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Article
Brief Report: Conveying Subjective Experience in Conversation: Production of Mental State Terms and Personal Narratives in Individuals with High Functioning Autism
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
  • Janet Bang, McGill University
  • Jesse Burns, McGill University
  • Aparna Nadig, McGill University
Publication Date
11-24-2012
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1007/s10803-012-1716-4
Abstract

Mental state terms and personal narratives are conversational devices used to communicate subjective experience in conversation. Pre-adolescents with high-functioning autism (HFA, n = 20) were compared with language-matched typically-developing peers (TYP, n = 17) on production of mental state terms (i.e., perception, physiology, desire, emotion, cognition) and personal narratives (sequenced retelling of life events) during short conversations. HFA and TYP participants did not differ in global use of mental state terms, nor did they exhibit reduced production of cognitive terms in particular. Participants with HFA produced significantly fewer personal narratives. They also produced a smaller proportion of their mental state terms during personal narratives. These findings underscore the importance of assessing and developing qualitative aspects of conversation in highly verbal individuals with autism.

Keywords
  • High-functioning autism,
  • Conversation,
  • Personal narrative,
  • Mental state terms
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Citation Information
Janet Bang, Jesse Burns and Aparna Nadig. "Brief Report: Conveying Subjective Experience in Conversation: Production of Mental State Terms and Personal Narratives in Individuals with High Functioning Autism" Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders Vol. 43 (2012) p. 1732 - 1740
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/janet-bang/1/