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by
Bruce Bower
There's more to the intelligence of autistic people
than meets the IQ. Unlike most individuals, children
and adults diagnosed as autistic often score much
higher on a challenging, nonverbal test of abstract
reasoning than they do on a standard IQ test,
say psychologist Laurent Mottron of Hôpital
Rivière-des-Prairies in Montreal and his
colleagues.
The same autistic individuals who score near or
below the IQ cutoff for "low functioning"
or "mental retardation" achieve average
or even superior scores on a test that taps a
person's ability to infer rules and to think abstractly
about geometric patterns, Mottron's team reports
in the August Psychological Science.
"Intelligence has been underestimated in
autistics," Mottron says. Autistic people
solve problems and deploy neural resources in
unusual ways, which are poorly understood and
might contribute to problems with IQ tests, he
asserts.
Mottron regards autism as a variant of healthy
neural development. For that reason, his group-including
study coauthor Michelle Dawson, herself diagnosed
as autistic-prefers the term "autistic"
to "person with autism."
The researchers studied 38 autistic children,
ages 7 to 16; 13 autistic adults, ages 16 to 43;
24 nonautistic children, ages 6 to 16; and 19
nonautistic adults, ages 19 to 32.
Volunteers completed an age-appropriate IQ test
and a Raven's Progressive Matrices test. The latter
test includes 60 items, each consisting of a series
of related geometric designs and a choice of six
or eight alternative designs, one of which completes
the series.
The nonautistic children and adults scored slightly
above the population average on both tests.
In contrast, autistic kids and adults scored far
higher on the Raven's test than they did on the
IQ tests. These youngsters' average IQ was substantially
below the population average, but their average
score on the Raven's test was in the normal range.
One-third of autistic children qualified as "low
functioning" by IQ, but only 5 percent did
so by Raven's scores. Moreover, another third
of the autistic children achieved "high intelligence"
on the Raven's test.
As in previous research, autistic volunteers performed
well on an IQ task that required them to reproduce
geometric designs using colored blocks.
The new findings confirm prior indications that
autistics score poorly on IQ tests despite processing
perceptual information well, comments psychologist
Uta Frith of University College London. In a 2000
study, Frith's team noted that autistic and nonautistic
children made equally rapid and accurate visual
judgments, such as discerning which of two lines
was longer.
In people with autism, a lack of social insight
derails the ability to acquire skills and information
from others, a key to IQ success, Frith theorizes.
Autistics thus succeed only on self-explanatory
tasks, such as the Raven's test.
The Raven's test may measure autistic intelligence
better than an IQ test does, adds psychologist
Helen Tager-Flusberg of Boston University. Nonetheless,
many autistic children are extremely impaired
intellectually, she says.
Researchers generally sell short the unique features
of autistic intelligence, Dawson responds. For
example, autistics shift flexibly back and forth
between focusing on details of a scene or its
overall configuration, whereas nonautistics single-mindedly
concentrate on the big picture, she says.
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