The use of formal language as a strong sign of verbal autistic children in diglossic communities: The case of Arabic

The current study aimed to investigate whether the use of formal language (Modern Standard Arabic [MSA]) by young children in diglossic Arab communities offers diagnostic insights, especially for verbal autistic children and to further explore this phenomenon. We used a cohort study design, with 4-6...

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Published in:Autism research
Main Authors: Francis, Konstantinos, Alshammari, Nasser, Alsulaihim, Nailah, Aboukhamseen, Suja, El Dardiri, Mohammad, AlRashidi, Fawzeiah, Ridha, Hashem Almutaz, Al-Hassan, Mada, Terzi, Arhonto
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 20-09-2024
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Summary:The current study aimed to investigate whether the use of formal language (Modern Standard Arabic [MSA]) by young children in diglossic Arab communities offers diagnostic insights, especially for verbal autistic children and to further explore this phenomenon. We used a cohort study design, with 4-6-year-old fluent first language Arabic-speaking children attending Arabic Kindergartens in two representative Kuwait governates. Reported cases for MSA use were assessed via a computer-based structured language test and corroborated cases were further assessed for exposure to sources of MSA, verbal IQ, temperamental characteristics, and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Four children from the same class without developmental difficulties were selected for each MSA user as control group. The frequency of MSA use among verbal pre-schoolers was 0.46%. Use of MSA did not correlate with parents' education, amount of exposure to MSA, verbal IQ, but with severity of ASD. Predicted probability of ASD in the presence of MSA was 0.86. Executive functions of ASD-MSA users were similar to those of the control group and significantly higher than unselected autistic peers in the literature. The use of MSA has the potential to serve as a strong sign for the diagnosis of verbal autistic children, often missed or delayed in being diagnosed. We also discuss strategies via which language is acquired in ASD.
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ISSN:1939-3792
1939-3806
1939-3806
DOI:10.1002/aur.3237