Watson L R
Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7190, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 1998 Feb;28(1):51-9. doi: 10.1023/a:1026063003289.
This study examined the extent to which mothers of preschool children with autism use language that is related to the child's focus of attention. Fourteen mother-child dyads involving preschool children with autism participated in this study, along with 14 matched dyads involving typically developing preschool children. Both groups were observed during 15 minutes of free play. Results revealed that the mothers of children with autism directed verbalizations to something within the child's focus of attention as frequently as the mothers of typically developing children. Thus, children with autism had as many opportunities to benefit from verbal input related to their focus of attention as did typically developing children. However, mothers of children with autism directed verbalizations to something not within the child's focus of attention more frequently than mothers of typically developing children. This nonrelated input may have reflected the mothers' attempts to adapt to their children's difficulties in attention and interaction.
本研究考察了自闭症学龄前儿童的母亲使用与孩子注意力焦点相关语言的程度。十四对患有自闭症的学龄前儿童母婴参与了本研究,另有十四对匹配的发育正常的学龄前儿童母婴也参与其中。两组均在15分钟的自由玩耍时间内接受观察。结果显示,自闭症儿童的母亲像发育正常儿童的母亲一样频繁地将言语指向孩子注意力焦点范围内的事物。因此,自闭症儿童与发育正常儿童一样,有同样多的机会从与他们注意力焦点相关的言语输入中受益。然而,自闭症儿童的母亲比发育正常儿童的母亲更频繁地将言语指向孩子注意力焦点范围之外的事物。这种不相关的输入可能反映了母亲们试图适应孩子在注意力和互动方面的困难。