Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development

Autism has been attributed to a deficit in contextual information processing. Attempts to understand autism in terms of such a defect, however, do not include more recent computational work upon context. This work has identified that context information processing depends upon the extraction and use...

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Main Author: John R. Skoyles
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2011-01-01
Series:Autism Research and Treatment
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/681627
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spelling doaj-c9d7ae013d8b4455a2013b4482b324d62020-11-24T22:15:13ZengHindawi LimitedAutism Research and Treatment2090-19252090-19332011-01-01201110.1155/2011/681627681627Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical DevelopmentJohn R. Skoyles0Centre for Mathematics and Physics in the Life Sciences and Experimental Biology (CoMPLEX), University College London, London NW1 2HE, UKAutism has been attributed to a deficit in contextual information processing. Attempts to understand autism in terms of such a defect, however, do not include more recent computational work upon context. This work has identified that context information processing depends upon the extraction and use of the information hidden in higher-order (or indirect) associations. Higher-order associations underlie the cognition of context rather than that of situations. This paper starts by examining the differences between higher-order and first-order (or direct) associations. Higher-order associations link entities not directly (as with first-order ones) but indirectly through all the connections they have via other entities. Extracting this information requires the processing of past episodes as a totality. As a result, this extraction depends upon specialised extraction processes separate from cognition. This information is then consolidated. Due to this difference, the extraction/consolidation of higher-order information can be impaired whilst cognition remains intact. Although not directly impaired, cognition will be indirectly impaired by knock on effects such as cognition compensating for absent higher-order information with information extracted from first-order associations. This paper discusses the implications of this for the inflexible, literal/immediate, and inappropriate information processing of autistic individuals.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/681627
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John R. Skoyles
spellingShingle John R. Skoyles
Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
Autism Research and Treatment
author_facet John R. Skoyles
author_sort John R. Skoyles
title Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
title_short Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
title_full Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
title_fullStr Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
title_full_unstemmed Autism, Context/Noncontext Information Processing, and Atypical Development
title_sort autism, context/noncontext information processing, and atypical development
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Autism Research and Treatment
issn 2090-1925
2090-1933
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Autism has been attributed to a deficit in contextual information processing. Attempts to understand autism in terms of such a defect, however, do not include more recent computational work upon context. This work has identified that context information processing depends upon the extraction and use of the information hidden in higher-order (or indirect) associations. Higher-order associations underlie the cognition of context rather than that of situations. This paper starts by examining the differences between higher-order and first-order (or direct) associations. Higher-order associations link entities not directly (as with first-order ones) but indirectly through all the connections they have via other entities. Extracting this information requires the processing of past episodes as a totality. As a result, this extraction depends upon specialised extraction processes separate from cognition. This information is then consolidated. Due to this difference, the extraction/consolidation of higher-order information can be impaired whilst cognition remains intact. Although not directly impaired, cognition will be indirectly impaired by knock on effects such as cognition compensating for absent higher-order information with information extracted from first-order associations. This paper discusses the implications of this for the inflexible, literal/immediate, and inappropriate information processing of autistic individuals.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/681627
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