Title of article :
Visual perspective taking impairment in children with autistic spectrum disorder
Author/Authors :
Hamilton، نويسنده , , Antonia F. de C. and Brindley، نويسنده , , Rachel and Frith، نويسنده , , Uta، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
8
From page :
37
To page :
44
Abstract :
Evidence from typical development and neuroimaging studies suggests that level 2 visual perspective taking – the knowledge that different people may see the same thing differently at the same time – is a mentalising task. Thus, we would expect children with autism, who fail typical mentalising tasks like false belief, to perform poorly on level 2 visual perspective taking as well. However, prior data on this issue are inconclusive. We re-examined this question, testing a group of 23 young autistic children, aged around 8 years with a verbal mental age of around 4 years and three groups of typical children (n = 60) ranging in age from 4 to 8 years on a level 2 visual perspective task and a closely matched mental rotation task. The results demonstrate that autistic children have difficulty with visual perspective taking compared to a task requiring mental rotation, relative to typical children. Furthermore, performance on the level 2 visual perspective taking task correlated with theory of mind performance. These findings resolve discrepancies in previous studies of visual perspective taking in autism, and demonstrate that level 2 visual perspective taking is a mentalising task.
Keywords :
Visual perspective taking , children , AUTISM , theory of mind
Journal title :
Cognition
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Cognition
Record number :
2076641
Link To Document :
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