| Literature DB >> 30523479 |
A de Marchena1,2, E S Kim3, A Bagdasarov3,4, J Parish-Morris3,5, B B Maddox3,6, E S Brodkin3,7, R T Schultz3,5,8.
Abstract
While well-represented on clinical measures, co-speech gesture production has never been formally studied in autistic adults. Twenty-one verbally fluent autistic adults and 21 typically developing controls engaged in a controlled conversational task. Group differences were observed in both semantic/pragmatic and motoric features of spontaneously produced co-speech gestures. Autistic adults prioritized different functions of co-speech gesture. Specifically, they used gesture more than controls to facilitate conversational turn-taking, demonstrating a novel nonverbal strategy for regulating conversational dynamics. Autistic adults were more likely to gesture unilaterally than bilaterally, a motoric feature of gesture that was individually associated with autism symptoms. Co-speech gestures may provide a link between nonverbal communication symptoms and known differences in motor performance in autism.Entities:
Keywords: Adulthood; Autism spectrum disorder; Conversation; Gesture; Motor skills; Nonverbal communication
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30523479 PMCID: PMC6451661 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-018-3829-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257