On acquiring a complex personal reference system: experimental results from Thai children with autism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.60.2018.468Abstract
Reference of pronouns may be constrained via lexical presuppositions, including
marked F-features, implicated presuppositions, and deictic center shifting in certain languages.
This paper explores the acquisition of personal reference terms in Thai, a language that has
a highly complex personal reference system. The participants of the study were 67 typicallydeveloping
children (TD) and 29 children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), a population
which has long been observed to have difficulties with pronouns. The children were asked to
complete simple production and comprehension tasks on personal reference terms. Overall,
ASD children performed on par in production but significantly poorer in comprehension than
TD children. Given the freedom of choice in the production task, ASD children preferred using
fixed referential terms for self-reference, whereas TD children opted for personal pronouns. In
terms of comprehension, ASD children were shown to generally be able to detect the person
features but they seemed to struggle the most with the pragmatic aspects of personal reference
terms. Our results support previous literature that lexical presuppositions are acquired
earlier than implicated presuppositions. We add to the literature that the types or the amount of
implicated presuppositions matter in acquisition.
Keywords: implicated presupposition, pragmatic inference, pronoun, personal reference, acquisition,
deixis, Thai