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a Ohio State University Medical Centre, Department of
Neurology, 1654 Upham Drive, Columbus, OH, USA, b Department of Neurology, University of Florida College of
Medicine, Box 100236, Gainesville, FL 32610-0236, USA, c Dartmouth
Medical School, Hanover, NH 03756, USA, d Department of Pediatrics, Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Medical Center, One Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA, e College of Arts and Sciences, Florida
State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA, f Department of Psychiatry, g Department of Pediatric Neurology, Massachusetts General
Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
Correspondence to: Dr DQ Beversdorf, Ohio State University Medical Centre, Department of Neurology, 1654 Upham Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, USA. Telephone 001 614 293 8531; fax 001 614 293 4688; email beversdorf.2{at}osu.edu
Received 21 November 1997 and in revised form 7 April 1998;
Accepted 13 May 1998
OBJECTIVE
Several deficits have
been proposed to account for cognitive impairment in autism including
an inability to comprehend the perspectives of others ("theory of
mind"), an inability to process emotional information, and difficulty
drawing together diverse information in context ("central
coherence"). Because context (central coherence) and emotion can
influence memory, a study was designed to show if autism spectrum
disorder was associated with impaired utilisation of context and
emotion in recall; and if impairments in theory of mind processing
would influence recall in autism spectrum disorder.
METHODS
Ten high functioning subjects with autism
spectrum disorder and 13 age and IQ matched controls were tested using
recall tests. In the first coherence memory test, subjects listened to
a series of word lists that were in varying degrees of syntactic and
semantic (coherent) order and were asked to recall the words. In the
second coherence memory test, subjects listened to stories consisting of sentences that were, or were not, in logical (coherent) order. In
the emotional memory test, the subjects listened to sentences that
were highly emotional or non-emotional. In the theory of mind test, the
subjects listened to stories requiring varying levels of understanding
of the perspectives of others.
RESULTS
There were no significant differences
between groups in recall of coherent versus incoherent word lists, nor
was there a significant difference between groups in recall of coherent
versus incoherent stories. However, the control subjects recalled more
of the emotional than non-emotional sentences, whereas the autism
spectrum disorder group did not show such a difference. No significant
difference existed in recall of stories requiring varying levels of
understanding of the perspectives of others among subjects with autism
spectrum disorder, and subjects with autism spectrum disorder did not
differ from control subjects in the influence of theory of mind content on story recall.
CONCLUSION
The study shows that memory
in high functioning adults with autism spectrum disorder is facilitated
by emotional content to a lesser degree than it is facilitated by
coherence. Therefore, impairments in emotional processing cannot be
considered as simply an effect of the "weak central coherence"
theory in autism spectrum disorder. Whereas the reasons for this
emotional deficit are unknown, evidence of abnormalities of the limbic
structures in autism spectrum disorder may provide an anatomical explanation.
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