Foster Nathan C, Bennett Simon J, Causer Joe, Elliott Digby, Bird Geoffrey, Hayes Spencer J
Fondazione Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Italy.
Liverpool John Moores University, UK.
Autism. 2020 Aug;24(6):1494-1505. doi: 10.1177/1362361320908104. Epub 2020 Mar 13.
Autistic people sometimes find it difficult to copy another person's movement accurately, especially if the movement is unfamiliar or novel (e.g. to use chop sticks). In this study, we found that autistic people were generally less accurate at copying a novel movement than non-autistic people. However, by making a small adjustment and asking people to copy this movement for a set number of attempts in a predictable manner, we showed that autistic people did successfully learn to copy a new movement. This is a very important finding for autistic people because rather than thinking they cannot copy new movements, all that needs to be considered is for parents/guardians, teachers and/or support workers to make a small adjustment so that learning occurs in a predictable manner for new skills to be successfully acquired through copying. The implications from this study are wide-ranging as copying (imitation) and motor learning are important developmental processes for autistic infants and children to acquire in order to interact within the world. Therefore, practising these behaviours in the most effective way can certainly help the developmental pathway.
自闭症患者有时会发现准确模仿他人的动作很困难,尤其是当这个动作不熟悉或很新奇时(比如使用筷子)。在这项研究中,我们发现自闭症患者在模仿新奇动作时通常不如非自闭症患者准确。然而,通过做一个小调整,让人们以可预测的方式对这个动作进行一定次数的模仿尝试,我们发现自闭症患者确实能够成功学会模仿新动作。这对自闭症患者来说是一个非常重要的发现,因为与其认为他们无法模仿新动作,不如说需要家长/监护人、教师和/或支持工作者做一个小调整,以便以可预测的方式进行学习,从而通过模仿成功掌握新技能。这项研究的影响广泛,因为模仿(效仿)和运动学习是自闭症婴幼儿为了在这个世界中互动而需要掌握的重要发育过程。因此,以最有效的方式练习这些行为肯定有助于他们的发育进程。