| Literature DB >> 25374134 |
Andrée-Anne S Meilleur1, Patricia Jelenic, Laurent Mottron.
Abstract
Outstanding skills, including special isolated skills (SIS) and perceptual peaks (PP) are frequent features of autism. However, their reported prevalence varies between studies and their co-occurrence is unknown. We determined the prevalence of SIS in a large group of 254 autistic individuals and searched for PP in 46 of these autistic individuals and 46 intelligence and age-matched typically developing controls. The prevalence of SIS among autistic individuals was 62.5% and that of PP was 58% (13% in controls). The prevalence of SIS increased with intelligence and age. The existence of an SIS in a particular modality was not associated with the presence of a PP in the same modality. This suggests that talents involve an experience-dependent component in addition to genetically defined alterations of perceptual encoding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25374134 PMCID: PMC4544492 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-014-2296-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Group studies investigating numerous talents and strengths in ASD, including Kanner and Asperger’s seminal descriptions
| N, diagnosis; mean age (range); mean intelligence level (range) | Skill definitions | Skill assessment tools; information sources | Skill types (prevalence in %) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kanner ( | 11 autistic individuals; 5.38 (2.33–11); From “severe intellectual defect” to “superior intelligence” | Observations ranging from “At the age of 1 year he could hum and sing many tunes accurately.” to “…and had an excellent rote memory.” | Direct observation; Clinician and parental reports | Any talent (54.5); Memory (54.5); Music (36.3) |
| Asperger ( | 4 autistic individuals; 8.25 (6–11); IQ n/a | Observations ranging from “His extraordinary calculating ability had been reported by the parents and verified by us.” to “He was an excellent speller and never made mistakes.” | Direct observation; Clinician and parental report | Any Talent (75); Memory (50); Calculation (25); Spelling (25) |
| Rimland ( | 540 autistic individuals; Age and IQ n/a | “…any “special abilities” the child may display.” | Postal survey; Parental report | Any talent (9.8) |
| Rapin ( | 51 “High-functioning autistic individuals”; 4.8 (range n/a); NVIQ 102.9 (range n/a) | “…whether they (parents) felt that their child had unusually well developed abilities in memory, mathematics, recognition of letters and numbers, music or motor skills.” | Questionnaire; Parental report | Memory (70.6); Number and Dates (45.1); Puzzle/spatial skills (35.3); Music (27.5); Fine motor (21.6); Letters/numbers (25.5); Other (31.4) |
| 125 “Low-functioning autistic individuals”; 5.0 (range n/a); NVIQ 45.6 (range n/a) | Memory (44); Dates (13.6); Puzzle/spatial skills (26.4); Music (23.2); Fine motor (14.4); Letters/numbers (9.6); Other (17.6) | |||
| Bolte and Poustka ( | 254 autistic probands; 15.54 (6–49); FSIQ 72.56 (32–129) | ADI-R Score of 3 or 4 coded on “current” behavior: performance level above the participant’s general level of cognitive functioning and above that expected for their age, with (4) or without (3) functional or adaptive use of skill in daily life | ADI-R special isolated skills items (106–111); Parental report | Any Talent in memory, music, computation, reading, visual-spatial and/or drawing (13) |
| Howlin et al. ( |
| Exceptional cognitive skill in any of the Wechsler subtests (1 SD ≥ population norms and 2 SD ≥ participant’s mean) | Wechsler subtests; Psychometric assessment | Strength in cognitive skill for at least one Wechsler subtest (26.4) |
|
| Outstanding skill/knowledge definitely above subject’s general level of ability and above that of age-matched individuals from the general population | Questionnaire; Parental report | Any Talent in memory, music, computation (including calendrical calculation) and/or visual-spatial (25.8) | |
| 137/137 autistics n/a (11–55) PIQ 69.9 (28–135) VIQ 77.5 (7–134) | See definitions above | Questionnaire and Wechsler subtests | Any Talent and/or cognitive skills (28.5) | |
| Jones et al. ( | 100 ASD; 15.6 (14.8–16.9) FSIQ 84.3 (50–119) | Test performance highly discrepant from own general intellectual functioning | Wechsler Objective Reading and Numerical Dimensions and test of Word Reading Efficiency; Psychometric assessment | Strength in literacy and/or mathematics (72.7) |
| Bennett and Heaton ( | 125 ASD; 10.0 (3–20); IQ n/a but 7.9 % had intellectual disability | One or more skills that were outstanding given their functioning skills based on nine structured and open-ended questions | Questionnaire; Parental report | Any Talent (42); Memory/knowledge (28); Mathematical/numerical (15.2); Artistic (9.6); Music (9.6); Reading/vocabulary (9.6); Spatial (8.8); ICT (8.8); Mechanical (3.2); Other (4.8) |
| Current study |
| ADI-R Score of 2 or 7 coded on “current” or “ever” behavior: Performance level above the participant’s general level of cognitive functioning and above that expected for their age, with (7) or without (2) functional or adaptive use of the skill in daily life. | ADI-R special isolated skills items (88–93); Parental report | Any Talent (62.6); Memory (52.5); Visuospatial (32); Reading (22.4); Drawing (17.5); Music (16.9); Computation (16.7) |
|
| Perceptual peak on experimental tasks (1 SD ≥ population mean) | Modified block design and Pitch Discrimination Tasks; Experimental testing | Strength in perceptual performance for at least one experimental task (57.5) | |
| Same 43 subjects | See definitions above | ADI-R special isolated skills items (88–93) and Experimental Tasks | Any Talent and/or perceptual peak (88.4) |
ASD autism spectrum disorders, FSIQ full scale IQ, VIQ verbal IQ, PIQ performance IQ, NVIQ non-verbal IQ, ADI-R autism diagnostic interview-revised
Descriptive Characteristics of participants for a. Study 1: Talents, i.e. “Special Isolated Skills” and b. Study 2: Strengths, i.e. “Perceptual Peaks”
| Talents (i.e. ADI-R “Special Isolated Skills”) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | Mean | Range | SD | |
| a. | ||||
| Age in years | 254 | 11.35 | 2–39 | 8.00 |
| Wechsler’s GIQ z-score | 171 | −0.85 | −4.00 to 2.00 | 1.28 |
| RPM z-score | 150 | 0.54 | −2.33 to 2.33 | 1.11 |
| RPM raw score | 150 | 41.2 | 7–60 | 11.99 |
RPM Raven progressive matrices (maximum raw score is 60), GIQ global IQ from Wechsler’s Intelligence Scales, SD standard deviation
** p < 0.001
Fig. 1An example of two models of the modified block design task for the minimum (left) and maximum (right) perceptual coherence (PC) levels
Descriptive characteristics of participants with or without outstanding skills and between-group statistics for a. Special isolated skills (SIS) and b. Perceptual peaks (PP)
| Special isolated skills (SIS) | Statistics |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| With | Without | |||
| a. | ||||
| Autistic individuals | ||||
| N (%) | 159 (62.6) | 95 (37.4) | Binomial test | <0.001** |
| Male (%) | 141 (63.2) | 82 (36.8) | χ2(1, N = 254) = 0.310 | 0.578 |
| Wechsler’s GIQ z-score (SD) | −0.67 (1.28) | −1.36 (1.13) | t(169) = −3.208 | 0.002* |
| RPM z-score (SD) | 0.68 (1.08) | 0.04 (1.07) | t(146) = −3.112 | 0.002* |
| Age in years (SD) | 13.36 (8.25) | 7.97 (6.28) | t(237.455) = −5.878 | <0.001** |
†No female TD controls with a PP peak. Intelligence levels and ages are expressed as mean (SD)
TD typically developing, RPM Raven progressive matrices, GIQ global IQ from Wechsler’s Intelligence Scales, SD standard deviation
** p < 0.001; * p < 0.01
Fig. 2Graph showing the percentage of the sample from Study 1 with (blue) and without (red) reported talents, or “Special Isolated Skills” (SIS), in any domain and in each of the six ADI-R SIS domains separately
Predisposing factors to a. Special isolated skills and b. Perceptual peaks: age, intelligence (FSIQ or RPM), sex and group
| Independent variables | Special isolated skills | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient (B) | SE | Wald |
| Exp(B) (odds-ratio) | |
| a. | |||||
| Age in years | 0.084 | 0.033 | 6.402 | 0.011 | 1.087 |
| Wechsler’s GIQ z-score | 0.391 | 0.146 | 7.147 | 0.008* | 1.479 |
| Sex | −0.539 | 0.518 | 0.860 | 0.354 | 0.584 |
| Constant | 0.986 | 0.707 | 1.947 | 0.163 | 2.680 |
| Age in years | 0.101 | 0.038 | 7.009 | 0.008* | 1.106 |
| RPMz-score | 0.525 | 0.188 | 7.808 | 0.005* | 1.690 |
| Sex | −0.606 | 0.648 | 0.874 | 0.350 | 0.546 |
| Constant | 0.406 | 0.770 | 0.278 | 0.598 | 1.501 |
GIQ global IQ from Wechsler’s Intelligence Scales, RPM Raven progressive matrices
** p < 0.001; * p < 0.01
Fig. 3Performance level on experimental tasks (Block design, Pitch discrimination) and on intelligence measures (Wechsler’s Global IQ (GIQ), Raven Progressive Matrices (RPM)). Performance levels are shown in z score for autistics (light grey) and the typically developing (TD) controls (dark grey). The stars above the brackets, at the top of the graph, represent significance levels for differences in task performance separately for each group. The last line at the bottom of the graph indicates significance levels for between group differences in performance separately for each task and measure. ** p < 0.001; * p < 0.001
Fig. 4Graph showing the percentage of the sample from Study 2 with (blue) and without (red) strengths, or “Perceptual Peaks” (PP), in any task and in each task separately. The graph shows the percentages separately for typically developing (TD) controls (left) and autistics (right). The proportion of individuals with and without PP is significantly different between TD controls and autistics. * p < 0.001