ASD - Individual Differences Explanation Flashcards

1
Q

1 What is ToM?

A

The understanding that other people have thoughts, feelings, knowledge and perspectives that differ from ours.

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2
Q

1 What did Simon Baron-Cohen argue?
What does it present?

A

ToM is impaired in those with ASD - not fully functioning
Itself as a reduced or delayed ability to recognise and understand the internal mental states of other people

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3
Q

1 What is ‘mindblindness’?

A

The inability to understand the minds of others

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4
Q

1 What skills does ToM develop from?

A

Skills which usually appear early in childhood development:
1. follow another persons line of sight
2. engage in pretend play
3. imitate other’s behaviour

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5
Q

1 What is a key skill in ToM development?

A

Joint attention - when an adult draws a child’s attention to an object using gestures and line of sight.

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6
Q

1 What did Scaife & Bruner (1975) find?

A

Neurotypical children show joint attention by around 14 months. this skill is often delayed or impaired in children with ASD. This delay causes a ToM deficit which can explain later problems with social communication in later years

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7
Q

1 What is the key deficit in ToM for children with ASD

A

Ability to distinguish between physical objects and mental objects

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8
Q

1 Supporting research (eyes task) for ToM?

A

Baron-Cohen (2001) - used ‘eyes task’ to assess ToM deficits.
Ppts with ASD were significantly worse at determining the emotions displayed than controls were

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9
Q

1 Supporting research (Sally Anne task) for ToM?

A

Baron-Cohen (1985) - only 20% of the ASD correctly answered where Sally would look for her marble compared with 85% of the neurotypical children and 86% of the children with Downs syndrome

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10
Q

1 Methodological issues for ToM?

A

Sally Anne task - relies on ability to understand language as there is a large amount of the ‘story’ the child must be told. Children with ASD may find this difficult

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11
Q

1 Why is ToM a partial explanation?

A

Limited explanation for non-social features of ASD.

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12
Q

1 Positive applications of ToM?

A

Developed strategies and techniques to help children with ASD to ‘mind read’
Joint attention training - adults engage children in tasks (pointing at objects, showing objects & jointly looking at objects)
Such training can have significant benefits on communication and social skills development for children with ASD

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13
Q

2 What is central coherence?

A

Humans ability to gain overall meaning from a mass of different details

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14
Q

2 Strong central coherence?

A

Able to identify the most relevant information and form a meaningful understanding of the entire conversation withoit dwelling on details

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15
Q

2 Weak central coherence?

A

May remember very specific details of the conversation but be unable to summarise the content that was discussed

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16
Q

2 What did Frith refer to?

A

Central coherence differences in the way we are able to perceive the world as local processing and global processing

17
Q

2 What is local processing?

A

Allows us to analyse the fine details and to examine the elements that make up a task or event in fine detail

18
Q

2 What is global processing?

A

Allows us to see how the details fit together to form the ‘bigger picture’

19
Q

2 What did Frith argue that those with ASD have?

A

Those with ASD have impaired global processing but may have enhanced local processing

20
Q

2 What did Frith (1989) say people with ASD are less likely to do?

A

People with ASD are less likely to pay attention to the broader context of a task, conversation, object or event

21
Q

2 Supporting research (tiles) for weak central coherence?

A

Shah & Frith (1993) - those with ASD performed better on broken up ‘tiles’ task than those in other two groups suggesting a preference for local processing.
Second experiment - patterns were already broken up so local processing was not needed - did no better than other groups

22
Q

2 What does weak central coherence consider ASD in?

A

Considers ASD in positive and optimistic light - doesnt claim that a damaging cognitive deficit is the cause of ASD
Local processing is a bias rather than a deficit - while it may be difficult to overcome, it can be

23
Q

2 Why is weak central coherence a partial explanation?

A

Doesnt explain how preference for local processing is created - unclear what parts of the brain might be involved in development of this bias