2023
DOI: 10.1002/aur.3079
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Receptive language and receptive‐expressive discrepancy in minimally verbal autistic children and adolescents

Yanru Chen,
Brynn Siles,
Helen Tager‐Flusberg

Abstract: Among the approximately one‐third of autistic individuals who experience considerable challenges in acquiring spoken language and are minimally verbal (MV), relatively little is known about the range of their receptive language abilities. This study included 1579 MV autistic children and adolescents between 5 and 18 years of age drawn from the National Database for Autism Research and the SFARI Base data repository. MV autistic children and adolescents demonstrated significantly lower receptive language compar… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Reports of the receptive/expressive relationship note that standard measures of expressive language show stronger expressive versus receptive skill, with children across the entire autism spectrum (e.g., Hudry et al, 2010). Within an exclusively minimally verbal samples age 5-18, the opposite was found, with receptive scores higher than expressive ones (Chen et al, 2024). The present Profiles 2 and 3, with an exclusively minimally verbal sample, in children age 3-8, also show a stronger receptive versus expressive skill.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports of the receptive/expressive relationship note that standard measures of expressive language show stronger expressive versus receptive skill, with children across the entire autism spectrum (e.g., Hudry et al, 2010). Within an exclusively minimally verbal samples age 5-18, the opposite was found, with receptive scores higher than expressive ones (Chen et al, 2024). The present Profiles 2 and 3, with an exclusively minimally verbal sample, in children age 3-8, also show a stronger receptive versus expressive skill.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%