| Literature DB >> 29492241 |
Katherine B Martin1, Zakia Hammal2, Gang Ren3, Jeffrey F Cohn4, Justine Cassell5, Mitsunori Ogihara6, Jennifer C Britton1, Anibal Gutierrez1, Daniel S Messinger1.
Abstract
Background: Deficits in motor movement in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have typically been characterized qualitatively by human observers. Although clinicians have noted the importance of atypical head positioning (e.g. social peering and repetitive head banging) when diagnosing children with ASD, a quantitative understanding of head movement in ASD is lacking. Here, we conduct a quantitative comparison of head movement dynamics in children with and without ASD using automated, person-independent computer-vision based head tracking (Zface). Because children with ASD often exhibit preferential attention to nonsocial versus social stimuli, we investigated whether children with and without ASD differed in their head movement dynamics depending on stimulus sociality.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Head movement; Motor movement; Social processing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29492241 PMCID: PMC5828311 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-018-0198-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Chronological age and mental age by ASD group
| N | Mean | SD | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at visit (months) | No ASD | 21 | 51.23 | 15.35 |
| ASD | 21 | 60.80 | 16.52 | |
| Mental age (months) | No ASD | 20 | 54.58 | 14.59 |
| ASD | 19 | 54.08 | 22.95 |
Children with ASD did not differ from children without ASD on chronological or mental age
Gender by ASD group
| Males | Females | |
|---|---|---|
| No ASD | 14 | 7 |
| ASD | 17 | 4 |
Children with ASD did not differ from children without ASD on gender
Fig. 1Stimuli presentation by video. The 16-min video consisted of social and nonsocial stimuli, designed to elicit joint-attention and emotion expression in young children
Fig. 2Head orientation. The 3° of rigid head movement (pitch, yaw, and roll) are indexed above by the x, y, and z arrows. The green arrow indexes pitch, the blue arrow indexes yaw, and the red arrow indexes roll
Range of pitch, yaw, and roll
| Minimum (radians) | Maximum (radians) | Minimum (degrees) | Maximum (degrees) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pitch | − .75 | 1.16 | 42.97 down | 66.46 up |
| Yaw | − .85 | .84 | 48.70 left | 48.13 right |
| Roll | − 1.05 | 1.13 | 60.16 left shoulder | 64.74 right shoulder |
Number of epochs and mean epoch duration by ASD Group
| Marginal Mean |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of Epochs | No ASD | 8.00 | 2.70 | .11 |
| ASD | 18.00 | |||
| Mean Epoch Duration (frames) | No ASD | 1049.04 | 1.89 | .18 |
| ASD | 747.98 |
Fig. 3Proportion of tracked frames by group. Children with ASD did not differ in their proportion of frames successfully tracked by the automated software (Zface) than children without ASD. Overall, 85% of frames for children with ASD were tracked and 87% of frames for children without ASD were tracked. Error bars: ± 1 SEM
Fig. 4Between-group differences in yaw angular displacement. Children with ASD have greater yaw angular displacement than children without ASD. Note. Error bars: ± 1 SEM
Repeated-measures ANOVA of pitch, yaw, and roll
| df |
|
|
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADis_Pitch | Video | 3.74 | 3.21 | .02* | .08 |
| Video*Group | 3.74 | 0.40 | .79 | .01 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 1.81 | .19 | .05 | |
| ADis_Yaw | Video | 4.85 | 3.97 | <.01* | .10 |
| Video*Group | 4.85 | 1.39 | .23 | .04 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 4.36 | .04* | .11 | |
| ADis_ Roll | Video | 2.71 | 0.42 | .72 | .01 |
| Video*Group | 2.71 | 1.26 | .29 | .03 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 3.33 | .08 | .08 | |
| AVel_Pitch | Video | 3.31 | 3.27 | .02* | .08 |
| Video*Group | 3.31 | 0.68 | .58 | .02 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 0.77 | .39 | .02 | |
| AVel_Yaw | Video | 3.60 | 1.90 | .12 | .05 |
| Video*Group | 3.60 | 0.57 | .67 | .02 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 4.01 | .05* | .10 | |
| AVel_Roll | Video | 3.46 | 2.58 | .06 | .07 |
| Video*Group | 3.46 | 0.56 | .67 | .02 | |
| Group | 1.00 | 7.35 | .01* | .17 | |
| * |
ADis angular displacement, AVel angular velocity
Fig. 5Between-group differences in yaw and roll angular velocity. Children with ASD had greater yaw and roll angular velocity than children without ASD. Note. Error bars: ± 1 SEM
Fig. 6Video (nonsocial vs. social) by group interaction. Compared to children without ASD, children with ASD differed in angular displacement of yaw (a) and angular velocity of yaw (b) and roll (c) only during the social stimulus (video 4), but not the nonsocial stimulus (video 2). Error bars: ± 1 SEM