The main objective is to assess the psycholinguistic and graphomotor characteristics of written production in patients with ASD. The secondary objectives are: * Identifying links between specific deficits of ASD and difficulties in written production. * Identifying links between the severity of ASD and difficulties in written production. The primary evaluation criterion is the quantity of written production, namely the number of words produced in 5 minutes on a text copying task (BHK) and in 15 minutes on each of the two written production tasks (descriptive and persuasive). The secondary evaluation criteria are: * Graphomotor indicators of written production (writing speed, pre-writing time, pause time, writing time, handwriting size, results obtained in BHK (number of words produced, letter height, line parallelism, telescoping, ambiguous letters). * Cognitive and psycholinguistic indicators of written production (presence of titles, presence of paragraphs, number of sentences, number of words per sentence, lexical richness, lexical field, number of action verbs, morphological complexity, number of syntactic markers related to oneself, number of syntactic markers related to others, number of spelling errors, evaluation of the overall quality of the produced text). * Results obtained in tests (writing habits questionnaire, Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale (second edition), Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (fourth edition) - Similarities subtest, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (fourth edition) - Vocabulary subtest, Rey Figure, MASC).
Context : Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is one of the neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) characterized by persistent deficits in communication and social interaction, and restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, and activities (DSM-5 diagnostic criteria; American Psychiatric Association, 2013). These symptoms are present from early developmental stages and correspond to neurological conditions characterized by structural and/or functional brain abnormalities. While diagnosis is typically made in childhood (average age of 4 years (Rogé, 2019)), many adults seek diagnostic evaluation for ASD from autism resource centers (CRA). This is partly due to the diversity of symptoms that can lead to a 'diagnostic odyssey' spanning several years (Rutherford et al., 2016). Even though the dyad identified by DSM-5 allows for precise diagnosis, many other clinical signs can be found in patients with ASD (mood disorders, sleep disorders, impulsivity/hyperactivity, anxiety, motor disorders, language disorders, etc.), which can complicate diagnosis and delay the implementation of early and appropriate intervention. In this context, an interesting avenue is the study of writing characteristics in patients with ASD. Indeed, several studies show that patients with ASD present deficits in motor skills as well as in several psycholinguistic domains such as grammar, morphology, and phonology (Habib et al., 2019). Furthermore, individuals with ASD may exhibit specific semantic and pragmatic impairments (Bishop, 1989). These findings may provide additional useful clues in a perspective of differential diagnosis and understanding of cognitive functioning.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
38
* Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale - fourth edition (Similarities and Vocabulary subtests) * MASC (Movie for assessment of social cognition) * Rey figure * BHK (Quick Writing Assessment Scale) * Descriptive text writing * Persuasive text writing
Centre Hospitalier de Niort
Niort, France
RECRUITINGAssessment of psycholinguistic and graphomotor characteristics of written production in patients with autism spectrum disorder (asd)
Number of words produced in both 3 written production tasks (copy, descriptive text, and persuasive text) : adults with ASD vs adults with typical development
Time frame: 18 months
Identifying links between specific deficits of ASD and difficulties in written production
Identifying links between theory of mind (MASC results), which is one of the main explicative model of the autistic functioning, and number of words produced in both 3 written production tasks. Indeed, the writing activity involves taking into account the recipient, and thus the theory of mind.
Time frame: 18 months
Identifying links between the severity of ASD and difficulties in written production
Identifying links between the severity of ASD (ADOS-2 results) and number of words produced in both 3 written production tasks. Indeed, the severity of ASD can affect the ability to communicate, which is one of the diagnostic criteria of ASD, and thus the ability to produce a text.
Time frame: 18 months
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