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Children with autism spectrum disorder have an...
Journal article

Children with autism spectrum disorder have an exceptional explanatory drive

Abstract

An "explanatory drive" motivates children to explain ambiguity. Individuals with autism spectrum disorders are interested in how systems work, but it is unknown whether they have an explanatory drive. We presented children with and without autism spectrum disorder unsolvable problems in a physical and in a social context and evaluated problem-solving and explanation-seeking responses. In the physical context (but not the social context), the children with autism spectrum disorder showed a stronger explanatory drive than controls. Importantly, the number of explanatory behaviors made by children with autism spectrum disorder in the social context was independent of social and communicative impairments. Children with autism spectrum disorder did not show an exceptional explanatory drive in the social domain. These results suggest that children with autism spectrum disorder have an explanatory drive and that the explanatory drive may be domain specific.

Authors

Rutherford; Subiaul F

Journal

Autism, Vol. 20, No. 6, pp. 744–753

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

August 1, 2016

DOI

10.1177/1362361315605973

ISSN

1362-3613

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