首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The neural underpinnings of prosody in autism
Authors:Inge-Marie Eigsti  Jillian Schuh  Einar Mencl  Robert T. Schultz  Rhea Paul
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , University of Connecticut , Storrs , Connecticut , USA inge-marie.eigsti@uconn.edu;3. Department of Psychology , University of Connecticut , Storrs , Connecticut , USA;4. Department of Neurology-FWC , Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee , Wisconsin , USA;5. Haskins Laboratories , Yale University , New Haven , Connecticut , USA;6. Center for Autism Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , USA;7. Yale Child Study Center, Yale University , New Haven , Connecticut , USA
Abstract:This study examines the processing of prosodic cues to linguistic structure and to affect, drawing on fMRI and behavioral data from 16 high-functioning adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and 11 typically developing controls. Stimuli were carefully matched on pitch, intensity, and duration, while varying systematically in conditions of affective prosody (angry versus neutral speech) and grammatical prosody (questions versus statement). To avoid conscious attention to prosody, which normalizes responses in young people with ASD, the implicit comprehension task directed attention to semantic aspects of the stimuli. Results showed that when perceiving prosodic cues, both affective and grammatical, activation of neural regions was more generalized in ASD than in typical development, and areas recruited reflect heightened reliance on cognitive control, reading of intentions, attentional management, and visualization. This broader recruitment of executive and “mind-reading” brain areas for a relative simple language-processing task may be interpreted to suggest that speakers with high-functioning autism (HFA) have developed less automaticity in language processing and may also suggest that “mind-reading” or theory of mind deficits are intricately bound up in language processing. Data provide support for both a right-lateralized as well as a bilateral model of prosodic processing in typical individuals, depending upon the function of the prosodic information.
Keywords:Autism  Prosody  Language  fMRI  Theory of mind
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号