Publication date: Available online 6 September 2018
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology
Author(s): R. Lindström, T. Lepistö-Paisley, T. Makkonen, O. Reinvall, T. Nieminen-von Wendt, R. Alén, T. Kujala
Abstract
Objective
The present study explored the processing of emotional speech prosody in school-aged children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) but without marked language impairments (children with ASD [no LI]).
Methods
The mismatch negativity (MMN)/the late discriminative negativity (LDN), reflecting pre-attentive auditory discrimination processes, and the P3a, indexing involuntary orienting to attention-catching changes, were recorded to natural word stimuli uttered with different emotional connotations (neutral, sad, scornful and commanding). Perceptual prosody discrimination was addressed with a behavioral sound-discrimination test.
Results
Overall, children with ASD (no LI) were slower in behaviorally discriminating prosodic features of speech stimuli than typically developed control children. Further, smaller standard-stimulus event related potentials (ERPs) and MMN/LDNs were found in children with ASD (no LI) than in controls. In addition, the amplitude of the P3a was diminished and differentially distributed on the scalp in children with ASD (no LI) than in control children.
Conclusions
Processing of words and changes in emotional speech prosody is impaired at various levels of information processing in school-aged children with ASD (no LI).
Significance
The results suggest that low-level speech sound discrimination and orienting deficits might contribute to emotional speech prosody processing impairments observed in ASD.
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