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A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder

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A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder. / Stewart, H.J.; Mcintosh, R.D.; Williams, J.H.G.
In: Autism Research, Vol. 6, No. 6, 18.12.2013, p. 522-530.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stewart, HJ, Mcintosh, RD & Williams, JHG 2013, 'A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder', Autism Research, vol. 6, no. 6, pp. 522-530. https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.1312

APA

Stewart, H. J., Mcintosh, R. D., & Williams, J. H. G. (2013). A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder. Autism Research, 6(6), 522-530. https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.1312

Vancouver

Stewart HJ, Mcintosh RD, Williams JHG. A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder. Autism Research. 2013 Dec 18;6(6):522-530. Epub 2013 Oct 2. doi: 10.1002/aur.1312

Author

Stewart, H.J. ; Mcintosh, R.D. ; Williams, J.H.G. / A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder. In: Autism Research. 2013 ; Vol. 6, No. 6. pp. 522-530.

Bibtex

@article{cc0009513e8c4a88ba80cbbe7c590fa4,
title = "A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder",
abstract = "Imitation is a potentially crucial aspect of social cognitive development. Although deficits in imitation ability have been widely demonstrated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the specificity and significance of the findings is unclear, due largely to methodological limitations. We developed a novel assessment of imitation ability, using objective movement parameters (path length and action duration) derived from a touch-sensitive tablet laptop during drawing actions on an identical tablet. By direct comparison of the kinematics of a model's actions with those of the participant who observed them, measures of imitation accuracy were obtained. By replaying the end-point of the movement as a spot on the screen, imitation accuracy was compared against a “ghost control” condition, with no human actor but only the end-point of the movement seen [object movement reenactment (OMR)]. Hence, demands of the control task were closely matched to the experimental task with respect to motor, memory, and attentional abilities. Adolescents with ASD showed poorer accuracy for copying object size and action duration on both the imitation and OMR tasks, but were significantly more impaired for imitation of object size. Our results provide evidence that some of the imitation deficit in ASD is specific to a self-other mapping problem, and cannot be explained by general factors such as memory, spatial reasoning, motor control, or attention, nor related to the social demands of the testing situation.",
author = "H.J. Stewart and R.D. Mcintosh and J.H.G. Williams",
year = "2013",
month = dec,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1002/aur.1312",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "522--530",
journal = "Autism Research",
issn = "1939-3792",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A specific deficit of imitation in autism spectrum disorder

AU - Stewart, H.J.

AU - Mcintosh, R.D.

AU - Williams, J.H.G.

PY - 2013/12/18

Y1 - 2013/12/18

N2 - Imitation is a potentially crucial aspect of social cognitive development. Although deficits in imitation ability have been widely demonstrated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the specificity and significance of the findings is unclear, due largely to methodological limitations. We developed a novel assessment of imitation ability, using objective movement parameters (path length and action duration) derived from a touch-sensitive tablet laptop during drawing actions on an identical tablet. By direct comparison of the kinematics of a model's actions with those of the participant who observed them, measures of imitation accuracy were obtained. By replaying the end-point of the movement as a spot on the screen, imitation accuracy was compared against a “ghost control” condition, with no human actor but only the end-point of the movement seen [object movement reenactment (OMR)]. Hence, demands of the control task were closely matched to the experimental task with respect to motor, memory, and attentional abilities. Adolescents with ASD showed poorer accuracy for copying object size and action duration on both the imitation and OMR tasks, but were significantly more impaired for imitation of object size. Our results provide evidence that some of the imitation deficit in ASD is specific to a self-other mapping problem, and cannot be explained by general factors such as memory, spatial reasoning, motor control, or attention, nor related to the social demands of the testing situation.

AB - Imitation is a potentially crucial aspect of social cognitive development. Although deficits in imitation ability have been widely demonstrated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the specificity and significance of the findings is unclear, due largely to methodological limitations. We developed a novel assessment of imitation ability, using objective movement parameters (path length and action duration) derived from a touch-sensitive tablet laptop during drawing actions on an identical tablet. By direct comparison of the kinematics of a model's actions with those of the participant who observed them, measures of imitation accuracy were obtained. By replaying the end-point of the movement as a spot on the screen, imitation accuracy was compared against a “ghost control” condition, with no human actor but only the end-point of the movement seen [object movement reenactment (OMR)]. Hence, demands of the control task were closely matched to the experimental task with respect to motor, memory, and attentional abilities. Adolescents with ASD showed poorer accuracy for copying object size and action duration on both the imitation and OMR tasks, but were significantly more impaired for imitation of object size. Our results provide evidence that some of the imitation deficit in ASD is specific to a self-other mapping problem, and cannot be explained by general factors such as memory, spatial reasoning, motor control, or attention, nor related to the social demands of the testing situation.

U2 - 10.1002/aur.1312

DO - 10.1002/aur.1312

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 522

EP - 530

JO - Autism Research

JF - Autism Research

SN - 1939-3792

IS - 6

ER -