Swettenham J
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge, U.K.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 1996 Feb;37(2):157-65. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.1996.tb01387.x.
A specially designed computer version of the Sally-Anne false task belief task was used to teach understanding of false belief to three groups: children with autism, children with Down's Syndrome and young normal children. In an initial assessment children were selected for teaching only if they failed four false belief tasks: the dolls version of the Sally-Anne task (close transfer task) and three other false belief tasks involving different scenarios (distant transfer tasks). Following teaching, all three groups were able to pass the Sally-Anne task, but the children with autism alone were unable to pass the distant transfer tasks. The possibility that the children with autism had developed an alternative strategy in order to pass the instruction task is discussed.
使用专门设计的计算机版萨利-安妮错误信念任务,向三组儿童教授错误信念理解:自闭症儿童、唐氏综合征儿童和正常幼儿。在初始评估中,只有那些在四项错误信念任务中失败的儿童才被选入教学组:萨利-安妮任务的玩偶版本(近距离迁移任务)以及其他三项涉及不同场景的错误信念任务(远距离迁移任务)。教学后,所有三组儿童都能够通过萨利-安妮任务,但只有自闭症儿童无法通过远距离迁移任务。文中讨论了自闭症儿童为通过指导任务而发展出替代策略的可能性。