It is well established that people with autism have impaired face processing, but much less is
known about voice processing in autism. Four experiments were therefore carried out to
assess (1) familiar voice-face and sound-object matching; (2) familiar voice recognition; (3)
unfamiliar voice discrimination; and (4) vocal affect naming and vocal-facial affect matching.
In Experiments 1 and 2 language-matched children with specific language impairment (SLI)
were the controls. In Experiments 3 and 4 language-matched children with SLI and young
mainstream children were the controls. The results were unexpected: the children with
autism were not impaired relative to controls on Experiments 1, 2 and 3, and were superior
to the children with SLI on both parts of Experiment 4, although impaired on affect
matching relative to the mainstream children. These results are interpreted in terms of an
unexpected impairment of voice processing in the children with SLI associated partly, but
not wholly, with an impairment of cross-modal processing. Performance on the experimental
tasks was not associated with verbal or nonverbal ability in either of the clinical groups. The
implications of these findings for understanding autism and SLI are discussed.