817
Views
30
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Salience and Context: Interpretation of Metaphorical and Literal Language by Young Adults Diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome

, , , &
Pages 22-54 | Published online: 10 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

Asperger's Syndrome (AS) involves difficulties in social communication but no delays in language or cognitive development. According to the received view, individuals with AS are biased toward the literal and are insensitive to contextual cues. According to the graded salience hypothesis (CitationGiora, 1997, Citation2003), participants with AS and controls would be sensitive to both context and degree of salience rather than to degree of nonliterality. Our results show that while individuals with AS generally performed worse than controls, their overall pattern of response was similar to that of controls: both groups performed worse on novel than on familiar expressions, whether literal or metaphorical; both groups benefited from context, which reduced response times and error rates on novel but not on familiar metaphors; both groups rated negative utterances as more metaphoric than their affirmative counterparts. Individuals with AS, then, are sensitive to context and degree of salience and are not biased toward the literal.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The authors dedicate the article to Inga Eidelman, who passed away shortly after she had finished preparing the program for their studies. The studies reported here were supported by a grant to Rachel Giora by The Israel Science Foundation (grant No. 652/07) and Vice President for Research and Development at TAU Encouragement Fund. The authors wish to thank Tamir Atsmon, the head of Beit Ekstein's Group home Beit Ofek–Afeka, for allowing them access to participants diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome and to relevant information about the participants. Thanks are also extended to Zohar Lev from The Multidisciplinary Center for Individuals Diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome of the Beit Ekstein Group and to Professor Tally Sagie and Dr. Assaf Tripto for information about the diagnostic tests. They also thank Neta Rousso and Dr. Ronit Welgreen for helpful information and for all their help. In particular, they are very grateful to the participants with AS for their cooperation. Additionally, they wish to thank Atar Abramson and Haim Dubossarsky for running Experiment 3 and Yossi Arzouan, Henri Cohen, Miriam Faust, Barbara Hemforth, Barbara Kaup, Itamar Mendelson, Orna Peleg, Yeshayahu Shen, Eran Zaidel, and two reviewers for very helpful comments and criticisms.

Notes

1In Gold and her colleagues' studies relative familiarity was established only for metaphors.

2Given the nosological debate surrounding Asperger's syndrome, our findings reported later need not necessarily generalize to other ASD individuals.

3Some metaphoric items were taken from CitationMashal, Faust, & Hendler (2005).

4Note that in Hebrew there are neither indefinite articles nor capital letters.

5Running the analyses on all the responses, the incorrect ones included, produced the same results.

6This is also the case when all the responses are included in the analysis or when participants, who made either 7 or 8 errors in one of the conditions, are discarded from the analysis.

7Although several of the participants with AS were receiving medication and this may have affected the results of this study, it seems, however, that the most likely effect would be towards diminishing their performance (for example through sedation); this may have influenced the strength but not the direction of the study's results.

8One should note that all the pretests controlling for our items were run on individuals without AS (for the scarcity of individuals with AS). While both groups were matched for age, sex, and education, verbal IQ scores were not collected.

9Specifically, when provided with two types of cues—event knowledge and prosodic cues—participants with ASD were marginally more accurate than when provided with one cue—event knowledge—only, F(1, 17 = 3.9, p = .06 (Mirella Dapretto, personal communication, June 24, 2009).

Log in via your institution

Log in to Taylor & Francis Online

PDF download + Online access

  • 48 hours access to article PDF & online version
  • Article PDF can be downloaded
  • Article PDF can be printed
USD 53.00 Add to cart

Issue Purchase

  • 30 days online access to complete issue
  • Article PDFs can be downloaded
  • Article PDFs can be printed
USD 401.00 Add to cart

* Local tax will be added as applicable

Related Research

People also read lists articles that other readers of this article have read.

Recommended articles lists articles that we recommend and is powered by our AI driven recommendation engine.

Cited by lists all citing articles based on Crossref citations.
Articles with the Crossref icon will open in a new tab.