| Literature DB >> 28593596 |
Gemma Zantinge1,2, Sophie van Rijn3,4, Lex Stockmann5, Hanna Swaab1,2,5.
Abstract
This study aimed to assess physiological arousal and behavioral regulation of emotion in the context of frustration in 29 children with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) and 45 typically developing children (41-81 months). Heart rate was continuously measured and emotion strategies were coded, during a locked-box task. Results revealed increases in arousal followed by a decline during recovery, significant for both groups indicating that heart rate patterns between groups were identical. The ASD group deployed less constructive and more venting and avoidance strategies, which was related to language impairments. We conclude that rather than abnormal levels of emotional arousal, a key impairment in young children with ASD may be difficulties in behaviorally regulating and expressing experienced emotions to others.Entities:
Keywords: Arousal; Autism spectrum disorders; Cognition; Emotion; Emotion regulation; Self-control
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28593596 PMCID: PMC5570774 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3181-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Demographic characteristics of the ASD group and the non-clinical control group
| ASD ( | Control ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ( | Mean ( | Group differences | |
| Age range | 43–79 months | 41–81 months |
|
| Gender | M = 25, F = 2 | M = 35, F = 9 | (χ2 (1) = 2.18, |
| FSIQ | 86.89 (22.43) | 110.27 (14.61) |
|
| SES† ( | 2.33 (0.72) | 2.61 (0.47) |
|
*Group difference significant at p < .05
†SES: 1 = low, 2 = medium, 3 = high
ADI and ADOS scores for the ASD group (N = 27)
| Scale | Mean ( | |
|---|---|---|
| ADI social communication (cut-off = 10) | 18.93 (5.87) | |
| ADI communication | Verbal ( | 14.58 (4.19) |
| Non-verbal ( | 13.20 (0.84) | |
| ADI repetitive behavior (cut-off = 3) | 6.41 (3.25) | |
| ADI developmental deviance (cut-off = 1) | 4.10 (1.26) | |
| ADOS severity score | 8.08 (1.66) | |
Fig. 1Timeline locked box task (Lab-TAB; Goldsmith et al. 1999)
Fig. 2Heart rate (BPM) from baseline to frustration and from frustration to recovery in 30 s epochs. Error bars displaying SE. At all individual time points there are no significant differences between groups
Within group increases in emotional arousal (heart rate) during the locked-box task
| ASD | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| Baseline to frustration 1 |
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| Baseline to frustration 2 |
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| Baseline to frustration 3 |
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| Recovery 1 to recovery 2 |
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*Significant at p < .05. Effect sizes displayed in Cohens d
Group comparisons of behavioral emotion coping strategies during the locked-box task
| ASD ( | Control ( |
| ɳ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constructive strategies | 2.29 (1.06) | 2.72 (0.55) | .03* | .07 |
| Venting strategies | 1.83 (1.39) | 0.98 (1.18) | <.01* | .10 |
| Avoidance strategies | 0.84 (0.80) | 0.12 (0.22) | <.01* | .32 |
*Group differences significant at p < .05