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The Psychology of Autistic Spectrum Disorders and Implications for Practice Dr Fiona J Scott Autism Research Centre University of Cambridge
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Autistic Spectrum Disorders: Difficulties with reciprocal social interaction Difficulties with communication Restricted/repetitive interests & behaviours Unusual sensory responses/processing Uneven abilities Savant skills
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Key Psychological Theories: Theory of Mind Systemising – Empathising model Weak Central Coherence Feature Processing
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‘Canary Wharf’ drawn by Stephen Wiltshire, from ‘Cities’ (1989) Dent & Sons, London
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‘Central Coherence’ (e.g., Frith 1989): The everyday tendency to process information in CONTEXT for GIST Pulling information together for higher level MEANING
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Embedded Figures Test (Shah & Frith 1983)
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Block Design (Shah & Frith 1993)
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“ In her dress there was a big tear” (Frith & Snowling 1983) Homographs: “The sea tastes of salt and……” (Happe, 2000) Sentence Completion:
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Brosnan & Scott (2004): ‘Gestalt processing’ Children with autism show significantly less ability to process ‘nature relationships’ between stimuli.
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‘Feature Processing’ (e.g., Plaisted, 1999): Enhanced discrimination & reduced generalisation in autism Inability to recognise similarities between stimuli or situations
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‘Systemising – Empathising’ (e.g., Baron-Cohen, 2003) Understand according to rules & regulations Analysis of input-output relationships Systemising: Empathising: Understand according to socio-emotional experience Includes ToM
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Superior systemising depends on EXACTNESS in information processing Excellent detail is being detected, ALL information is considered Baron-Cohen et al., (2003): Systemising AS/HFA males > AS/HFA females > controls (M>F) Empathising AS/HFA males < AS/HFA females < controls (M<F)
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Neural Explanation? Increased cell density in brains of people with autism (Piven et al, 1995) Failure of ‘pruning’ in brain development (Murphy et al., 2002) Macrencephaly by 2 years of age (Bolton et al., ongoing; Courchesne et al., 2001)
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Social difficulties: Poor processing of faces (e.g., identity – Ashwin, ongoing) Difficulty reading emotions Inability to easily see generalities
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Communication difficulties: Language requires understanding of meaning Need meaning to see communicative purpose Language is heavily context dependent
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Routines, rituals and rigidity: Kanner (1943) “..a situation, a performance, a sentence is not regarded as complete if it is not made up of exactly the same elements that were present at the time the child was first confronted with it”
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Sensory abnormalities (e.g., Belmonte, 2003): Overconnected network passes so much ‘noise’ it swamps the signal? Or an underconnected network passes so little signal it is lost in the noise? Filtering in autism is all-or-none Hyper sensitivity - due to detailed processing of features with equal weight? Hypo sensitivity - due to cognitive shut-down when stimuli are too intense?
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Savant skills & uneven profiles: Feature processing would be good for:- Perfect/absolute pitch (Heaton et al 1998) Graphic/drawing skills (Mottron et al, 2000; Pring et al., 1995) Recall of facts, concrete information Upside down jigsaws, noticing details
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Practical developments: Diagnostic/screening tools (e.g., AQ) Genetic & neurological detection & understanding Appropriate intervention & management Improved understanding
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Conclusions: Autism results from an “embarrassment of riches”? (Happe, 1999) Psychological theories such as WCC, feature processing, & systemising can help to explain social & communication deficits, stereotypies & rigidity, sensory oddities, and cognitive & savant skills in autism. Future research may help explain why in a neurological, and perhaps genetic, sense.
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