Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

Linguistic recursion and Autism Spectrum Disorder

Abstract

Both first-order and second-order false-belief mastery are important in acquisition of Theory of Mind. Our logicalanalysis of second-order false-belief tasks shows that this sort of reasoning involves recursion. Language involves recursion aswell; recursive possessive and complements clauses are examples.Second-order social reasoning depends on both individual cognitive resources and immersion in a wide range of interactivecontexts. But since the ‘usual’ interactive contexts do not make the same sense to children with Autism Spectrum Disorder(ASD), it has been proposed that they use language as scaffolding in false-belief understanding.We hypothesize that competency in linguistic recursion predicts second-order false-belief mastery for children with ASD.We investigate this by training children with ASD to better comprehend and produce recursive possessive and complementclauses. We have developed and validated a tool to measure the recursion competency in the Danish language, and we applythis in a randomized controlled training study.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View