The Level and Nature of Autistic Intelligence

Michelle Dawson(Hôpital Rivière-des-Prairies), Isabelle Soulières(Hôpital Rivière-des-Prairies), Morton Ann Gernsbacher(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Laurent Mottron(Hôpital Rivière-des-Prairies)
Psychological Science
July 31, 2007
Cited by 536

Abstract

Autistics are presumed to be characterized by cognitive impairment, and their cognitive strengths (e.g., in Block Design performance) are frequently interpreted as low-level by-products of high-level deficits, not as direct manifestations of intelligence. Recent attempts to identify the neuroanatomical and neurofunctional signature of autism have been positioned on this universal, but untested, assumption. We therefore assessed a broad sample of 38 autistic children on the preeminent test of fluid intelligence, Raven's Progressive Matrices. Their scores were, on average, 30 percentile points, and in some cases more than 70 percentile points, higher than their scores on the Wechsler scales of intelligence. Typically developing control children showed no such discrepancy, and a similar contrast was observed when a sample of autistic adults was compared with a sample of nonautistic adults. We conclude that intelligence has been underestimated in autistics.


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