L4 - Theories of Autism Flashcards
What is the prevalence of autism ?
Autism spectrum disorder
Asperger’s syndrome - people on the spectrum without language delay or learning disability
1% of the population - many remained undiagnosed
What is autism?
Clinically defined as:
- Impairments in social-communication
- Restricted and repetitive patterns of behaviour
Extremely heterogenous in terms of core clinical features and associated neurocognitive profile
What is the definition and deficit criteria that the DSM-V say are autistic traits?
Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across multiple contexts
Deficits in social-emotional reciprocity
Deficits in nonverbal communication
Deficits in developing, maintaining and understanding relationships
Stereotyped or repetitive motor movements, use of objects or speech
Insistence on sameness, inflexibility
Highly restricted, fixated interested that are abnormal intensity
Hyper-reactive to sensory input or unusual interest
What makes a good theory of autism?
Specificity
Uniqueness
Universality
What is the theory of mind towards autism?
Agent without a mind
Not understanding others’ minds
Baron-Cohen 1985 - autistic children found the FB task difficult compared to control
Autistic children are less likely to attribute mental states to things in the environment
What is the hypothesis of autism?
Good specificity for autism characteristics
- powerful and convincing
- difficulties in relating, communicating
- all related to understanding of the mind
But NOT universal
- not shown in every single autistic person
- what about the 20% that did pass the ToM
What are some evidence for autism and ToM?
Sparrevohn and Howie 1995 - autistic children with higher verbal mental age more likely to pass ToM tasks
Happe 1995 - relationship between child’s verbal mental age and passing FB tasks, verbal mental age of 12 able to pass compared to 4yrs in typical developing children
What is the 2nd order belief task?
Mary and John saw the ice cream van in the park
Mary went home for money
John saw the ice cream van move to the church
Mary sees the ice cream van at the church
John sets out to find Mary, he is told she is getting ice cream
Where with John look for Mary?
Baron-Cohen 1989 - autistic people pass 1st order, fail 2nd order, propose ToM was delay rather than deficit
BUT Asperger’s pass 2nd order
Not diagnostic
Is deficit of ToM unique to ASD?
Children with visual impairment showed difficulty with false belief (Minter, Hobson, Bishop, 1998)
Children with hearing impairments have delayed acknowledging false belief (Woolfe, Want and Siegal 2002)
Communication disadvantage leads to delay in understanding minds
ToM deficit not unique to ASD
Does ToM have good specificity?
Accounts for social and communication impairments
BUT:
Insistence on sameness
Routines
Narrow interest
Repetitive behaviour
What is executive control?
Proposed to account for social and non-social symptoms (repetitive behaviour)
The ability to maintain an appropriate problem-solving set for the attainment of a future goal
Includes behaviours such as; planning, impulse control, inhibition of responses, set maintenance, organised search, flexibility
What did Ozonoff 1991 find about executive control?
Tower of Hanoi - acted impulsively, could not plan several moves ahead, shifted all loops directly
Wisconsin card sort - unable to shift attentional focus, preserved to sort by established systems
Theory of Mind tests - many passed 1st, some passed 2nd (not a common denominator like the other two)
Can executive control explain social/communication problems?
Perhaps FB failure due to insufficient imagination?
Windows task - children <4yrs and autistic unable to inhibit pre-potent response
Cannot resist to point in the direction
Maybe FB task is about failure to inhibit?
Is executive dysfunction the primary cause of ASD?
ASD has no problem with sabotage but cannot lie
Impairment is not an EF deficit
- not specific
Adult onset ED not cause ASD
- not unique
No evidence for executive dysfunction in ASD preschool children
- not universale
What is weak central coherence?
Attempts to explain social and non-social
- Firth 2003n
Do not automatically process contextual meaning or use prior knowledge
A bias towards piecemeal or local processing