Learning in Autism Implicitly Superb /

Background: Although autistic people have shown impairments in various learning and memory tasks, recent studies have reported mixed findings concerning implicit learning in ASD. Implicit skill learning, with its unconscious and statistical properties, underlies not only motor but also cognitive and...

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Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerzők: Németh Dezső
Janacsek Karolina
Szabó-Balogh Virág
Londe Zsuzsa
Mingesz Róbert Zoltán
Fazekas Márta
Jámbori Szilvia
Bálóné Dányi Izabella
Vetró Ágnes
Dokumentumtípus: Cikk
Megjelent: 2010
Sorozat:PLOS ONE 5 No. 7
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0011731

mtmt:1962606
Online Access:http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/20277
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520 3 |a Background: Although autistic people have shown impairments in various learning and memory tasks, recent studies have reported mixed findings concerning implicit learning in ASD. Implicit skill learning, with its unconscious and statistical properties, underlies not only motor but also cognitive and social skills, and it therefore plays an important role from infancy to old age. & Methodology/Principal Findings: We investigated probabilistic implicit sequence learning and its consolidation in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Three groups of children participated: thirteen with high-functioning ASD, 14 age-matched controls, and 13 IQ-matched controls. All were tested on the Alternating Serial Reaction Time Task (ASRT), making it possible to separate general skill learning from sequence-specific learning. The ASRT task was repeated after 16 hours. We found that control and ASD children showed similar sequence-specific and general skill learning in the learning phase. Consolidation of skill learning and sequence-specific learning were also intact in the ASD compared to the control groups. & Conclusions/Significance: These results suggest that autistic children can use the effects/results of implicit learning not only for a short period, but also for a longer stretch of time. Using these findings, therapists can design more effective educational and rehabilitation programs. © 2010 Nemeth et al. 
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700 0 2 |a Szabó-Balogh Virág  |e aut 
700 0 2 |a Londe Zsuzsa  |e aut 
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700 0 2 |a Fazekas Márta  |e aut 
700 0 2 |a Jámbori Szilvia  |e aut 
700 0 2 |a Bálóné Dányi Izabella  |e aut 
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