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Colloquia Winter 2011 (Laura Wagner and Cynthia Clopper)

January 21, 2011
12:00PM - 1:00PM

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2011-01-21 12:00:00 2011-01-21 13:00:00 Colloquia Winter 2011 (Laura Wagner and Cynthia Clopper) Laura WagnerPsychologyCynthia ClopperLinguisticsPerception of Dialect Variation by Young Adults with High-Functioning AutismAbstract:The linguistic profile of people with autism spectrum disorders typically involves intact perceptual processing, accompanied by deficits in the social functions of language. In a series of three experiments, the impact of this profile on the perception of regional dialect was examined. Young adults with high-functioning autism exhibited similar performance to a neurotypical comparison group in regional dialect classification and localness rating tasks, suggesting that they can use indexical information in speech to make judgments about the regional background of unfamiliar talkers. However, the participants with high-functioning autism were less able to differentiate among the dialects in an attitude judgment task, suggesting that they do not share social stereotypes related to dialect variation with the neurotypical comparison group.Colloquia Winter 2011 Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences ccbs@osu.edu America/New_York public

Laura Wagner

Psychology

Cynthia Clopper

Linguistics

Perception of Dialect Variation by Young Adults with High-Functioning Autism

Abstract:

The linguistic profile of people with autism spectrum disorders typically involves intact perceptual processing, accompanied by deficits in the social functions of language. In a series of three experiments, the impact of this profile on the perception of regional dialect was examined. Young adults with high-functioning autism exhibited similar performance to a neurotypical comparison group in regional dialect classification and localness rating tasks, suggesting that they can use indexical information in speech to make judgments about the regional background of unfamiliar talkers. However, the participants with high-functioning autism were less able to differentiate among the dialects in an attitude judgment task, suggesting that they do not share social stereotypes related to dialect variation with the neurotypical comparison group.

Colloquia Winter 2011