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Communication deficits are a defining feature of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), manifest during social interactions. Previous studies investigating communicative deficits have largely focused on the perceptual biases, social motivation, cognitive flexibility, or mentalizing abilities of isolated individuals. By embedding autistic individuals in live non-verbal interactions, we characterized a novel cause for their communication deficits. Adults with ASD matched neurotypical individuals in their ability and propensity to generate and modify intelligible behaviors for a communicative partner. However, they struggled to align the meaning of those behaviors with their partner when meaning required referencing their recent communicative history. This communicative misalignment explains why autistic individuals are vulnerable in everyday interactions, which entail fleeting ambiguities, but succeed in social cognition tests involving stereotyped contextual cues. These findings illustrate the cognitive and clinical importance of considering social interaction as a communicative alignment challenge, and how ineffective human communication is without this key interactional ingredient.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.cortex.2019.01.003

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2019-06-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

115

Pages

15 - 26

Total pages

11

Keywords

Conceptual alignment, Human communication, Mentalizing, Social interaction, Theory of mind, Adolescent, Adult, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Communication, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Mentalization, Motivation, Social Behavior, Theory of Mind, Young Adult