| Literature DB >> 30291497 |
Hideyuki Haraguchi1, Andrew Stickley1,2, Aya Saito1,3, Hidetoshi Takahashi1, Yoko Kamio4,5.
Abstract
Little is known about the across time stability of autistic traits during the transition period from preschool to school age in the general population. The current study compared autistic traits assessed by a mother-reported quantitative measure, the Social Responsiveness Scale, at age 5 and 8 years and examined the intraclass correlation coefficients of scores across the period for 168 Japanese community-based children. Results showed that total and two subdomain-related autistic trait scores remained primarily stable in males and females. This stability was observed for both children with higher and lower autistic traits scores with a possible sex-specific pattern. Our findings suggest that autistic traits in the general population can be reliably assessed using quantitative measures for this age period.Entities:
Keywords: Autistic traits; Preschool children; Social Responsiveness Scale; Stability
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30291497 PMCID: PMC6331487 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-018-3770-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study participants
Characteristics of the study participants (N = 168)
| Mean (SD) range | ||
|---|---|---|
| Children | ||
| Sex (male:female) | 89:79 | |
| At age 5 (years) | 5.36 (0.29) 4.83–5.92 | |
| At age 8 (years)a | 7.92 (0.29) 7.42–8.92 | |
| Parents | ||
| Years of schooling (years) | ||
| Fatherb | 15.30 (2.27) 9–24 | |
| Mother | 14.83 (1.75) 9–19 | |
| Employment | ||
| Fatherc | ||
| Employed | 161 (98.8) | |
| Not employed | 2 (1.2) | |
| Motherd | ||
| Employed | 65 (38.9) | |
| Not employed | 102 (61.1) | |
| Household incomee | ||
| < 2 million JPY | 4 (2.5) | |
| 2 < 5 million JPY | 30 (18.5) | |
| 5 < 7 million JPY | 47 (29.0) | |
| 7 < 10 million JPY | 46 (28.4) | |
| 10 < 15 million JPY | 28 (17.3) | |
| ≥ 15 million JPY | 7 (4.3) | |
JPY Japanese Yen (in September 2012, 1 million yen = ca. US $ 12,800)
aCalculated for 167 participants
bCalculated for 164 participants
cCalculated for 163 participants
dCalculated for 167 participants
eCalculated for 162 participants
SRS scores at age 5 and 8 years
| SRS raw scores | All children ( | Male ( | Female ( | Two-way ANOVA | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age 5 | Age 8 | Age 5 | Age 8 | Age 5 | Age 8 | Sex | Age | Sex × Age | ||
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) |
|
|
| |
| [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | |||||
| Total | 33.43 (19.32) | 32.26 (21.90) | 1.060 | 35.52 (20.52) | 34.58 (23.27) | 31.08 (17.70) | 29.63 (20.06) | 2.484 | 1.143 | 0.053 |
| [5–117] | [4–132] | [5–111] | [4–132] | [5–117] | [4–113] | |||||
| SCI | 28.71 (15.36) | 27.94 (17.68) | 0.829 | 30.01 (16.26) | 29.56 (18.73) | 27.24 (14.24) | 26.11 (16.34) | 1.706 | 0.717 | 0.132 |
| [4–92] | [3–102] | [4–90] | [3–102] | [5–92] | [4–92] | |||||
| RRB | 4.72 (4.65) | 4.32 (4.91) | 1.595 | 5.51 (4.91) | 5.02 (5.26) | 3.84 (4.19) | 3.52 (4.37) | 5.374* | 2.460 | 0.107 |
| [0–25] | [0–32] | [0–21] | [0–32] | [0–25] | [0–23] | |||||
SRS Social Responsiveness Scale, SCI Social Communication and Interaction, RRB Restricted Interests and Repetitive Behavior
*p < 0.05
Intraclass correlation coefficients of the SRS scores at age 5 and 8 years
| Whole group | All children ( | Male ( | Female ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| SRS total | 0.759*** | 0.750*** | 0.767*** |
| SCI | 0.738*** | 0.735*** | 0.738*** |
| RRB | 0.761*** | 0.724*** | 0.807*** |
SRS Social Responsiveness Scale, SCI Social Communication and Interaction, RRB Restricted Interests and Repetitive Behavior
***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05
SRS raw scores at age 5 and 8 years among the higher- and lower-scoring groups
| Age 5 | Age 8 | Age 5 | Age 8 | Age 5 | Age 8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | |
| [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | |
| Higher-scoring group | All children ( | Male ( | Female ( | |||
| SRS total | 68.27 (18.83) | 63.12 (31.28) | 70.13 (17.36) | 62.50 (32.52) | 65.30 (21.60) | 64.10 (30.88) |
| [46–117] | [20–132] | [51–111] | [20–132] | [46–117] | [23–113] | |
| SCI | 55.46 (14.45) | 52.35 (23.84) | 56.63 (13.72) | 51.88 (24.71) | 53.60 (16.13) | 53.10 (23.67) |
| [38–92] | [19–102] | [38–90] | [19–102] | [40–92] | [21–92] | |
| RRB | 12.81 (5.56) | 10.77 (8.27) | 13.50 (4.94) | 10.63 (8.88) | 11.70 (6.55) | 11.00 (7.65) |
| [4–25] | [1–32] | [6–21] | [1–32] | [4–25] | [2–23] | |
SRS Social Responsiveness Scale, SCI Social Communication and Interaction, RRB Restricted Interests and Repetitive Behavior
SRS raw scores of the study participants and of the families who consented to participate in the longitudinal study but who were not included in this study
| SRS | All children | Male | Female | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | Non-participantsa | Participants | Non-participantsb | Participants | Non-participantsc | |||||||
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) |
|
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) |
|
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) |
|
| |
| [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | [Range] | |||||||
| Total | 33.43 (19.32) | 35.13 (17.83) | −0.85 | 0.39 | 35.52 (20.52) | 36.47 (19.56) | −0.32 | 0.75 | 31.08 (17.70) | 33.60 (15.58) | −0.97 | 0.34 |
| [5–117] | [7–121] | [5–111] | [7–121] | [5–117] | [8–83] | |||||||
| SCI | 28.71 (15.36) | 30.14 (14.21) | −0.90 | 0.37 | 30.01 (16.26) | 31.15 (15.37) | −0.49 | 0.63 | 27.24 (14.24) | 28.99 (12.75) | −0.82 | 0.41 |
| [4–92] | [6–96] | [4–90] | [6–96] | [5–92] | [8–69] | |||||||
| RRB | 4.72 (4.65) | 4.99 (4.28) | −0.57 | 0.57 | 5.51 (4.91) | 5.33 (4.77) | 0.25 | 0.80 | 3.84 (4.19) | 4.61 (3.64) | −13 | 0.21 |
| [0–25] | [0–25] | [0–21] | [0–25] | [0–25] | [0–18] | |||||||
SRS Social Responsiveness Scale, SCI Social Communication and Interaction, RRB Restricted Interests and Repetitive Behavior
aCalculated for 178 participants
bCalculated for 95 participants
cCalculated for 83 participants