I
had another surprise a couple of days ago; I was standing with Monty outside
the entrance to a very noisy ice-cream bar.
There were babies crying, a lady begging rather aggressively and an
orderly queue to enter the shop. Finally,
the noise abated and I heard Monty say:-
“Finished
switching ears off!”
Is
there more to this than the emergence of spontaneous and appropriate speech?
Selective Hearing, Elective
hearing and (S)elective mutism
I
once did a course called Noise Control as part of my Engineering degree. I recall that at the start of the course, the
Professor confessed his desire to be able to turn his hearing on and off; clearly
there were some noises he would prefer not to hear.
If
you have children you will have discovered “selective hearing”; whenever you
want them to come for a meal, they just do not seem to hear you. If you offer ice cream though, they will hear
the first time you call.
There
is also the relatively common case of selective mutism, in people with anxiety disorders, they
lose the ability to speak in stressful situations.
I
think that many non-verbal autistic children probably have elective mutism;
they just decide not to speak, or perhaps there is a barrier inside them that
they just cannot get over.
Many
people with autistic children initially go through a phase of thinking their child
is deaf. I know a child who lost his
hearing and then a couple of years later regained it. I met him just after his hearing was restored
and I was convinced he had autism; he had all the characteristics.
Maybe
some autistic children have elective deafness and/or elective mutism and
perhaps a little pharmacological intervention could actually help them overcome
this barrier?
For
Monty, thankfully, these problems are in the past. For him ABA and PECS did the job.
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