Landau Emily, Nayar Kritika, Martin Gary E, Stevens Cassandra, Xing Jiayin, Guilfoyle Janna, Lau Joseph C Y, Losh Molly
Roxelyn and Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States.
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Hassenfeld Children's Hospital at NYU Langone, New York City, NY, United States.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Sep 4;16:1588429. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1588429. eCollection 2025.
Narrative, or storytelling, ability is a well-documented area of difficulty in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and is an important skill that is related to social-communicative success. Evidence also demonstrates subtle narrative differences among first-degree relatives of autistic individuals, including parents (ASD parents) and siblings (ASD siblings), suggesting narrative ability may reflect genetic influences related to ASD. Less structured contexts, such as free form narrative retellings (i.e., without scaffolding via visual aids), require individuals to reconstruct a previously told narrative from memory and reflect differences in underlying attention, language, and executive functioning. Narrative retellings are impacted in ASD, though work has yet to examine this ability in first-degree relatives. A prior study employed a first telling narrative task (First Telling) involving simultaneous viewing of a picture book among autistic individuals, their parents, siblings, and respective control groups while collecting eye tracking data to extrapolate attentional mechanisms.
The present study aimed to extend this work by adding an additional less structured narrative retelling (Retell task) to characterize the breakdown in narrative quality between different contexts and assess how narration and visual attention during the First Telling narrative may relate to narrative quality in the Retell task.
As predicted, narrative retellings were less sophisticated than first-telling narratives, and the quality of the First Telling was related to the quality of the Retell narrative for all groups. Some overlapping patterns of narrative quality emerged between individuals with ASD, their parents, and siblings. No associations emerged between visual attention in the First Telling and narrative quality in the Retell task.
Results support previous findings of narrative challenges in ASD and provide evidence that narrative skills may be subtly impacted in first degree relatives, suggesting ASD-related genetic influence on elements of narrative ability. Findings may inform intervention efforts, as the lack of visual supports in the retell task impacted narrative quality in ways that parallel the challenges individuals may face in everyday storytelling and naturalistic conversational interactions.
叙事能力,即讲故事的能力,是自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)中一个有充分记录的困难领域,并且是一项与社交沟通成功相关的重要技能。证据还表明,自闭症个体的一级亲属,包括父母(自闭症谱系障碍父母)和兄弟姐妹(自闭症谱系障碍兄弟姐妹)之间存在细微的叙事差异,这表明叙事能力可能反映了与自闭症谱系障碍相关的遗传影响。结构较松散的情境,如自由形式的叙事复述(即没有通过视觉辅助工具的支撑),要求个体从记忆中重构之前讲述的故事,并反映出潜在注意力、语言和执行功能方面的差异。叙事复述在自闭症谱系障碍中会受到影响,不过尚未有研究考察一级亲属的这项能力。先前的一项研究采用了首次讲述叙事任务(首次讲述),让自闭症个体、他们的父母、兄弟姐妹以及各自的对照组同时观看一本图画书,同时收集眼动追踪数据以推断注意力机制。
本研究旨在扩展这项工作,增加一项结构更松散的叙事复述任务(复述任务),以描述不同情境下叙事质量的下降情况,并评估首次讲述叙事过程中的叙述和视觉注意力与复述任务中的叙事质量之间的关系。
正如预期的那样,叙事复述比首次讲述叙事更不复杂,并且所有组的首次讲述质量都与复述叙事的质量相关。自闭症个体、他们的父母和兄弟姐妹之间出现了一些叙事质量的重叠模式。首次讲述中的视觉注意力与复述任务中的叙事质量之间没有关联。
研究结果支持了先前关于自闭症谱系障碍叙事挑战的研究发现,并提供证据表明叙事技能可能在一级亲属中受到细微影响,这表明与自闭症谱系障碍相关的基因对叙事能力的某些要素有影响。研究结果可能为干预措施提供参考,因为复述任务中缺乏视觉支持对叙事质量的影响方式,与个体在日常讲故事和自然对话互动中可能面临的挑战类似。