R.D. Miller, D.R. McKean
Tetrahedron Letters
Speech and language differences have long been described as important characteristics of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Linguistic abnormalities range from prosodic differences in pitch, intensity, and rate of speech, to language idiosyncrasies and difficulties with pragmatics and reciprocal conversation. Heterogeneity of findings and a reliance on qualitative, subjective ratings, however, limit a full understanding of linguistic phenotypes in autism. This review summarizes evidence of both speech and language differences in ASD. We also describe recent advances in linguistic research, aided by automated methods and software like natural language processing (NLP) and speech analytic software. Such approaches allow for objective, quantitative measurement of speech and language patterns that may be more tractable and unbiased. Future research integrating both speech and language features and capturing “natural language” samples may yield a more comprehensive understanding of language differences in autism, offering potential implications for diagnosis, intervention, and research.
R.D. Miller, D.R. McKean
Tetrahedron Letters
Jannis Born, Matteo Manica
ICLR 2022
Randall B. Lauffer, Thomas J. Brady, et al.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Mani Abedini, Michael Kirley, et al.
Australasian Medical Journal