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Molly Losh

Molly Losh

· Jo Ann G. and Peter F. Dolle Professor of Learning Disabilities and Associate Dean for ResearchVerified

Northwestern University

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Papers
Funding$25.0M2 active
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Research topics

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Psychology
  • Developmental psychology
  • Medicine
  • Audiology
  • Neuroscience

Selected publications

  • Verbal entrainment in autism spectrum disorder and first-degree relatives

    Scientific Reports · 2022 · 24 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Psychology
    • Cognitive psychology
    • Developmental psychology

    Entrainment, the unconscious process leading to coordination between communication partners, is an important dynamic human behavior that helps us connect with one another. Difficulty developing and sustaining social connections is a hallmark of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Subtle differences in social behaviors have also been noted in first-degree relatives of autistic individuals and may express underlying genetic liability to ASD. In-depth examination of verbal entrainment was conducted to examine disruptions to entrainment as a contributing factor to the language phenotype in ASD. Results revealed distinct patterns of prosodic and lexical entrainment in individuals with ASD. Notably, subtler entrainment differences in prosodic and syntactic entrainment were identified in parents of autistic individuals. Findings point towards entrainment, particularly prosodic entrainment, as a key process linked to social communication difficulties in ASD and reflective of genetic liability to ASD.

  • A cross-cultural study showing deficits in gaze-language coordination during rapid automatized naming among individuals with ASD

    Scientific Reports · 2021 · 30 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Psychology
    • Audiology
    • Developmental psychology

    Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and their first-degree relatives demonstrate automaticity deficits reflected in reduced eye-voice coordination during rapid automatized naming (RAN), suggesting that RAN deficits may be a genetically meaningful marker of ASD language-related impairments. This study investigated whether RAN deficits in ASD extend to a language typologically distinct from English. Participants included 23 Cantonese-speaking individuals with ASD and 39 controls from Hong Kong (HK), and age- and IQ-comparable groups of previously-studied English-speaking individuals with ASD (n = 45) and controls (n = 44) from the US. Participants completed RAN on an eye tracker. Analyses examined naming time, error rate, measures of eye movement reflecting language automaticity, including eye-voice span (EVS; location of eyes versus the named item) and refixations. The HK-ASD group exhibited longer naming times and more refixations than HK-Controls, in a pattern similar to that observed in the US-ASD group. Cultural effects revealed that both HK groups showed longer EVS and more fixations than US groups. Naming time and refixation differences may be ASD-specific impairments spanning cultures/languages, whereas EVS and fixation frequency may be more variably impacted. A potential underlying mechanism of visual "stickiness" may be contributing to this breakdown in language automaticity in ASD.

Recent grants

Education

  • Postdoctoral Fellow

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    2006
  • Doctorate in Developmental Psychology

    University of California, Berkeley

    2004
  • Bachelor of Arts, Psychology

    San Diego State University

    1998
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