Litcius/Paper detail

Training Syntax to Enhance Theory of Mind in Children with ASD

Stéphanie Durrleman, Anamaria Bentea, Andreea Prisecaru, Évelyne Thommen, Hélène Delage

2022Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Preschool children with neurotypical development (ND) trained on sentential complements ("X thinks/says that") improve their Theory of Mind (ToM) performance. Can complementation training also enhance ToM in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)? Thirty-three children with ASD (Mage = 8;11) and 20 younger ND peers (Mage = 4;3) were trained on sentential complements (4-6 weeks, 2-3 times per week, via the DIRE i-Pad App). Pre-training and post-training comparisons show that (1) training boosted both complementation and ToM performance across groups; (2) improvements remained 4-6 weeks after training ended; (3) participants with milder ASD symptoms made most gains. Training on sentential complements thus seems beneficial for addressing ToM difficulties in children with ASD, especially those with milder symptoms.

Topics & Concepts

NeurotypicalTheory of mindAutism spectrum disorderPsychologyAutismSyntaxDevelopmental psychologyTypically developingCognitive psychologyCognitionPsychiatryLinguisticsPhilosophyAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchBehavioral and Psychological StudiesChild and Animal Learning Development