2020
DOI: 10.1002/aur.2363
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Atypical Perception of Sounds in Minimally and Low Verbal Children and Adolescents With Autism as Revealed by Behavioral and Neural Measures

Abstract: The common display of atypical behavioral responses to sounds by individuals with autism (ASD) suggests that they process sounds differently. Within ASD, individuals who are minimally or low verbal (ASD-MLV) are suspected to have greater auditory processing impairments. However, it is unknown whether atypical auditory behaviors are related to receptive language and/or neural processing of sounds in ASD-MLV. In Experiment 1, we compared the percentage of time 47 ASD-MLV and 36 verbally fluent (ASD-V) participan… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…The latter is consistent with one third to one half of diagnosed autistic children exhibiting enhanced non-verbal abilities for their chronological age [58]. The manifestations of auditory hypersensitivity (e.g., covering their ears with their hands when exposed to physical noises or a human voice) are maximal during the non-verbal or minimally verbal period [59]. Atypical socio-communicative behaviours and interests are observed before the emergence of formal language even before its atypical development is noticed.…”
Section: Pre-clinical Phase: Attentional Differences Preceding Recognition Of the Syndromesupporting
confidence: 74%
“…The latter is consistent with one third to one half of diagnosed autistic children exhibiting enhanced non-verbal abilities for their chronological age [58]. The manifestations of auditory hypersensitivity (e.g., covering their ears with their hands when exposed to physical noises or a human voice) are maximal during the non-verbal or minimally verbal period [59]. Atypical socio-communicative behaviours and interests are observed before the emergence of formal language even before its atypical development is noticed.…”
Section: Pre-clinical Phase: Attentional Differences Preceding Recognition Of the Syndromesupporting
confidence: 74%
“…The latter is consistent with one third to one half of diagnosed autistic children exhibiting enhanced nonverbal abilities for their chronological age [29]. The manifestations of auditory hypersensitivity (covering ears with their hands when exposed to physical noises or human voice) are maximal during the non or minimally verbal period [30]. Atypical socio-communicative behaviors and interests are observed before the emergence of formal language and even before its atypical development is noticed.…”
Section: Pre-clinical Phase: Attentional Differences Preceding Recognition Of the Syndromesupporting
confidence: 73%
“…The latter is consistent with one third to one half of diagnosed autistic children exhibiting enhanced nonverbal abilities for their chronological age [58]. The manifestations of auditory hypersensitivity (covering their ears with their hands when exposed to physical noises or a human voice) are maximal during the nonverbal or minimally verbal period [59]. Atypical socio-communicative behaviors and interests are observed before the emergence of formal language, even before its atypical development is noticed.…”
Section: Pre-clinical Phase: Attentional Differences Preceding Recognition Of the Syndromesupporting
confidence: 72%