首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


Enhanced pure-tone pitch discrimination among persons with autism but not Asperger syndrome
Authors:Anna Bonnel  Stephen McAdams  Claude Berthiaume  Valter Ciocca  Laurent Mottron
Institution:a McGill University, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Canada
b Centre d’excellence en troubles envahissants du développement de l’Université de Montréal (CETEDUM), Montréal, Canada
c Hôpital Rivière-des-Prairies, Montréal, Canada
d McGill University, CIRMMT, Schulich School of Music, Canada
e University of British Columbia, School of Audiology and Speech Sciences, Canada
Abstract:Persons with Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) display atypical perceptual processing in visual and auditory tasks. In vision, Bertone, Mottron, Jelenic, and Faubert (2005) found that enhanced and diminished visual processing is linked to the level of neural complexity required to process stimuli, as proposed in the neural complexity hypothesis. Based on these findings, Samson, Mottron, Jemel, Belin, and Ciocca (2006) proposed to extend the neural complexity hypothesis to the auditory modality. They hypothesized that persons with ASD should display enhanced performance for simple tones that are processed in primary auditory cortical regions, but diminished performance for complex tones that require additional processing in associative auditory regions, in comparison to typically developing individuals. To assess this hypothesis, we designed four auditory discrimination experiments targeting pitch, non-vocal and vocal timbre, and loudness. Stimuli consisted of spectro-temporally simple and complex tones. The participants were adolescents and young adults with autism, Asperger syndrome, and typical developmental histories, all with IQs in the normal range. Consistent with the neural complexity hypothesis and enhanced perceptual functioning model of ASD (Mottron, Dawson, Soulières, Hubert, & Burack, 2006), the participants with autism, but not with Asperger syndrome, displayed enhanced pitch discrimination for simple tones. However, no discrimination-thresholds differences were found between the participants with ASD and the typically developing persons across spectrally and temporally complex conditions. These findings indicate that enhanced pure-tone pitch discrimination may be a cognitive correlate of speech-delay among persons with ASD. However, auditory discrimination among this group does not appear to be directly contingent on the spectro-temporal complexity of the stimuli.
Keywords:Autism spectrum disorders  Auditory processing  Pitch  Timbre  Loudness  Enhanced perceptual functioning model
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
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