jiddt

Journal of Intellectual Disability - Diagnosis and Treatment

Structural and Functional Neuroimaging of Restricted and Repetitive Behavior in Autism Spectrum Disorder
Pages 21-34
Jenna M. Traynor and Geoffrey B.C. Hall

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2015.03.01.4

Published: 26 March 2015

 


Abstract: A prominent symptom of Autism Spectrum Disorder includes restricted and repetitive behaviours. This symptom has been divided into three subtypes: repetitive motor behaviour, insistence on sameness and circumscribed interests. In the past, the neural correlates of these behaviours have been largely understudied. More recently, neuroimaging studies have pointed to a number of neural networks that may underlay these behaviours. However, results from this work have been varied and remain difficult to integrate. The purpose of this review is to summarize recent neuroimaging studies on restricted and repetitive behaviours in autism, and to provide an organized framework that will permit a clearer understanding of the neural correlates of these behaviours. Using a developmental perspective, this review will identify that there are distinct and overlapping neural networks that are associated with repetitive motor behaviour, insistence on sameness and circumscribed interests. In addition, this review will identify a series of executive and affective function tasks that have proven efficacious in the study of repetitive behaviour.

Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder, neuroimaging, repetitive behaviour, repetitive motor behaviour, insistence on sameness, circumscribed interests.
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Journal of Intellectual Disability - Diagnosis and Treatment

Functional Measurement of Special Education Teachers’ and Students’ Expectations Toward Job Training for Persons with Intellectual Disability
Pages 35-42
Guadalupe Elizabeth Morales-Martinez, Ernesto Octavio Lopez-Ramirez, Maria Guadalupe Villarreal-Treviño and Yanko Norberto Mezquita-Hoyos

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2015.03.01.5

Published: 26 March 2015

 


Abstract: Persons with intellectual disability (PWID) have fewer opportunities for enrolment in school programs and post-school employment than do their peers with typical development. Evidence suggests that attitude toward PWID is a main factor in either promoting or limiting better life conditions for this population. In this paper, the goal was to determine the cognitive information integration rules underlying the expectations of 174 special education teachers and students with regard to job training for PWID. In order to accomplish this goal, four factors (Gender, Severity of disability, Type of task, and Emotional traits) were orthogonally combined to implement a cognitive algebra study design. We obtained 48 experimental conditions, with each one presented as a scenario describing a PWID in a work training situation. Participants read these scenarios and were asked to judge the probability of the success of PWID with regard to learning the skills needed to complete the required work.Patterns of response allowed us to identify low, moderate, and high viewpoints with regard to participants’ judgments of predicted success. Personal factors (Emotional traits and Severity of disability) and the Type of task factor were considered the most important in influencing the participants’ judgment. These factors seemed to be integrated in a complex systematic cognitive pattern. Implications from this type of result with regard to PWID and work training are discussed in this paper.

Keywords: Intellectual disability, attitudes, special education teachers, work training, cognitive algebra.
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Journal of Intellectual Disability - Diagnosis and Treatment

Might we be Calling Problems Seen in Autism Spectrum Conditions: ‘Poor Theory of Mind,’ when Actually they are Related to Non-Generalised ‘Object Permanence’?
Pages 43-48
Wenn B. Lawson and Brynn A. Dombroski

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2015.03.01.6

Published: 26 March 2015

 


Abstract: Autism spectrum conditions (ASC) and the delayed development of object permanence is often not questioned, and is rarely understood. The following paper attempts to explore this idea and suggests reasons for why such development is delayed and the possibility that certain difficult behaviours seen in children with ASC are less likely to be connected to having poor theory of mind and more connected to lacking generalized concepts of object permanence.

Keywords: Autism Spectrum Conditions, Theory of Mind, Object Permanence, Challenging Behaviour.
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Speech and Language Issues in Children with Prader-Willi Syndrome
Pages 164-168
Jennifer L. Miller and Sara S. Plager

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2014.02.03.2

Published: 19 December 2014

 


Abstract: Background: Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a genetic disorder caused by the lack of the paternal contribution of Chromosome 15q11.2-q13.2 region.It is associated with global developmental delays, including speech and language delay.There is no information regarding the prevalence of apraxia of speech in this syndrome, despite the fact that it is often recognized clinically.In this study, we sought to investigate the prevalence of apraxia in children with PWS and speech and language delay.

Methods: Thirty children with genetically confirmed PWS, ages 22 months to 9 years of age, were evaluated by a certified speech-language pathologist due to physician concerns about speech and language development.Children were assessed by a variety of tests based on their age.

Results: Sixteen children had receptive language deficits and 18 had expressive language deficits.Fourteen of the thirty children (47%) had results on evaluation that were consistent with apraxia, of which 57% were male, and 71% (p<0.001) had deletion-type PWS.

Conclusion: As expected, children with PWS who are referred for concerns about speech and language development are commonly found to have receptive and expressive language deficits.However, there was a high prevalence of apraxia in our patients, which has not previously been reported in this population.We recommend that children with PWS be evaluated for apraxia by a speech-language pathologist once their expressive language skills are developed enough for speech assessment.The diagnosis of apraxia will necessitate specific speech therapy techniques which may not otherwise be used for individuals with this syndrome, thus resulting in more severe and prolonged speech delays.

Keywords: Prader-Willi syndrome, apraxia, speech delay.
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