Publication | Closed Access
The Takete—Maluma Phenomenon in Autism Spectrum Disorders
44
Citations
40
References
2013
Year
PsycholinguisticsSocial SciencesPsychologyNeurodiversityAsd ShowPhoneticsAutismNeuropathologyEtiologyAsd ParticipantsCognitive SciencePsychiatryTakete—maluma PhenomenonSyndromic AutismAsd GroupNeurodevelopmental DisordersNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatrySpeech PerceptionMedicineNeurogenic Communication Disorders
It has been reported that people tend to preferentially associate phonemes like /m/, /l/, /n/ to curvilinear shapes and phonemes like /t/, /z/, /r/, /k/ to rectilinear shapes. Here we evaluated the performance of children/adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and neurotypical controls in this audiovisual congruency phenomenon. Pairs of visual patterns (curvilinear vs rectilinear) were presented to a group of ASD participants (low- or high-functioning) and a group of age-matched neurotypical controls. Participants were asked to associate each item to non-meaningful phoneme clusters. ASD participants showed a lower proportion of expected association responses than the controls. Within the ASD group the performance varied as a function of the severity of the symptomatology. These data suggest that children/adolescents with ASD show, although at different degrees as a function of the severity of the ASD, lower phonetic-iconic congruency response patterns than neurotypical controls, pointing to poorer multisensory integration capabilities.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1