Weak coherence, no theory of mind, or executive dysfunction? Solving the puzzle of pragmatic language disorders

Deficits in pragmatic language ability are common to a number of clinical populations, for example, right-hemisphere damage (RHD), Autism and traumatic brain injury (TBI). In these individuals the basic structural components of language may be intact, but the ability to use language to engage socially is impaired. Despite the nature of these difficulties being well documented, exactly what causes these difficulties is less clear. Furthermore, the current status of causal explanations for pragmatic difficulties across these populations is divergent and sometimes contradictory. This paper explores the empirical validity of three theories that attempt to explain pragmatic language impairment. It is recommended that a new, more convergent approach to investigating the causes of pragmatic language disability be adopted.

[1]  Marjorie Nicholas,et al.  The expression and perception of facial emotion in brain-damaged patients , 1986, Neuropsychologia.

[2]  B. King,et al.  Asperger syndrome: to be or not to be? , 2003, Current opinion in pediatrics.

[3]  J. D. Saddy,et al.  Story arrangement ability in right brain-damaged patients , 1992, Brain and Language.

[4]  Y. Joanette,et al.  Right Hemisphere and Verbal Communication , 1989 .

[5]  U. Frith,et al.  The neuropsychology of autism. , 1996, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[6]  Tony Attwood,et al.  Asperger's Syndrome: A Guide for Parents and Professionals , 1997 .

[7]  William Hirst,et al.  Constraints on the processing of indirect speech acts: Evidence from aphasiology , 1984, Brain and Language.

[8]  P. Jensen,et al.  Narrative and procedural discourse after closed head injury. , 1991, Brain injury.

[9]  I. Rapin,et al.  Executive functioning in high-functioning children with autism. , 2001, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[10]  M. Mesulam,et al.  Developmental learning disabilities of the right hemisphere. Emotional, interpersonal, and cognitive components. , 1983, Archives of neurology.

[11]  Skye McDonald,et al.  Exploring the Cognitive Basis of Right-Hemisphere Pragmatic Language Disorders , 2000, Brain and Language.

[12]  M. Prior,et al.  Autistic children's knowledge of thinking and feeling states in other people. , 1990, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[13]  D. Sperber,et al.  Précis of Relevance: Communication and Cognition , 1987 .

[14]  G. Hynd,et al.  Neurodevelopmental differences in emotional prosody in normal children and children with left and right temporal lobe epilepsy , 1990, Brain and Language.

[15]  C. Frith,et al.  Reading the mind in cartoons and stories: an fMRI study of ‘theory of mind’ in verbal and nonverbal tasks , 2000, Neuropsychologia.

[16]  J. A. Hanson,et al.  Facial affect recognition in children , 1988, Neurology.

[17]  Simon Baron-Cohen,et al.  The Strange Stories Test: A Replication with High-Functioning Adults with Autism or Asperger Syndrome , 1999, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[18]  S. Mcdonald,et al.  Evaluating social skills following traumatic brain injury: the BRISS as a clinical tool. , 1995, Brain injury.

[19]  R. Kaplan,et al.  Dissociation of autonomic and subjective responses to emotional slides in right hemisphere damaged patients , 1994, Neuropsychologia.

[20]  W. Fisher,et al.  Asperger's Syndrome: To be or Not to Be? , 1990, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[21]  P Mitchell,et al.  Overly literal interpretations of speech in autism: understanding that messages arise from minds. , 1997, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines.

[22]  Development of theories of mind in deaf children. , 1998 .

[23]  M. Perkins Is pragmatics epiphenomenal? Evidence from communication disorders , 1998 .

[24]  Connie A. Tompkins,et al.  Influence of Congruent and Incongruent Contexts on Prosodic Mood Recognition by Brain-Damaged Adults , 1985 .

[25]  D. Lancker,et al.  Recognition of emotional‐prosodic meanings in speech by autistic, schizophrenic, and normal children , 1989 .

[26]  C. Braun,et al.  Does severe traumatic closed head injury impair sense of humour? , 1989, Brain injury.

[27]  Howard Gardner,et al.  Surprise but not coherence: Sensitivity to verbal humor in right-hemisphere patients , 1983, Brain and Language.

[28]  Joan C. Borod,et al.  Cerebral mechanisms underlying facial, prosodic, and lexical emotional expression: A review of neuropsychological studies and methodological issues. , 1993 .

[29]  Robert W. Thatcher,et al.  Cyclic cortical reorganization during early childhood , 1992, Brain and Cognition.

[30]  M. Hallett,et al.  Modeling other minds , 1995, Neuroreport.

[31]  H. Gardner,et al.  The comprehension of metaphor in brain-damaged patients. , 1977, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[32]  C. Jarrold,et al.  Linking theory of mind and central coherence bias in autism and in the general population. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[33]  M. Hough Narrative comprehension in adults with right and left hemisphere brain-damage: Theme organization , 1990, Brain and Language.

[34]  M. Eales Pragmatic impairments in adults with childhood diagnoses of autism or developmental receptive language disorder , 1993, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[35]  P Mitchell,et al.  Are individuals with autism and Asperger's syndrome susceptible to visual illusions? , 1999, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[36]  B. Adamovich Information processing, cognition, attention, and communication following closed-head injury. , 1990, Folia phoniatrica.

[37]  S. McDonald,et al.  Requests That Overcome Listener Reluctance: Impairment Associated with Executive Dysfunction in Brain Injury , 1998, Brain and Language.

[38]  Donna B. Pincus,et al.  Distinguishing Lies from Jokes: Theory of Mind Deficits and Discourse Interpretation in Right Hemisphere Brain-Damaged Patients , 1998, Brain and Language.

[39]  L. Turkstra,et al.  Assessment of pragmatic communication skills in adolescents after traumatic brain injury. , 1996, Brain injury.

[40]  J. Russell Autism as an executive disorder , 1997 .

[41]  H. Brownell,et al.  The use of pronoun anaphora and speaker mood in the interpretation of conversational utterances by right hemisphere brain-damaged patients , 1992, Brain and Language.

[42]  B. Murdoch,et al.  A Comparison of the Conversational Skills of Closed Head Injured Children and Normal Children , 1990 .

[43]  D. Levine,et al.  Covariant Defects in Visuospatial Abilities and Recall of Verbal Narrative After Right Hemisphere Stroke , 1986, Cortex.

[44]  Roger Wales,et al.  An investigation of the ability to process inferences in language following right hemisphere brain damage , 1986, Brain and Language.

[45]  M. Siegal,et al.  Where to look first for children's knowledge of false beliefs , 1991, Cognition.

[46]  S. Ozonoff,et al.  A longitudinal study of executive function and theory of mind development in autism , 1994, Development and Psychopathology.

[47]  M. Spiers,et al.  Social cognitive factors in brain injury-associated personality change. , 1994, Brain injury.

[48]  S. McDonald Differential pragmatic language loss after closed head injury: Ability to comprehend conversational implicature , 1992, Applied Psycholinguistics.

[49]  H. Gardner,et al.  The role of the right hemisphere in the apprehension of complex linguistic materials , 1981, Brain and Language.

[50]  M. Beeman Semantic Processing in the Right Hemisphere May Contribute to Drawing Inferences from Discourse , 1993, Brain and Language.

[51]  H. Gardner,et al.  Appreciation of indirect requests by left- and right-brain-damaged patients: The effects of verbal context and conventionality of wording , 1989, Brain and Language.

[52]  H. Brownell,et al.  Discourse ability and brain damage : theoretical and empirical perspectives , 1990 .

[53]  C. Prutting,et al.  Pragmatics as social competence. , 1982, The Journal of speech and hearing disorders.

[54]  M. Siegal,et al.  Insights into theory of mind from deafness and autism. , 2000 .

[55]  M. Marschark,et al.  Psychological perspectives on deafness , 2014 .

[56]  Simon Baron-Cohen,et al.  Can we teach children with autism to understand emotions, belief, or pretence? , 1996, Development and Psychopathology.

[57]  B. Pennington,et al.  Are there emotion perception deficits in young autistic children? , 1990, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[58]  E. Koff,et al.  Channels of emotional expression in patients with unilateral brain damage. , 1985, Archives of neurology.

[59]  S. McDonald Pragmatic Language Skills after Closed Head Injury: Ability to Meet the Informational Needs of the Listener , 1993, Brain and Language.

[60]  Ursula Bellugi,et al.  I. The Neurocognitive Profile of Williams Syndrome: A Complex Pattern of Strengths and Weaknesses , 2000, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[61]  Helen Tager-Flusberg,et al.  Semantic processing in the free recall of autistic children: Further evidence for a cognitive deficit , 1991 .

[62]  M. P. Everard,et al.  The near-normal autistic adolescent , 1974 .

[63]  Michael Siegal,et al.  Representing Inner Worlds: Theory of Mind in Autistic, Deaf, and Normal Hearing Children , 1999 .

[64]  C. Penn,et al.  Compensatory strategies in the language of closed head injured patients. , 1988, Brain injury.

[65]  M. Ghaziuddin,et al.  Pedantic speaking style differentiates asperger syndrome from high-functioning autism , 1996, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[66]  J. Burack,et al.  Perceptual processing among high-functioning persons with autism. , 1999, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[67]  F. Volkmar,et al.  Speech and prosody characteristics of adolescents and adults with high-functioning autism and Asperger syndrome. , 2001, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[68]  Sally Ozonoff,et al.  An Exploration of Right-Hemisphere Contributions to the Pragmatic Impairments of Autism , 1996, Brain and Language.

[69]  Ellen Winner,et al.  Distinguishing irony from deception: Understanding the speaker's second-order intention , 1991 .

[70]  U. Frith,et al.  Autism and Asperger Syndrome , 1992 .

[71]  H. Gardner,et al.  The effects of right hemisphere damage on the pragmatic interpretation of conversational remarks , 1990, Brain and Language.

[72]  A. J. Fridlund,et al.  Visuospatial dysfunction following unilateral brain damage: dissociations in hierarchical and hemispatial analysis. , 1988, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[73]  S. McDonald Exploring the Process of Inference Generation in Sarcasm: A Review of Normal and Clinical Studies , 1999, Brain and Language.

[74]  P. Jensen,et al.  Three discourse profiles of closed-head-injury speakers: theoretical and clinical implications. , 1992, Brain injury.

[75]  S. Baron-Cohen,et al.  Is There a "Language of the Eyes"? Evidence from Normal Adults, and Adults with Autism or Asperger Syndrome , 1997 .

[76]  M. Prior,et al.  Brief report: Neuropsychological testing of autistic children through an exploration with frontal lobe tests , 1990, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[77]  S. Baron-Cohen,et al.  Recognition of Mental State Terms , 1994, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[78]  Howard Gardner,et al.  The Contribution of the Right Hemisphere to the Organization of Paragraphs , 1983, Cortex.

[79]  P. Szatmari,et al.  A follow-up study of high-functioning autistic children , 1989, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[80]  Howard Gardner,et al.  Comprehension of humorous and nonhumorous materials by left and right brain-damaged patients , 1986, Brain and Cognition.

[81]  P. Sommers,et al.  Pragmatic language skills alter closed head injury: Ability to negotiate requests , 1993 .

[82]  C. Mateer,et al.  Right hemisphere appreciation of prosodic and linguistic indications of implicit attitude , 1985, Brain and Language.

[83]  H. Jackson,et al.  Impaired Emotional Recognition Following Severe Head Injury , 1987, Cortex.

[84]  H. Whitaker,et al.  Effects of right and left hemisphere cerebrovascular lesions on discrimination of prosodic and semantic aspects of affect in sentences , 1992, Brain and Language.

[85]  S Baron-Cohen,et al.  Are children with autism deaf to gricean maxims? , 1996, Cognitive neuropsychiatry.

[86]  Richard S. J. Frackowiak,et al.  Other minds in the brain: a functional imaging study of “theory of mind” in story comprehension , 1995, Cognition.

[87]  N. O’connor,et al.  Remembering of words by psychotic and subnormal children. , 1967, British journal of psychology.

[88]  K. V. Van Horn,et al.  Developmental models of social cognition in assessing psychosocial adjustments in head injury. , 1993, Brain injury.

[89]  J. Russell How executive disorders can bring about an inadequate 'theory of mind' , 1997 .

[90]  James Robert Brašić,et al.  Aspergers Syndrome: A Guide for Parents and Professionals , 1999, Neurology.

[91]  A. Karmiloff-Smith,et al.  Is There a Social Module? Language, Face Processing, and Theory of Mind in Individuals with Williams Syndrome , 1995, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[92]  Skye McDonald,et al.  Clinical Insights into Pragmatic Theory: Frontal Lobe Deficits and Sarcasm , 1996, Brain and Language.

[93]  S. Baron-Cohen,et al.  Hey! It was just a joke! Understanding propositions and propositional attitudes by normally developing children and children with autism. , 1997, The Israel journal of psychiatry and related sciences.

[94]  C. Prutting,et al.  Appraisal of communicative competence in head injured adults , 1984 .

[95]  B. Pennington,et al.  Executive function deficits in high-functioning autistic individuals: relationship to theory of mind. , 1991, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[96]  J. Rumsey,et al.  Neuropsychological divergence of high-level autism and severe dyslexia , 1990, Journal of autism and developmental disorders.

[97]  B. Murdoch,et al.  Interpretation and comprehension of linguistic humour by adolescents with head injury: a case-by-case analysis. , 1999, Brain injury.

[98]  M. Lezak Neuropsychological assessment, 3rd ed. , 1995 .

[99]  Uta Frith,et al.  Reading for meaning and reading for sound in autistic and dyslexic children , 1983 .

[100]  Simon Baron-Cohen,et al.  A test of central coherence theory: linguistic processing in high-functioning adults with autism or Asperger syndrome: is local coherence impaired? , 1999, Cognition.

[101]  H. Gardner,et al.  Inference deficits in right brain-damaged patients , 1986, Brain and Language.

[102]  Christine Chiarello,et al.  Right hemisphere language comprehension : perspectives from cognitive neuroscience , 1998 .

[103]  J. Rumsey,et al.  Autistic children as adults: psychiatric, social, and behavioral outcomes. , 1985, Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry.

[104]  J L Bradshaw,et al.  Atypical interference of local detail on global processing in high-functioning autism and Asperger's disorder. , 2000, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[105]  P. Barry,et al.  Rating communication behaviours in the head-injured adult. , 1989, Brain injury.

[106]  B. Murdoch,et al.  Interpretation and comprehension of linguistic humour by adolescents with head injury: a group analysis. , 2000, Brain injury.

[107]  H. Brownell,et al.  Deficits in inference and social cognition: The effects of right hemisphere brain damage on discourse. , 1998 .

[108]  N. Foldi,et al.  Appreciation of pragmatic interpretations of indirect commands: Comparison of right and left hemisphere brain-damaged patients , 1987, Brain and Language.

[109]  M. Coltheart,et al.  Interpreting Ambiguous Advertisements: The Effect of Frontal Lobe Damage , 1998, Brain and Cognition.

[110]  F. Happé Studying weak central coherence at low levels: children with autism do not succumb to visual illusions. A research note. , 1996, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[111]  H. Brownell,et al.  Acquired `theory of mind' impairments following stroke , 1999, Cognition.

[112]  J. Duncan,et al.  Intelligence and the Frontal Lobe: The Organization of Goal-Directed Behavior , 1996, Cognitive Psychology.

[113]  F. Happé Communicative competence and theory of mind in autism: A test of relevance theory , 1993, Cognition.

[114]  U. Frith,et al.  The role of visual and motor cues for normal, subnormal and autistic children. , 1969, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[115]  R. Hobson Autism and the Development of Mind , 1995 .

[116]  U. Frith,et al.  Autism: beyond “theory of mind” , 1994, Cognition.

[117]  M. Barnes,et al.  Knowing the meaning, getting the point, bridging the gap, and carrying the message: Aspects of discourse following closed head injury in childhood and adolescence , 1990, Brain and Language.

[118]  Michael Siegal,et al.  Theory of Mind and Pragmatic Understanding Following Right Hemisphere Damage , 1996, Brain and Language.

[119]  Donald T. Stuss,et al.  Frontal lobes and language , 1989, Brain and Language.