Written by Stephen M.
Edelson, Ph.D.
Center for the Study of Autism, Salem, Oregon
Autistic individuals typically have problems
processing auditory information. One auditory
processing problem occurs when a person hears
speech sounds but he/she does not perceive the
meaning of the sounds. For example, if someone
says the word shoe, the person may
hear the speech sound, but he/she does not understand
the meaning of the sound. Sometimes the lack of
speech comprehension is interpreted by others
as an unwillingness to comply. However, the person
may not be able to retrieve the meaning of the
sound at that particular time.
Eric Courchesne of the University of California
at San Diego has found significant impairments
in auditory processing in autistic individuals
using P300 brain wave technology (see Courchesne,
1987 for a review). The P300 brain wave occurs
300 milli-seconds after the presentation of a
stimulus. (The P refers to the positive
polarity of the brain wave.) The P300 is associated
with cognitive processing, and this brain wave
is considered an indication of long-term memory
retrieval (Donchin, Ritter, & McCallum, 1978).
Edelson et al. (1999) examined auditory P300 activity
prior to and three months following auditory integration
training (AIT). Three autistic individuals participated
in the experimental AIT group and two autistic
individuals participated in a placebo group. Prior
to AIT, all five individuals had abnormal auditory
P300 activity, indicating an auditory processing
problem. Three months following AIT, the results
showed dramatic improvement in P300 activity for
those who received AIT (i.e., a normalization
of P300 activity) and found no change in those
who received the placebo.
We do not know the underlying reason for auditory
processing problems in autism; however, autopsy
research by Drs. Bauman and Kemper have shown
that an area in the limbic system, the hippocampus,
is neurologically immature in autistic individuals
(Bauman & Kemper, 1994). The hippocampus is
responsible for sensory input as well as learning
and memory. Basically, information is transferred
from the senses to the hippocampus, where it is
processed and then transferred to areas of the
cerebral cortex for long-term storage. Since auditory
information is processed in the hippocampus, the
information may not be properly transferred to
long-term memory in autistic individuals.
Auditory processing problems may also be linked
to several autistic characteristics. Autism is
sometimes described as a social-communication
problem. Processing auditory information is a
critical component of social-communication. Other
characteristics that may be associated with auditory
processing problems include: anxiety or confusion
in social situations, inattentiveness, and poor
speech comprehension.
Interestingly, those individuals who do not have
auditory processing problems are often auditory
learners. These children do very well using
the Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) approach,
whereas those who are visual learners do not do
as well with this approach (McEachin, Smith and
Lovaas, 1993). Given this, one might suspect that
many visual learners have auditory processing
problems and that visual learners will do quite
well with a visual communication/instruction approach.
It is also possible to provide visual support
with ABA programs that have an auditory component.
In this way, the visual learner can process the
auditory information more easily.
The better autistic children understand auditory
information, the better they can comprehend their
environment, both socially and academically. The
better we understand the autistic child, the better
we can develop ways to intervene in an effective
manner.
References
Bauman, M.L., & Kemper, T.L. (1994). Neuroanatomic
observations of the brain in autism. In M.L. Bauman
& T.L. Kemper (Eds.), The neurobiology of
autism. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP.
Courchesne, E. (1987). A neurophysiological view
of autism. In E. Schopler & G.B. Mesibov (Eds.),
Neurological issues in autism. New York: Plenum
Press.
Donchin, E., Ritter, W., & McCallum, W.C.
(1978). Cognitive psychophysiology: The endogenous
components of the ERP. In E. Callaway, P. Tueting,
& S. Koslow (Eds.), Event-related brain potentials
in man. New York: Academic Press.
Edelson, S.M., Arin, D., Bauman, M., Lukas, S.E.,
Rudy, J.H., Sholar, M., & Rimland, B. (1999).
Auditory integration training: A double-blind
study of behavioral, electrophysiological, and
audiometric effects in autistic subjects. Focus
on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities,
14, 73-81.
McEachin, J.J., Smith, T., & Lovaas, O.I.
(1993). Long-term outcome for children with autism
who received early intensive behavioral treatment.
American Journal of Mental Retardation, 97, 359-372
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