Affiliation of Author, Researcher, or Creator

School of Communication

Department

Communication Sciences and Disorders

Author(s)

Jonet Artis, Rhiannon J Luyster, Lily Carroll, Angela Xiaoxue He, Sudha Arunachalam

Resource Type

Article

Publication, Publisher or Distributor

Journal of Cognition and Development

Publication Date

3-5-2025

Brief Description

This research paper explores the role of speaker, listener and real-time social attention for pronoun comprehension in autistic and nonautistic children in the northeast United States. We assessed the pronoun comprehension of 22 autistic children (average age of 62 months, range 46–80 months) and 22 nonautistic children (average age 44 months, range 30–57 months) matched on expressive vocabulary scores. We evaluated the first- and second-person possessive pronoun comprehension (“my” and “your”) using a game in which two experimenters hid stickers and provided clues to their location by providing a verbal clue (e.g. “It’s in your box”) with accompanying gaze to the addressee. We also coded each child’s gaze to the speaker during the pronoun comprehension task. Findings suggest that both autistic and nonautistic children comprehend first- and second-person pronouns at levels above chance. Nonautistic children performed better at comprehending second-person pronouns than autistic children. For both groups, children were more accurate in their comprehension of the second-person pronoun “your” when it referred to themselves versus when it referred to the experimenter; errors more commonly reflected “self-bias” rather than pronoun reversal errors. Children who gazed at the speaker performed better in comprehending second-person pronouns than children who did not. Our results reveal considerable overlap in the strengths and challenges of young language learners with and without autism. Our findings suggest that children may benefit from repeated experiences across varied conversational settings – including addressed and non-addressed speech – to practice the synchronization of semantics and pragmatics in their ongoing mastery of language.

Keywords

pronoun comprehension, autistic children, non-autistic children

Recommended Citation

Artis, J., Luyster, R. J., Carroll, L., He, A. X., & Arunachalam, S. (2025). Personal Pronoun Comprehension in Addressed and Non-Addressed Situations in Autistic and Nonautistic Preschoolers. Journal of Cognition and Development, 1–24. https://doi.org/10.1080/15248372.2025.2470236

Preferred Citation Style

APA

Peer Reviewed

1

License Agreement

1

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