No evidence for high inflexible precision of prediction errors in autism during lexical processing

Philippa L Howard*, Ascension Pagan*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Research has shown that information processing differences associated with autism could impact on language and literacy development. This study tested an approach to autistic cognition that suggests learning occurs via prediction errors, and autistic people have very precise and inflexible predictions that result in more sensitivity to meaningless signal errors than non-autistic readers. We used this theoretical background to investigate whether differences in prediction coding influence how orthographic (Experiment 1) and semantic information (Experiment 2) is processed by autistic readers. Experiment 1 used a lexical decision task to test whether letter position information was processed less flexibly by autistic than non-autistic readers. Three types of letter strings: words, transposed letter and substituted letters nonwords were presented. Experiment 2 used a semantic relatedness task to test whether autistic readers processed words with high and low semantic diversity differently to non-autistic readers. Results showed similar transposed letter and semantic diversity effects for all readers; indicating that orthographic and semantic information are processed similarly by autistic and non-autistic readers; and therefore, differences in prediction coding were not evident for these lexical processing tasks.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1775-1785
Number of pages11
JournalAutism Research
Volume16
Issue number9
Early online date27 Jul 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Sept 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Firstly, we would like to thank the people who dedicated their time to take part in this project, who without, this research would not be possible. Secondly, we would like to thank the team at Autistica, who very kindly agreed to advertise this project via the Autistica Discover Network. Thirdly, we would like to thank Tamas Novak (Specialist Psychology Technician, School of Education, University of Bristol), for his instrumental technical support throughout the project.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Autism Research published by International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Research Groups and Themes

  • SoE Centre for Psychological Approaches for Studying Education

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