| Literature DB >> 29980900 |
Patricia Abbott1, Francesca G Happé2, Rebecca A Charlton3.
Abstract
Little is known about cognition in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) across adulthood. We examined executive function abilities and autism traits in 134 adults receiving a first diagnosis of ASD. Participants aged 18-75 years with abilities in the normal range were assessed on executive function and self-report autism traits. Results suggest that for some abilities relying on speed and sequencing (Trails A and B; Digit Symbol), late-diagnosed individuals with ASD may demonstrate better performance than typical age-norms. On other executive measures (Digit Span, Hayling and Brixton tests) age-related correlations were similar to typical age-norms. Different domains of executive function may demonstrate different trajectories for ageing with ASD, with patterns of slower, accelerated or equivalent age-related change being observed across different measures.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Autism spectrum disorders; Cognition; Executive function; Lifespan
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29980900 PMCID: PMC6223764 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-018-3675-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Demographic information for males and females receiving a diagnosis of ASD
| Male | Female | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean, SD) | 31.38 (11.99) | 30.51 (11.97) | F = .140, p = .708 |
| Highest educational levela (%) | No qualifications = 7.2% | No qualifications = 2.7% |
|
| In employment/education (yes, no, retired) | 49.4, 40.2%, 3.1% (missing 7.2%) | 48.6%, 40.5%, 0% (missing 10.8%) |
|
| Employment details | None = 9.3% | None = 13.5% | – |
| Family history of ASD (yes-diagnosed, no) | 5.92 | 5.32 |
|
| Family history | None = 81.4% | None = 75.7% | – |
aFor whole sample: no qualifications = 6%; GCSE level = 26.9%; Post-16 qualifications = 3.7%; A-level = 29.9%; Diploma = 2.2%; Degree = 11.9%; Post-graduate = 3.7% (missing = 14.9%). UK population average: no qualifications = 22.5; GCSE up to 1 A-level = 28.5%; 2 or more A-level = 12.4%; Undergraduate degree or higher = 27.4%
Self-report ASD traits and mood scales by gender
| Male | Female | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AQ (mean, SD) | 34.04 (7.55) | 36.59 (6.88) | F(1,131) = 3.20, p = .076 |
| EQ (mean, SD) | 20.71 (10.31) | 19.95 (10.44) | F(1,131) = .145, p = .704 |
| SQ (mean, SD) | 60.93 (26.66) | 61.95 (25.33) | F(1,130) = .040, p = .842 |
aFor the SQ n = 95
Mean (and standard deviations) for executive function tasks by gender
| Male | Female | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Digit symbol scaled scorea | 8.04 (3.01) | 10.41 (3.20) | |
| Digit span scaled scorea | 9.72 (3.51) | 9.59 (2.85) | F(1,132) = .039, p = .844 |
| Brixton-scaled scoreb | 6.85 (1.99) | 6.35 (1.96) | F(1,132) = 1.66, p = .200 |
| Hayling total-scaled scoreb | 5.41 (1.45) | 5.46 (1.59) | F(1,132) = .027, p = .870 |
| Trial A new percentilec | 55.36 (32.98) | 64.59 (30.63) | F(1,132) = 2.18, p = .142 |
| Trails B new percentilec | 60.21 (28.57) | 64.05 (28.50) | F(1,132) = .487, p = .487 |
| Key search profile scored | 2.57 (1.29) | 3.03 (1.19) | F(1,132) = 3.55, p = .062 |
| Zoo map profile scored | 2.43 (1.18) | 2.43 (.867) | F(1,132) = .000, p = .998 |
| Mean EF percentilec | 52.31 (17.48) | 58.11(16.82) | F(1,132) = 3.01, p = .085 |
Significant result is given in bold
aRange = 1–20, average = 10
bRange = 2–10, average = 6
cRange = 1–100, average = 50
dRange = 0–4, average = 2
Correlations with age
| Whole sample (n = 134) | Sample excluding adults > 60 years old (n = 130) | |
|---|---|---|
| EF measures (n = 134) | ||
| Digit symbol scaled scorea |
|
|
| Digit span | r = .101, p = .244 | r = .072, p = .417 |
| Brixton-scaled score | r = − .127, p = .142 |
|
| Hayling total-scaled score | r = − .105, p = .226 | r = − .086, p = .329 |
| Trial A new percentile |
| r = .151, p = .086 |
| Trails B new percentiles |
|
|
| Key search profile scorea | r = .121, p = .163 | r = .047, p = .598 |
| Zoo Map profile score | r = − .153, p = .078 |
|
| Mean EF percentilea | r = .127, p = .145 | r = .046, p = .604 |
| AQ (n = 133)a |
|
|
| EQ (n = 133) | r = − .003, p = .973 | r = .028, p = .749 |
| SQ (n = 132) |
|
|
| BDI (n = 73) | r = − .138, p = .246 | r = − .144, p = .235 |
| BAI (n = 73) | r = − .208, p = .077 | r = − .165, p = .161 |
Significant results are given in bold
aCorrelations for males and females provided where group differences are significant or showing a trend towards significance for gender differences. Digit Symbol: male r = .217, p = .033, female r = .253, p = .132; key search: male r = .112, p = .273, female r = .175, p = .301; mean EF: male r = .101, p = .324, female r = .222, p = .187; AQ: male r = .264, p = .009; female r = .121, p = .477. NB correlations are not significantly different to each other on Fisher’s r: Digit Symbol scaled score (z = − .19, p = .849); Key Search Profile Score (z = − .32, p = .749); Mean EF percentile (z = − .62, p = .535); AQ (z = .74, p = .459)
Fig. 1Scatterplots showing correlations between age and Digit Symbol, Trails A and Trails B
Correlations with between Mean EF Percentile and Self-report ASD traits and mood scales
| Whole sample | Male | Female | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AQ (n = 133) | r = .160, p = .066 | r = .062, p = .548 |
|
| EQ (n = 133) |
| r = | r = |
| SQ (n = 132) |
|
|
|
| BDI (n = 73) |
| r = | r = |
| BAI (n = 73) | r = | r = | r = |
Significant results are given in bold
aRemains significant after controlling for age
bFisher’s r comparing correlations for males versus females (z = − 1.64, two-tailed p = .101; one-tailed p = .051)
Fig. 2Correlation between mean EF percentile and self-report AQ scores for males and females