Autistic and non-autistic adults use discourse context to determine a speaker’s intention to request
Faith Frost, Marisa Nagano, Emily Zane

TL;DR
The study shows that autistic and non-autistic adults use context similarly to understand if an ambiguous statement is a request or a literal comment.
Contribution
It reveals that emotion-identification ability, not autism diagnosis, predicts how adults interpret ambiguous utterances as requests.
Findings
Autistic and neurotypical adults use context similarly to interpret ambiguous utterances.
Emotion-identification scores predict accurate interpretation of requests better than autism diagnosis.
Executive functioning tests did not significantly influence the interpretation of utterances.
Abstract
The current study focuses on how autistic adults utilize context to determine whether ambiguous utterances (e.g., “I’m thirsty”) are intended as indirect requests or as literal comment/questions. Two questions are addressed: (1) How do autistic adults compare to neurotypical adults in using context to interpret an utterance’s intention as either literal or a request? (2) What cognitive mechanisms correlate with indirect request interpretation, and are these different for participants in each group? Twenty-six autistic and 26 neurotypical college students participated, engaging in an online experiment where they read narratives that ended with utterances open to literal or request interpretations, based on context. After each narrative, participants selected the best paraphrase of the utterance from two options, literal versus request. Following this task, participants completed two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Language Development and Disorders · Reading and Literacy Development
