| Literature DB >> 27716799 |
Paige M Siper1,2, Vance Zemon3, James Gordon4, Julia George-Jones1,2, Stacey Lurie1,3, Jessica Zweifach1,3, Teresa Tavassoli5, A Ting Wang1,2,6,7, Jesslyn Jamison1,2, Joseph D Buxbaum1,2,6,7,8,9, Alexander Kolevzon1,2,7,9,9.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: There is a critical need to identify biomarkers and objective outcome measures that can be used to understand underlying neural mechanisms in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Visual evoked potentials (VEPs) offer a noninvasive technique to evaluate the functional integrity of neural mechanisms, specifically visual pathways, while probing for disease pathophysiology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716799 PMCID: PMC5055293 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of ASD Participants.
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Nonverbal IQ | |
| Range: 42–140 | |
| Verbal IQ | |
| Range: 40–122 | |
| ADOS-2 Social Affect Domain | |
| ADOS-2 Repetitive, Restricted Behavior Domain | |
| ADOS-2 Total Score | |
| ADOS-2 Severity Score | |
| ADI-R Social Domain | |
| ADI-R Communication Domain | |
| ADI-R RRB Domain | |
| Vineland-II Adaptive Behavior Composite |
IQ and Vineland-II scores are listed as standard scores. ADOS-2 and ADI-R scores are listed as raw scores.
Amplitude and Latency.
| Standard Condition | Short-Duration Condition | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | ||||||||||
| ASD | 7.75 | 17.91 | 53.00 | 71.40 | 102.40 | 9.80 | 20.01 | 52.06 | 71.12 | 99.94 |
| (3.66) | (6.79) | (4.87) | (3.30) | (7.70) | (5.59) | (9.33) | (4.85) | (4.30) | (7.57) | |
| TD | 15.00 | 29.62 | 51.32 | 69.68 | 100.46 | 18.99 | 33.27 | 51.40 | 70.33 | 100.20 |
| (8.29) | (15.64) | (5.84) | (3.39) | (7.47) | (11.05) | (15.44) | (6.03) | (3.74) | (8.09) | |
| SIBS | 13.15 | 25.43 | 51.39 | 71.13 | 103.74 | 16.53 | 29.95 | 51.14 | 69.27 | 101.68 |
| (7.91) | (12.56) | (3.46) | (4.03) | (8.18) | (8.55) | (11.66) | (3.20) | (3.88) | (9.13) | |
Values are presented as mean (standard deviation) for the standard 60-s contrast-reversing checkerboard condition and the short-duration condition consisting of ten trials (3-s each). Asteriks indicate p-values < .05.
Fig 1Mean Amplitude by Group.
Children in the ASD group showed significantly smaller P60-N75 and N75-P100 amplitudes on both the standard condition and the short-duration condtition compared to the TD and SIBS groups. Significance bars indicate p-values < .05. Error bars: +/- 1 SE.
Fig 2Amplitude by Individual.
Scatterplots depict individual amplitude values by group for the standard and short-duration condition. Significance bars indicate p-values < .05.
Fig 3Mean magnitude squared coherence (MSC) by Group.
Mean MSCs are displayed for the standard condition. Significance bars indicate p-values < .05. Error bars: +/- 1 SE.
Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (ICC) for Time- and Frequency-Domain Variables.
| ICC | ||
|---|---|---|
| P60-N75 Amplitude | .920 | < .001 |
| N75-P100 Amplitude | .889 | < .001 |
| N75 Latency | .873 | < .001 |
| P100 Latency | .892 | < .001 |
| Band 1 | .445 | .002 |
| Band 2 | .717 | < .001 |
| Band 3 | .817 | < .001 |
| Band 4 | .785 | < .001 |
| Band 5 | .371 | .010 |
| Band 6 | . 165 | .183 |
Results show the consistency between the standard condition and short-duration condition. Frequency bands include the following: Band 1, 6–10 Hz; Band 2, 12–28 Hz; Band 3, 30–36 Hz; Band 4, 38–48 Hz; Band 5, 50–64 Hz, minus 60 Hz; Band 6, 66–84 Hz.