Literature DB >> 31714095

Autistic adults anticipate and integrate meaning based on the speaker's voice: Evidence from eye-tracking and event-related potentials.

Mahsa Barzy1, Jo Black1, David Williams1, Heather J Ferguson1.   

Abstract

Typically developing (TD) individuals rapidly integrate information about a speaker and their intended meaning while processing sentences online. We examined whether the same processes are activated in autistic adults and tested their timecourse in 2 preregistered experiments. Experiment 1 employed the visual world paradigm. Participants listened to sentences where the speaker's voice and message were either consistent or inconsistent (e.g., "When we go shopping, I usually look for my favorite wine," spoken by an adult or a child), and concurrently viewed visual scenes including consistent and inconsistent objects (e.g., wine and sweets). All participants were slower to select the mentioned object in the inconsistent condition. Importantly, eye movements showed a visual bias toward the voice-consistent object, well before hearing the disambiguating word, showing that autistic adults rapidly use the speaker's voice to anticipate the intended meaning. However, this target bias emerged earlier in the TD group compared to the autism group (2240 ms vs. 1800 ms before disambiguation). Experiment 2 recorded ERPs to explore speaker-meaning integration processes. Participants listened to sentences as described above, and ERPs were time-locked to the onset of the target word. A control condition included a semantic anomaly. Results revealed an enhanced N400 for inconsistent speaker-meaning sentences that was comparable to that elicited by anomalous sentences, in both groups. Overall, contrary to research that has characterized autism in terms of a local processing bias and pragmatic dysfunction, autistic people were unimpaired at integrating multiple modalities of linguistic information and were comparably sensitive to speaker-meaning inconsistency effects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31714095     DOI: 10.1037/xge0000705

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen        ISSN: 0022-1015


  6 in total

1.  Oscillatory entrainment mechanisms and anticipatory predictive processes in children with autism spectrum disorder.

Authors:  Shlomit Beker; John J Foxe; Sophie Molholm
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2021-10-13       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 2.  Prediction in Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review of Empirical Evidence.

Authors:  Jonathan Cannon; Amanda M O'Brien; Lindsay Bungert; Pawan Sinha
Journal:  Autism Res       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 5.216

Review 3.  Speech Processing in Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Integrative Review of Auditory Neurophysiology Findings.

Authors:  Alexandra P Key; Kathryn D'Ambrose Slaboch
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2021-09-27       Impact factor: 2.674

4.  Perspective influences eye movements during real-life conversation: Mentalising about self versus others in autism.

Authors:  Mahsa Barzy; Heather J Ferguson; David M Williams
Journal:  Autism       Date:  2020-07-09

5.  Ladies First: Gender Stereotypes Drive Anticipatory Eye-Movements During Incremental Sentence Interpretation.

Authors:  Ernesto Guerra; Jasmin Bernotat; Héctor Carvacho; Gerd Bohner
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2021-06-23

6.  Autistic Adults are Not Impaired at Maintaining or Switching Between Counterfactual and Factual Worlds: An ERP Study.

Authors:  Heather J Ferguson; Lena Wimmer; Jo Black; Mahsa Barzy; David Williams
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2021-03-11
  6 in total

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