| Literature DB >> 27987062 |
Emilia Thorup1, Johan Lundin Kleberg2, Terje Falck-Ytter2,3,4.
Abstract
This study tested whether including objects perceived as highly interesting by children with autism during a gaze following task would result in increased first fixation durations on the target objects. It has previously been found that autistic children differentiate less between an object another person attends to and unattended objects in terms of this measure. Less differentiation between attended and unattended objects in ASD as compared to control children was found in a baseline condition, but not in the high interest condition. However, typically developing children differentiated less between attended and unattended objects in the high interest condition than in the baseline condition, possibly reflecting reduced influence of gaze cues on object processing when objects themselves are highly interesting.Entities:
Keywords: Circumscribed interests; Communication; Gaze following; Joint attention; Social cognition
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27987062 PMCID: PMC5352793 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-016-2955-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Participant characteristics by group, final samples (M/SD)
| ASD N = 16 (4 girls) | TD N = 17 (5 girls) | Pairwise comparison ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (months) | 81.56/15.42 | 74.12/15.51 | 0.177a |
| NVIQb | 105.23/19.20c | 115.76/11.01 | 0.068a |
| SRS total score | 73.06/25.10 | 43.65/5.31 | <0.001a,d |
| RBS-R total score | 20.31/15.78c | 3.24/3.36 | 0.002a,d |
| RBS-R restricted interests subscale score | 2.85/2.15c | 0.35/0.61 | 0.001a,d |
| ADOS-2 total score | 14.31/5.77 | N/A | N/A |
aIndependent samples t-test
bNVIQ was assessed using the standard non-verbal subtests of WPPSI-III or WISC-IV
cBased on 13 children
dAdjusted due to unequal variances
Fig. 1Screen shots of the stimulus video, showing the attention grabber covering the model’s face, the model engaging in direct gaze, the model attending to one of the objects and then engaging in direct gaze again. Areas of interest (AOIs) are highlighted. Upper row depicts one of two stimuli sets in the high interest condition; lower row depicts one of two stimuli sets in the baseline condition
Descriptive statistics by group (M/SD) for accuracy measures
| Measure | ASD | TD |
|---|---|---|
| N valid trials, high interest condition | 3.88/0.96 | 4.47/1.01 |
| N valid trials, baseline condition | 4.38/1.31 | 4.94/1.20 |
| Accuracya, high interest condition | 0.75/0.20 | 0.64/0.21 |
| Accuracya, baseline condition | 0.73/0.26 | 0.63/0.24 |
aN congruent gaze shifts divided by total N (congruent and incongruent) gaze shifts
Fig. 2AUF-index (FFD at attended object divided by sum of FFD at attended and unattended objects, averaged across trials) for the two groups across conditions (error bars represent standard errors). **p < 0.01
Descriptive statistics by group (M/SD) for first fixation duration raw scores
| Measure type | Specific measure | ASD | TD |
|---|---|---|---|
| N valid trials, high interest condition | 2.81/0.83 | 2.82/1.01 | |
| N valid trials, baseline condition | 3.13/1.36 | 3.12/1.36 | |
| First fixation duration raw scores (s) | Attended object, high interest condition | 0.38/0.27 | 0.36/0.31 |
| Unattended objects, high interest condition | 0.32/0.13 | 0.41/0.15 | |
| Attended object, baseline condition | 0.30/0.13 | 0.54/0.39 | |
| Unattended objects, baseline condition | 0.44/0.30 | 0.39/0.23 | |
| First fixation duration raw scores at objects irrespective of gaze following performance (s) | High interest condition | 0.36/0.08 | 0.36/0.10 |
| Baseline condition | 0.37/0.11 | 0.39/0.15 |
Fig. 3Total looking time at objects divided by total looking time at screen for the two groups across conditions (error bars represent standard errors)