Âé¶¹´«Ã½AV

Book Chapter

Metacognition in Autism

Details

Citation

Craig K & Grainger C (2020) Metacognition in Autism. In: Volkmar FR (ed.) Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders. New York: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6435-8_102530-1

Abstract
First paragraph: ¡°Metacognition¡± can be thought of as ¡°thinking about thinking.¡± More specifically, metacognition is characterized as one¡¯s awareness of and ability to regulate one¡¯s own mental states (Flavell 1979). John Flavell (1979), who originally termed the definition, established a taxonomy of metacognition, distinguishing between ¡°metacognitive knowledge,¡± an individual¡¯s beliefs and knowledge about cognitions (including declarative knowledge, procedural knowledge, and knowledge about strategy use), and ¡°metacognitive skills,¡± an individual¡¯s ability to assess and control their own cognitive processes. Since Flavell¡¯s seminal work, researchers have reinterpreted and adjusted Flavell¡¯s original definition. Currently, most researchers agree that metacognitive skills involve reflective processes that monitor and increase the efficiency of underlying cognitive processes in a number of ways. Take for example the various adaptive metacognitive processes involved in completing a study task. Metacognitive skills are required to form a representation of one¡¯s existing learning and comprehension, evaluate the demands of the task and subsequently choose the appropriate strategy for task completion, monitor one¡¯s progress towards the task goal (perhaps adjusting strategy use), and reflect on one¡¯s decisions/performance during and after task completion (Flavell 1979; Lai 2011).

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2020
Publication date online10/03/2020
PublisherSpringer
Place of publicationNew York
eISBN978-1-4614-6435-8