Can Narrative Skills Improve in Autism Spectrum Disorder? A Preliminary Study with Verbally Fluent Adolescents Receiving the Cognitive Pragmatic Treatment.
Dize HilviuFederico FrauFrancesca Marina BoscoAndrea MariniIlaria GabbatorePublished in: Journal of psycholinguistic research (2023)
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting social and communicative skills, including narrative ability, namely the description of real-life or fictive accounts of temporally and causally related events. With this study, we aimed to determine whether a communicative-pragmatic training, i.e., the version for adolescents of the Cognitive-Pragmatic Treatment, is effective in improving the narrative skills of 16 verbally fluent adolescents with ASD. We used a multilevel approach to assess pre- and post-training narrative production skills. Discourse analysis focused on micro- (i.e., mean length of utterance, complete sentences, omissions of morphosyntactic information) and macrolinguistic measures (i.e., cohesion, coherence errors, lexical informativeness). Results revealed a significant improvement in mean length of utterance and complete sentences and a decrease in cohesion errors. No significant change was found in the other narrative measures investigated. Our findings suggest that a pragmatically oriented training may be useful in improving grammatical efficiency in narrative production.
Keyphrases
- autism spectrum disorder
- young adults
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- intellectual disability
- physical activity
- study protocol
- virtual reality
- patient safety
- emergency department
- combination therapy
- mental health
- adverse drug
- congenital heart disease
- mass spectrometry
- social media
- high resolution
- quality improvement