Price Johanna R, Biebesheimer Emily C, Chen Kong
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC, USA.
Coulter Faculty Commons, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC, USA.
Autism Dev Lang Impair. 2024 Jan 23;9:23969415241227071. doi: 10.1177/23969415241227071. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.
Gender differences in the written language of autistic individuals are an overlooked but important area of research. We contend that the gender differences in spoken language of autistic individuals may extend to written language, mirroring the gender differences of writing in the general population and reflecting the shared dimensionality of oral and written language. Our research question was: Do autistic adolescent females demonstrate written language characteristics, across persuasive, expository, and narrative genres, that are distinct from those of autistic adolescent males and non-autistic (NA) adolescent females?
We performed a secondary, exploratory analysis on writing samples collected from 18 participants (11 autistic males, three autistic females, and four NA females) from a larger investigation of autistic adolescents' writing skills. Each participant completed three writing samples-one persuasive, one expository, and one narrative (for a total of 54 writing samples). We compared sample length (total number of words), writing productivity (words written per minute), syntactic length (mean length of T-unit in words), vocabulary diversity (type-token ratio), and macrostructure of autistic females' samples to autistic males' and NA females' samples.
Based on non-parametric analyses using variable medians, autistic males, but not autistic females, wrote significantly shorter expository samples than NA females. Autistic males' writing productivity was significantly lower in the persuasive and expository genres than both autistic females and NA females. Several other comparisons of sample length, productivity, vocabulary diversity, and persuasive and narrative macrostructure yielded large effect sizes but were not statistically significant.
Though our small sample sizes prevent us from drawing generalizable conclusions, we observed that some gender-specific findings of the current study differ from previous findings based on a single autistic group (females and males combined). Combining data of autistic females with autistic males may cloud the distinct written language characteristics of each group.
Our findings, especially when situated in the context of relevant literature, suggest that larger-scale investigation of gender differences in written language is essential in order to more fully describe the unique characteristics of autistic females. Clinicians should be prepared to support autistic writers' needs for producing written language to meet their developmental, academic, social, and employment-related goals.
自闭症个体书面语言中的性别差异是一个被忽视但重要的研究领域。我们认为,自闭症个体口语中的性别差异可能会延伸到书面语言中,这既反映了普通人群写作中的性别差异,也体现了口语和书面语言的共同维度。我们的研究问题是:自闭症青少年女性在说服性、说明性和叙述性体裁的书面语言特征上,是否与自闭症青少年男性以及非自闭症(NA)青少年女性不同?
我们对从一项关于自闭症青少年写作技能的更大规模调查中收集的18名参与者(11名自闭症男性、3名自闭症女性和4名NA女性)的写作样本进行了二次探索性分析。每位参与者完成了三篇写作样本——一篇说服性、一篇说明性和一篇叙述性(共54篇写作样本)。我们将自闭症女性样本的样本长度(单词总数)、写作效率(每分钟写作单词数)、句法长度(以单词计的T单位平均长度)、词汇多样性(类型-标记比)和宏观结构与自闭症男性和NA女性的样本进行了比较。
基于使用可变中位数的非参数分析,自闭症男性(而非自闭症女性)所写的说明性样本明显比NA女性短。自闭症男性在说服性和说明性体裁中的写作效率显著低于自闭症女性和NA女性。在样本长度、效率、词汇多样性以及说服性和叙述性宏观结构的其他几项比较中,效应量很大,但无统计学意义。
尽管我们的样本量较小,无法得出可推广的结论,但我们观察到,本研究中一些特定性别的发现与之前基于单一自闭症群体(男女合并)的研究结果不同。将自闭症女性和自闭症男性的数据合并可能会掩盖每个群体独特的书面语言特征。
我们的研究结果,尤其是结合相关文献来看,表明对书面语言中的性别差异进行更大规模的调查对于更全面地描述自闭症女性的独特特征至关重要。临床医生应做好准备,支持自闭症写作者为实现其发展、学业、社交和就业相关目标而进行书面语言创作的需求。