| Literature DB >> 26864157 |
Louise Neil1, Nora Choque Olsson2, Elizabeth Pellicano3,4.
Abstract
Guided by a recent theory that proposes fundamental differences in how autistic individuals deal with uncertainty, we investigated the extent to which the cognitive construct 'intolerance of uncertainty' and anxiety were related to parental reports of sensory sensitivities in 64 autistic and 85 typically developing children aged 6-14 years. Intolerance of uncertainty and anxiety explained approximately half the variance in autistic children's sensory sensitivities, but only around a fifth of the variance in typical children's sensory sensitivities. In children with autism only, intolerance of uncertainty remained a significant predictor of children's sensory sensitivities once the effects of anxiety were adjusted for. Our results suggest intolerance of uncertainty is a relevant construct to sensory sensitivities in children with and without autism.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Intolerance of uncertainty; Sensory sensitivities
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26864157 PMCID: PMC4860201 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-016-2721-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Group characteristics of autistic and typically developing children
| Measures | Autistic children (n = 64) | Typically developing children (n = 85) |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | ||
| M (SD) | 10.36 (2.36) | 9.15 (1.87) |
| Range | 6.37–14.70 | 6.00–13.76 |
| Verbal IQ | ||
| Mean (SD) | 97.33 (16.36) | 111.02 (12.16) |
| Range | 57–130 | 79–149 |
| Performance IQ | ||
| Mean (SD) | 100.31 (15.40) | 105.62 (13.21) |
| Range | 73–134 | 75–132 |
| Full-scale IQ | ||
| Mean (SD) | 98.58 (14.93) | 109.47 (11.64) |
| Range | 70–129 | 78–135 |
| SCQ | ||
| Mean (SD) | 24.27 (9.01), n = 63 | 3.54 (3.24), n = 84 |
| Range | 5–46 | 0–14 |
| ADOS | ||
| Mean (SD) | 10.42 (3.75), n = 55 | |
| Range | 3–20 | |
Verbal IQ, performance IQ and full-scale IQ were all measured using the WASI-II (Wechsler 2011)
SCQ = Social Communication Questionnaire (Rutter et al. 2003). A score of 15 or above indicates elevated levels of autistic symptomology; ADOS = Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (Lord et al. 2000, 2012). Scores of 7 or above indicate the presence of an ASD
Descriptive statistics by group for total scores on the Intolerance of Uncertainty scale, Short Sensory Profile and Spence Children’s Anxiety scale in children with autism and typically developing children
| Measures | All autistic children (n = 64) | All typically developing children (n = 85) | Matched autistic children (n = 40) | Matched typically developing children (n = 40) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IUS | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 39.70 (11.19) | 21.02 (8.39) | 38.93 (10.87) | 20.83 (8.72) |
| Range | 18–59 | 12–47 | 18–59 | 12–42 |
| SSP | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 114.78 (28.34) | 166.56 (18.77) | 113.08 (28.18) | 166.45 (20.86) |
| Range | 63–181 | 96–190 | 63–181 | 96–190 |
| SCAS | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 33.59a (20.52) | 15.51a (9.47) | 30.85 (19.83) | 15.80 (10.20) |
| Range | 6–77 | 3–44 | 6–76 | 3–44 |
IUS = Intolerance of Uncertainty scale (higher scores reflect greater intolerance of uncertainty); SSP = Short Sensory Profile (high scores reflect fewer sensory sensitivities); SCAS = Spence Children’s Anxiety scale (higher scores reflect greater anxiety)
aThe mean SCAS score reported for our autistic sample is similar to that reported by Nauta et al. (2004) in a sample of 484 anxiety disordered children aged 6–11 years (Boys: M = 31.4, SD = 12.9; Girls: M = 33.0; SD = 13.5). Similarly, the mean SCAS score in our typical group is similar to those Nauta et al. report for their typical group (n = 261; Girls: M = 16.0, SD = 11.6; Boys: M = 15.9; SD = 9.0)
Pearson’s correlations between scores on the Intolerance of Uncertainty scale, Short Sensory Profile and the Spence Children’s Anxiety scale and background variables (age, ability and autistic symptomatology), for children with autism (n = 64) and typically developing children (n = 85)
| R | Gender | Age | Ability | SCQ | ADOS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IUS | |||||
| Autistic children | .05 | .02 | .19 | .40* | .07 |
| Typically developing children | .25 | −.03 | −.17 | ||
| SSP | |||||
| Autistic children | .05 | .23 | .01 | −.37* | −.06 |
| Typically developing children | −.02 | .14 | .18 | ||
| SCAS | |||||
| Autistic children | −.02 | −.10 | .01 | .38* | −.01 |
| Typically developing children | .18 | −.18 | −.16 | ||
IUS = Intolerance of Uncertainty scale (higher scores reflect greater intolerance of uncertainty); SSP = Short Sensory Profile (high scores reflect fewer sensory sensitivities); SCAS = Spence Children’s Anxiety scale—Parent version (higher scores reflect greater anxiety); Ability = Summed raw scores on the four subtests of the Wechsler Abbreviated Scales of Intelligence, 2nd Edition; SCQ = Social Communication Questionnaire; ADOS = Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (n = 52). Higher scores on the SCQ and ADOS reflect greater autistic symptoms
* p < .01
Pearson’s correlations between scores on the Intolerance of Uncertainty scale, Short Sensory Profile and Spence Children’s Anxiety scale for children with autism (n = 64) and typically developing children (n = 85)
| IUS-P | SSP | SCAS | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IUS | |||
| Children with autism | – | ||
| Typical children | – | ||
| SSP | |||
| Children with autism | −.67* | – | |
| Typical children | −.37* | – | |
| SCAS | |||
| Children with autism | .74* | −.68* | – |
| Typical children | .59* | −.38* | – |
IUS = Intolerance of Uncertainty scale (parent report, higher scores reflect greater intolerance of uncertainty); SSP = Short Sensory Profile (high scores reflect fewer sensory sensitivities); SCAS = Spence Children’s Anxiety scale (parent report, higher scores reflect greater anxiety)
* p < .01
Fig. 1Scatterplots showing the relationship between parent reported Intolerance of Uncertainty scale scores and Short Sensory Profile scores (a), Spence Children’s Anxiety scale scores and Short Sensory Profile scores (b) and Intolerance of Uncertainty scale scores and Spence Children’s Anxiety scale scores (c) in both autistic and typically developing children. Higher scores on the Intolerance of Uncertainty scale and Spence Children’s Anxiety scale indicate greater levels of symptoms. Higher scores on the Short Sensory Profile indicate lower levels of symptoms
Intolerance of Uncertainty scale scores and Spence Children’s Anxiety scale scores as predictors of Short Sensory Profile scores in children with autism and typically developing children
|
| ∆ | ∆ | β | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children with autism (n = 64) | ||||
| Model 1 | .45 | .45 | 50.01* | |
| IUS | −.67* | |||
| Model 2 | .52 | .08 | 9.63* | |
| IUS | −.37* | |||
| SCAS | −.41* | |||
| Typically developing children (n = 85) | ||||
| Model 1 | .14 | .14 | 13.49* | |
| IUS | −.37* | |||
| Model 2 | .18 | .04 | 3.76 | |
| IUS | −.23 | |||
| SCAS | −.24 | |||
IUS-P = Intolerance of Uncertainty scale (higher scores reflect greater intolerance of uncertainty); SCAS = Spence Children’s Anxiety scale (higher scores reflect greater anxiety)
* p < .01
Fig. 2Models of intolerance of uncertainty as a predictor of sensory sensitivities, mediated by anxiety, for children with autism (a) and typically developing children (b). The confidence intervals for the indirect effect is a BCa bootstrapped CI based on 1000 samples
Fig. 3Models of autism diagnosis as a predictor of anxiety, mediated by intolerance of uncertainty (a) and as a predictor of sensory sensitivities, mediated by intolerance of uncertainty (b). The confidence intervals for the indirect effect is a BCa bootstrapped CI based on 1000 samples