍的儿童的联合注意技能与对非言语口腔和言语运动动作进行排序的能力之间存在强正相关。涉及听觉、视觉和触觉模式的联合感觉输入方法使所有儿童组的非言语口腔和言语运动模仿表现显著提高。
本研究中患有自闭症谱系障碍的言语儿童在自然环境中对口部运动模仿的社会和认知需求方面存在困难,这种环境要求在人际互动中对传入刺激进行跨模式处理。此外,联合注意和口腔 Praxis 可能是口语交流和后期发展社会认知技能发展中重要耦合机制的组成部分。