| Literature DB >> 22937240 |
Eric Thiébaut1, Jean-Louis Adrien, Romuald Blanc, Catherine Barthelemy.
Abstract
The Social Cognitive Evaluation Battery (SCEB) is a new instrument for the psychological evaluation of children with autism. The battery consists of 16 scales that measure different cognitive and socioemotional functions. This study reports the results of a reliability analysis and some elements of validation. Analyses are based on the observed performance of 100 children with autism and a convenience sample of 35 normal children. Validation is based on the examination of the structure of the relations between the 16 scale scores of the SCEB, their relations with other measurements, the correspondence between the theoretical developmental ages, and the observed chronological ages and the SCEB's sensitivity to specific disorders. The results show that this new instrument is useful and relevant for the psychological assessment of children with autism.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22937240 PMCID: PMC3428613 DOI: 10.1155/2010/875037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1933
Examples of items taken from the 16 developmental level scales of the SCEB.
| Subscales | Examples of items |
|---|---|
|
| He or she knows how to solicit the adult (by gesture or verbally) to take part or follow with in a parlor game with or without an object |
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| He responds to a simple order |
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| When an adult points to an object, he looks directly at the object indicated |
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| He can comment on his own actions |
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| He understands sentences of two familiar words in context. |
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| He can imitate familiar noises (car engine, horn, machines etc) |
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| He can immediately imitate a gesture that he knows |
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| He recognizes and differentiates his parents |
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| He smiles at the appearance of an object he wants |
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| He can name and indicate the parts of his face |
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| He can perform playful actions with unrelated objects (e.g., simulating phoning or a flying plane with a pen.) |
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| He handles objects in an exploratory way (turning over, shaking, scratching, hitting etc.) |
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| When a mechanical toy stops working, the child looks at it impatiently |
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| He uses the handle of a toy rake to pull a cloth out of a cylinder |
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| He can fit objects of different shapes into each other |
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| An object hidden under one box is moved in view of the child and hidden under another box, the child immediately finds the object under the second box |
Figure 1Illustration of the developmental profile of an 8-year old autistic child.
Age distribution of subjects with Autism.
|
| 2-3 | >3–5 | >5–7 | >7–9 | >9–11 | >11–13 | >13–14 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 6 | 40 | 29 | 15 | 8 | 1 | 1 |
Descriptive statistics of CARS scores.
| Mean | SD | Range | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 39.4 | 5.56 | 30.5–60.0 |
Subscale Internal Consistency for Behavior Observation Grids, internal consistency and intraclass correlation agreement for Developmental Level Scales.
| Subscales | Internal consistency ( | Inter-rater reliability ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Behavior coding | Developmental coding | Developmental coding | ||||
| KR20 | Number of items | Cronbach | Number of items | Intraclass correlation agreement | CCI 95% | |
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| ||||||
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| ||||||
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| .83 | 10 | .80 | 9 | .84 | .68–1.00 |
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| .83 | 15 | .74 | 8 | .90 | .79–1.00 |
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| .81 | 9 | .87 | 10 | .85 | .75–.95 |
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| .91 | 11 | .85 | 7 | .94 | .88–1,00 |
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| .85 | 8 | .90 | 9 | .84 | .75–.93 |
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| .84 | 15 | .84 | 6 | .80 | .68–.92 |
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| .75 | 12 | .79 | 6 | .89 | .80–.98 |
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| .73 | 9 | .80 | 12 | .82 | .70–.94 |
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| .59 | 8 | .73 | 11 | .58 | .38–.78 |
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| ||||||
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| .85 | 18 | .86 | 12 | .76 | .59–.93 |
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| .74 | 7 | .71 | 5 | .89 | .81–.97 |
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| .67 | 6 | .82 | 5 | .77 | .65–.89 |
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| .84 | 16 | .80 | 9 | .89 | .79–.99 |
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| .89 | 14 | .93 | 8 | .84 | .75–.93 |
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| .94 | 19 | .81 | 5 | .81 | .68–.94 |
Figure 2Configuration of SCEB Scores: Plans 1 & 2.
Agreement between theoretical and observed age.
| Subscales | Theoretical developmental age in months | |||
| 4–8 | 8–12 | 12–18 | 18–24 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 5.80a | 7.33 | 4.36 | 21.85 |
| 1.79b | 1.86 | 2.91 | 2.64 | |
|
| 6.00 | 10.33 | 13.63 | 21.40 |
| 1.41 | 1.53 | 2.39 | 2.72 | |
|
| 6.00 | 11.29 | 15.80 | 21.64 |
| 1.41 | 1.60 | 2.17 | 2.65 | |
|
| 6.64 | 14.00 | 14.80 | 21.85 |
| 1.91 | 3.35 | 2.59 | 2.64 | |
|
| 6.30 | 11.00 | 13.00 | 20.71 |
| 1.64 | 1.41 | 2.28 | 3.26 | |
|
| 6.33 | 12.64 | 19.20 | 22.30 |
| 1.94 | 3.38 | 2.68 | 2.50 | |
|
| 5.71 | 12.11 | 17.60 | 22.00 |
| .95 | 2.37 | 2.61 | 2.59 | |
|
| 5.00 | 7.75 | 14.50 | 21.50 |
| .0 | 2.83 | 3.16 | 2.85 | |
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| 5.50 | 9.78 | 15.71 | 21.85 |
| .84 | 2.68 | 2.69 | 2.64 | |
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| 6.25 | 8.00 | 14.73 | 21.46 |
| 1.75 | 2.65 | 3.38 | 3.36 | |
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| 6.64 | 14.38 | 18.90 | 23.00 |
| 1.91 | 3.02 | 3.98 | 2.68 | |
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| 6.14 | 8.67 | 17.76 | 23.60 |
| 1.57 | 2.66 | 3.73 | 2.68 | |
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| 5.71 | 8.25 | 13.38 | 20.94 |
| .95 | 2.22 | 2.92 | 3.02 | |
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| 6.00 | 10.25 | 15.91 | 22.27 |
| 1.41 | 1.25 | 3.02 | 2.57 | |
|
| 6.00 | 8.30 | 13.00 | 20.50 |
| 2.0 | 2.57 | .50 | 3.28 | |
|
| 6.00 | 12.67 | 15.08 | 22.56 |
| 1.41 | 4.04 | 3.59 | 2.35 | |
aMean of observed age.
bSD of observed age.