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Cognitive imitation in typically-developing 3- and 4-year olds and individuals with autism
Authors:Francys Subiaul  Herbert Lurie  Kathryn Romansky  Tovah Klein  David Holmes  Herbert Terrace
Affiliation:1. Department of Speech & Hearing Science, The George Washington University, United States;2. Teachers College, Columbia University, United States;3. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, United States;4. Center for Toddler Development, Barnard College, United States;5. Eden Autism Institute, United States;6. Department of Psychology, Columbia University, United States;g New York Psychiatric Institute, United States
Abstract:Individuals diagnosed with autism suffer from numerous social, affective and linguistic impairments. It has also been suggested that they have a global imitation deficit. That hypothesis, however, is compromised by the fact that individuals with autism suffer from various motor impairments. Here we describe an experiment on cognitive imitation, a type of imitation that doesn’t require motor learning. Nine male autistic subjects and 20 typically-developing 3- and 4-year olds were trained to respond, in a prescribed order, to different lists of photographs that were displayed simultaneously on a touch-sensitive monitor. Because the position of the photographs varied randomly from trial to trial, sequences could not be learned by motor imitation. In three different imitation treatments, including a ghost control, autistic subjects learned new sequences more rapidly after observing a model execute those sequences than when they had to learn new sequences entirely by trial and error. Moreover, the performance of autistic subjects did not significantly differ from the performance of typically-developing controls. The result of this and other studies suggests that individuals with autism suffer from a specific novel motor imitation deficit.
Keywords:Autism   Social learning   Cognitive imitation   Ghost control   Emulation   Cognitive development   Children
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