Muskett2010

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Muskett2010
BibType ARTICLE
Key Muskett2010
Author(s) Tom Muskett, Mick Perkins, Judy Clegg, Richard Body
Title Inflexibility as an interactional phenomenon: using conversation analysis to re-examine a symptom of autism
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, autism spectrum disorder, inflexibility, play
Publisher
Year 2010
Language
City
Month
Journal Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics
Volume 24
Number 1
Pages 1–16
URL Link
DOI 10.3109/02699200903281739
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Many accounts of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) imply that the condition's behavioural ‘symptoms’ are direct reflexes of underlying deficits. In doing so, however, they invariably overlook the social contexts in which symptomatic behaviours occur and are identified as pathological. This study addresses this issue, using conversation analysis (CA) to examine the emergence of inflexibility, a behavioural trait symptomatic of ASD, during play involving an adult and diagnosed child. We argue that ‘inflexibility’ is the product of the child's strategic attempts to retain control over the unfolding interaction, within a context where such attempts breach normative expectations about adult–child play. Furthermore, it demonstrates that the adult does not resist these attempts, on occasion even explicitly providing opportunity for subsequent inflexibility. This challenges the assumption that ASD's behavioural profile solely represents the endpoint of underlying deficit, and demonstrates how ‘non-impaired’ speakers can be implicated in the manifestation of symptomatic behaviours.

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