Letitia Naigles
Professor/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
165 Scholarly Contributions
Intervention History of Children and Adolescents with High-Functioning Autism and Optimal Outcomes
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Idiosyncratic use of Language and Unusual References in Narratives of Optimal Outcome Children with a History of Autism Spectrum Disorders.
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
How the Speechome Recorder can change our understanding of developmental trajectories
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
How Integrated are Production and Comprehension of Tense/Aspect in Young Children with ASD?
2013
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
High and Lower Order Supported Joint Attention in Autism and Typical Development.
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Growth in naturalistic verb use differs by verb category in toddlers with ASD
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Growth Trajectories of Longitudinal Naturalistic Verb Use in ASD: Verb Category Matters
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Grammatical strengths and weaknesses in children with autism: Multiple comparisons of comprehension and production across development
2013
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Grammatical Aspect Is a Strength in the Language Comprehension of Young Children with Autism
2015
Research Type: Journal Article
General and Specific Predictors of Understanding Tense/Aspect in Young Children with ASD.
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
From one verb to two verbs: The acquisition of serial verb constructions in Mandarin Chinese
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Form is easy, meaning is hard: resolving a paradox in early child language.
2002
Research Type: Journal Article
Form Is Easy, Meaning Is Hard: What Language Comprehension Reveals about Language in Autism
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Flexibility in early verb use: evidence from a multiple-N diary study.
2009
Research Type: Journal Article
Filling a phonological gap: Social semantic training helps more than phonological training
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation