๐ค AI Summary
This study investigates the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying the processing of doubly embedded recursive possessive constructions in Mandarin among children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Using event-related potentials (ERPs) combined with a sentenceโpicture matching paradigm, the research compares online syntactic processing between children with ASD and typically developing peers. The findings reveal that children with ASD exhibit early perceptual atypicalities, as indexed by reduced P200 amplitude, and a core deficit in syntactic reanalysis, evidenced by attenuated and delayed P600 responses along with an absence of the posterior grammaticality effect. In contrast, lexical-semantic processing, reflected by the N400 component, remains relatively intact. These results support the modularity hypothesis of language, demonstrating a selective impairment in syntactic recursion in ASD while sparing other linguistic domains.
๐ Abstract
Recursive structures are a core property of human language, yet little is known about how children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) process complex recursion. This ERP study investigated the online processing of two-level recursive possessive structures in Mandarin-speaking children with ASD (n = 12) compared to typically developing (TD) peers (n = 12) using a sentence-picture matching paradigm. ERPs were analyzed for P200 (150-250 ms), N400 (300-500 ms), and P600 (500-1000 ms). Results showed that ASD children exhibited significantly reduced P200 amplitudes and failed to show the typical posterior grammaticality effect, indicating atypical early perceptual processing. No robust N400 violation effect was observed in either group, confirming the mismatch was not a semantic anomaly; however, ASD children showed a reversed anterior effect and an attenuated posterior effect. For the P600, ASD children had significantly reduced amplitudes, no posterior grammaticality effect, and a trend toward delayed latency, reflecting a core deficit in syntactic reanalysis. These findings demonstrate that while lexical-semantic processing is relatively preserved in ASD, the online syntactic computation required for recursion is severely impaired, supporting modular dissociation accounts of language in autism.