The main aim of the present study was to compare pictures and words with respect to access
to semantic systems in autism using a semantic priming paradigm. A word completion task
was conducted using both within-modality (word–word, WW) and cross-modality (picture–word,
PW) conditions on a group of high-functioning adolescents and adults with autism
(N = 20) and a control group (N = 20) matched on chronological age, mental age, Verbal
IQ and Performance IQ. Both groups showed semantic priming effects in both modality
conditions, generating significantly more responses for related prime-target pairs than for
unrelated pairs. Although the control group performed similarly on both priming tasks, the
autistic group performed significantly better on a PW task than on a WW task. These
findings suggest the possible advantage of pictures over words in access to semantics in
autism. The theoretical implications are discussed in terms of functional asymmetry between
verbal and pictorial semantic operations that may be specific to autism.