Autistic children often lack social behaviours which are normally present by 8-12 months
(Klin et al, 1992; Mundy et al, 1986), although current 'top down' theories about autism
hypothesise later-developing conceptual difficulties in social cognition. Research indicates
that there are abnormal 'bottom up' perceptual processes in autism (Moore, Hobson & Lee,
1995). Processing of unexpected dynamic visual information may occur to a diminished
extent (Courchesne, 1987), whilst in normal infancy, causal perception of the movements
of animate. and inanimate objects is likely to be important for social cognition and affective
relationships (Shultz, 1989; Premack & Dasser, 1990). It has been suggested that autistic
children have difficulties with the unpredictable nature of perceived social information
(Moody & Sigman, 1989b; Dawson & Lewy, 1989).
On the basis of such previous research, it was proposed that the early social abnormalities
of autistic children are a result -of them tending not to notice, or process further, brief
dynamic visual information about events unless these follow simple predictable patterns.
To test this hypothesis, seven young autistic and seven developmentally delayed children,
matched pairwise for verbal comprehension, were initially habituated to two computer-generated
displays, of a cartoon-like 'boy' (Runner) running up to a 'wall' and back, and
of a 'ball' moving towards the wall and apparently re-bounding back. Visual habituation
was reliable and due to information encoding. The autistic children looked relatively less
at the Runner habituation display, perhaps due to relatively diminished processing of
animate dynamic information. After habituation criterion was reached, a time delay was
introduced prolonging contact with the wall, so that the Ball display became 'impossible'
whereas the Runner remained 'possible'. As predicted, recovery of visual fixation indicated
that the delay was discriminated, and the autistic children recovered relatively less to the
novel Ball display compared with the developmentally delayed children. The autistic
children may not have perceived the anomaly in the novel 'impossible' Ball event. They
either may have had a general expectation for inanimate objects to move independently, or
a tendency not to notice altered significance in a repetitive visual event. However, the
group differences could also have been due to the autistic children tending not to have real
life expectations of cartoon images.
Consistent with the hypothesis, the scores of all 14 children both for pre-11 month social
behaviours and for joint attention, were associated with relative recovery for the novel Ball
display. As predicted from previous research, the autistic children engaged infrequently in
these social behaviours.
It is proposed that how children perceive the dynamic animate and inanimate world affects
how they develop socially during their first year of life. Relevant areas for future research
and implications for early interventions are discussed.
Date of Award | 1995 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE ROLE OF CAUSAL PERCEPTION OF MOVEMENT IN THE EARLY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF AUTISTIC CHILDREN
Morris, M. (Author). 1995
Student thesis: PhD