Katherine Trice
Katherine Trice
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Automatic
Autistic
Word Encoding and Retrieval in Autistic Children: a Web-Based Eye-Tracking Study
A technical session on autistic children’s encoding and retrieval of pragmatically inferred words.
Nov 17, 2023 4:30 PM
Boston, MA
Katherine Trice
,
Angelina DiNardo
,
Zhenghan Qi
Word Learning through Pragmatic Inference in Children with Autism: a Web-Based Eye-Tracking Study
A talk on autistic children’s encoding and retrieval of pragmatically inferred words.
Nov 3, 2023 11:00 AM
Boston, MA
Katherine Trice
,
Angelina DiNardo
,
Zhenghan Qi
Multimodal Statistical Learning in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
A talk on autistic children’s neural plasticity during statistical learning.
Mar 11, 2023 9:00 AM
Durham, NC
Anqi Hu
,
Katherine Trice
,
Violet Kozloff
,
Amanda Owen Van Horn
,
Diane Chugani
,
Zhenghan Qi
Project
No Advantage of Pragmatic Inference for Vocabulary Retention in Children with Autism.
A poster on autistic children’s encoding and retrieval of pragmatically inferred words.
Mar 10, 2023 2:30 PM
Durham, NC
Katherine Trice
,
Anna Papafragou
,
Zhenghan Qi
PDF
Project
Brain, Language, and Autism Study (BLAST)
How do different modalities and domains of statistical learning skills grow and change across development in different populations, and what brain systems and connectivities underpin this? In this collection of projects, we use online statistical learning in the MRI to tease apart the developmental time-course of statistical learning in neurotypical individuals and determine how it differs in autistic children. We critically examine hypotheses of invariance, change, and domain-general vs language-specific mechanisms in statistical learning, and chart out the neural underpinnings of behavioral differences and connections to language development across our groups. Major contributions: Explore the neural development of statistical learning in neurotypical children and adults using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) techniques, particularly MVPA; delineate how variations in structural connectivity in autistic and neurotypical children relate to statistical learning outcomes
Mentalization in Development (MIND)
How does the need to make pragmatic inferences to map words impact novel word meaning memory? In this collection of projects, we examine how the cognitive and neural basis of theory of mind modulate word learning outcomes in neurotypical and autistic adults and children, and how and why this may differ between individuals and groups. Major contributions: Empirically demonstrate stronger retention of pragmatically inferred over directly mapped words in neurotypical adults, older typically developing children, and a sub-group of autistic children, and a lack of it in younger typically developing children and a subgroup of autistic children; explore a significant modulating effect of theory of mind skills via both behavioral correlations and priming; conceptualize, design, program, and pilot neuro-imaging extensions of this project in neurotypical and autistic adults using fMRI (BOLD activation, MVPA, and functional connectivity) and EEG (pseudo-hyperscanning)
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