Full bibliography
Conversational Behaviors in Youth with High-functioning ASD and Asperger Syndrome.
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Paul, Rhea (Author)
- Orlovski, Stephanie (Author)
- Marcinko, Hillary (Author)
- Volkmar, Fred (Author)
Title
Conversational Behaviors in Youth with High-functioning ASD and Asperger Syndrome.
Abstract
Twenty-nine youth with autism spectrum disorders and 26 with typical development between 12 and 18 years of age were engaged in structured interviews (ADOS). The interviews were videotaped and rated for atypical conversational behaviors by trained raters, using the Pragmatic Rating Scale (Landa et al. Psychol Med 22:245-254, 1992). The ASD group was divided into AS and HFA/PDD-NOS subgroups. Significant differences were found among groups on approximately one-third of the PRS items. These items involved primarily the management of topics and information, reciprocity, intonation, and gaze management. The only differences to reach significance between the AS and HFA/PDD-NOS group were a greater tendency for overly formal speech on the part of the AS group, and more difficulty with gaze management on the part of the group with HFA/PDD-NOS. The implications of these findings for understanding and treating conversational deficits in ASD are discussed., (C) Plenum Publishing Corporation 2009. All Rights Reserved.
Publication
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
Publisher
R. Paul [middle dot] S. M. Orlovski [middle dot] H. C. Marcinko [middle dot] F. Volkmar Yale Child Study Center, 40 Temple St., Suite 6B, New Haven, CT 06510, USA
Date
2009-01
Volume
39
Issue
1
Pages
115-125
Journal Abbr
J Autism Dev Disord
DOI
Citation Key
paulConversationalBehaviorsYouth2009
ISSN
0162-3257
Language
English
Extra
173 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Place: (C) Plenum Publishing Corporation 2009. All Rights Reserved.
Citation
Paul, R., Orlovski, S., Marcinko, H., & Volkmar, F. (2009). Conversational Behaviors in Youth with High-functioning ASD and Asperger Syndrome. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 39(1), 115–125. https://doi.org/10/dbpngs
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