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Children with diagnoses of either autism or Asperger's syndrome were matched on measures of verbal mental age with nonautistic control children. They were tested on their abilities to process both facial and nonfacial stimuli. There were no significant differences between the low ability autistic and control groups, but the high ability autistic and Asperger's children performed significantly worse than controls across all tests. Group averages masked substantial individual variation. The results are seen as indicating a general perceptual deficit that is not specific to faces or emotions. This appears to be a common correlate of autism and Asperger's syndrome, rather than a core symptom.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/j.1469-7610.1994.tb01808.x

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

1994-09-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

35

Pages

1033 - 1057

Total pages

24

Keywords

Aptitude, Attention, Autistic Disorder, Child, Discrimination Learning, Emotions, Facial Expression, Female, Humans, Intellectual Disability, Intelligence, Male, Mental Recall, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual