| Literature DB >> 32221749 |
Alexandra Hendry1,2, Emily J H Jones3, Rachael Bedford4, Linn Andersson Konke5, Jannath Begum Ali3, Sven Bӧlte6,7, Karin C Brocki5, Ellen Demurie8, Mark Johnson3,9, Mirjam K J Pijl10, Herbert Roeyers8, Tony Charman11.
Abstract
Autism is frequently associated with difficulties with top-down attentional control, which impact on individuals' mental health and quality of life. The developmental processes involved in these attentional difficulties are not well understood. Using a data-driven approach, 2 samples (N = 294 and 412) of infants at elevated and typical likelihood of autism were grouped according to profiles of parent report of attention at 10, 15 and 25 months. In contrast to the normative profile of increases in attentional control scores between infancy and toddlerhood, a minority (7-9%) showed plateauing attentional control scores between 10 and 25 months. Consistent with pre-registered hypotheses, plateaued growth of attentional control was associated with elevated autism and ADHD traits, and lower adaptive functioning at age 3 years.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; Attention; Atypical development; Autism; Infant; Intermediate phenotype
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32221749 PMCID: PMC7557503 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-020-04465-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Age in months by likelihood group for each time-point
| 10-month time-point M (SD) | 15-month time-point M (SD) | 25-month time-point M (SD) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Elevated likelihood | 9.28 (.86) | 10.31 (.87) | 15.12 (1.00) | 14.53 (1.04) | 25.61 (1.45) | 24.47 (1.08) |
| Typical likelihood | 9.17 (.70) | 10.13 (.57) | 15.20 (.98) | 14.48 (.58) | 24.74 (.98) | 24.93 (1.36) |
Parent report of autism and ADHD traits and adaptive function at age 3 years, by outcome group and phase
| SRS-2 total score (SD) | CBCL-ADHD total score (SD) | Vineland ABC score (SD) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TL | EL-alla | EL-No ASD | EL-ASD | TL | EL-alla | EL-No ASD | EL-ASD | TL | EL-alla | EL-No ASD | EL-ASD | |
| Sample 1 | ||||||||||||
Mean SD | 25.99 (9.99) | 37.40 (23.92) | 30.94 (18.04) | 59.32 (33.92) | 3.18 (2.59) | 4.05 (2.93) | 3.83 (2.93) | 4.74 (3.32) | 97.75 (8.72) | 89.84 (10.14) | 91.73 (8.30) | 83.62 (11.20) |
| Sample 2 | ||||||||||||
Mean SD | 21.77 (10.35) | 40.66 (32.07) | 30.42 (20.09) | 57.44 (40.01) | 1.28 (1.19) | 2.74 (2.82) | 1.87 (2.18) | 4.46 (3.16) | 105.67 (7.73) | 94.97 (12.83) | 99.92 (9.25) | 87.30 (13.79) |
aComprises EL-ASD, EL-No ASD and EL-Outcome not known
Effect sizes (Cohen’s d) for each of the outcome variables, with most-likely class estimate versus single-time-point attention scores as a predictor
| Predictor | 3-year AF | SRS-2 | CBCL-ADHD | Vineland ABC | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Most-likely class estimate | .462 | .569 | .480 | .524 | .426 | .515 | .478 | .356 |
| Duration of orienting at age 10 months | .146 | .189 | .003 | < .001 | .026 | .002 | .007 | .015 |
| Duration of orienting at age 15 months | .247 | .085 | .003 | .001 | .007 | .022 | .016 | .068 |
| Attentional focus at age 25 months | .233 | .688 | .008 | .013 | .085 | .099 | .017 | .015 |
| Attention shifting at age 25 months | .076 | .272 | .019 | .026 | .123 | .113 | .033 | .026 |
Model fit statistics
| 1 Class | 2 Class | 3 Class | 4 Class | 5 Class | 6 Class | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample 1 | ||||||
| SSBIC | 2342.90 | 2285.45 | 2265.35 | 2245.89 | 2243.32 | |
| BLRT | NA | − 1161.40 | − 1126.39 | − 1110.07 | − 1094.05 | |
| Entropy | – | .76 | .64 | .72 | .76 | |
| Sample 2 | ||||||
| SSBIC | 3311.76 | 3257.35 | 3227.72 | 3215.10 | 3200.63 | 3197.63 |
| BLRT | NA | − 1644.50 | − 1620.16 | − 1588.23 | − 1590.10 | − 1560.45 |
| Entropy | – | .58 | .63 | .68 | .76 | .63 |
Class counts and mean scores for parent report of attentional control
| Class | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Normative | (b) High attentional control | (c) Low attentional control | (d) Plateaued attention development | (e) Low focus, high shifting | ||||||
| Sample | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Class counts (and proportions) based on estimated posterior probabilities | 177.44 (60.4%) | 262.73 (63.8%) | 47.03 (16.0%) | 54.13 (13.2%) | 47.03 (16.0%) | 54.13 (13.2%) | 20.09 (6.8%) | 35.51 (8.6%) | – | 18.46 (4.5%) |
| Class counts (and proportions) based on most-likely class membership | 194 (66.0%) | 297 (72.1%) | 43 (14.6%) | 36 (8.7%) | 43 (14.6%) | 41 (10.0%) | 14 (5.0%) | 23 (5.6%) | – | 15 (3.6%) |
| Mean duration of orienting 10 months (SE) | 3.25b (0.13) | 2.59b,d (0.10) | 4.86 (0.52) | 4.48 (0.40) | 1.96a,b,d (0.14) | 1.94a,b,d (0.16) | 3.42b (0.35) | 3.39 (0.21) | – | 1.70a,b,d (0.15) |
| Mean duration of orienting 15 months (SE) | 3.48b (0.18) | 2.89b,d (0.13) | 4.71 (0.14) | 4.42 (0.35) | 2.05a,b (0.21) | 2.04a,b,d (0.19) | 2.48b (0.39) | 3.81 (0.23) | – | 2.12b,d (0.24) |
| Mean attentional focus 25 months (SE) | 4.25 (0.09) | 4.65 (0.08) | 4.63 (0.21) | 5.05 (0.19) | 4.09 (0.20) | 3.37a,b (0.47) | 2.42a,b,c (0.35) | 4.10b (0.49) | – | 2.80a,b (0.29) |
| Mean attention shifting 25 months (SE) | 4.70 (0.06) | 5.10e (0.08) | 4.86 (0.14) | 5.40e (0.15) | 4.49 (0.29) | 3.80a,b,e (0.29) | 3.29a,b,c (0.31) | 3.62a,b,e (0.28) | – | 5.67 (0.18) |
| Mean attentional focus 3 years (SE) | 4.44b (0.11) | 4.96 (0.08) | 5.15 (0.19) | 5.02 (0.63) | 4.11b (0.22) | 4.16a (0.27) | 3.48a,b (0.35) | 3.88a (0.30) | – | 3.57a (0.44) |
Superscripts indicate which groups score higher on that measure (within the same Sample), based on significant (p < .05) post hoc Tukey tests for the 10-, 15- and 25-month measures and chi-square tests run within the 3-step auxiliary approach for 3-year Attentional Focus
Fig. 1Sample means by class for the 4-class LCA model of parent report of attentional control in the first 3 years of life: Sample 1
Fig. 2Sample means by class for the 5-class LCA model of parent report of attentional control in the first 3 years of life: Sample 2
Distal outcome scores at age 3 years, and family history and diagnostic group, by latent class
| Class | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Normative | (b) High attentional control | (c) Low attentional control | (d) Plateaued attention development | (e) Low focus, high shifting | Omnibus test with full dataset [excluding infants with missing data] | |||||||
| Sample | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Mean SRS raw total (SE) | 22.54 (1.24) | 25.96 (0.93) | 51.52 (9.61) | 38.74 (5.17) | 30.68 (4.36) | 34.99 (3.19)a | 94.58 (7.60)a,b,c | 72.67 (8.69)a,b c,e†, | – | 42.71 (12.23) | Χ2(3) = 151.83, | χ2 (4) = 41.84, [χ2 (4) = 43.76, |
| Mean CBCL-ADHD raw total (SE) | 4.55 (0.40) | 2.61 (0.26) | 3.63 (0.75) | 4.34 (1.37) | 3.22 (0.63) | 6.64 (0.89)a,b | 8.18 (0.97)a,b,c | 5.44 (1.21)a,b | – | 4.96 (1.21) | χ2 (3) = 17.54, | χ2 (4) = 28.07, [χ2 (4) = 16.72, |
| Vineland ABC score (SE) | 99.65 (1.32) | 94.42 (1.04) | 103.11 (3.12) | 97.58 (3.33) | 96.33 (3.37) | 88.48 (1.91)a‡,b | 79.35 (4.61)a,b,c | 82.62 (4.89)a‡,b‡ | – | 89.06 (3.46) | χ2 (3) = 23.33, | χ2 (4) = 13.84, [χ2 (4) = 9.52, |
| TL | 138 (68.3%) | 114 (75.5%) | 18 (22.0%) | 19 (12.6%) | 7 (8.5%) | 10 (6.6%) | 1 (1.2%) | 7 (4.6%) | – | 1 (0.7%)1 | ||
| EL-all¶ | 138 (65.1%) | 183 (70.1%) | 25 (11.8%) | 17 (6.5%) | 36 (17.0%) | 31 (11.9%) | 13 (6.1%) | 16 (6.1%) | – | 14 (5.4%)1 | ||
| EL-no ASD | 83 (66.4%) | 84 (69.4%) | 15 (12.0%) | 8 (6.6%) | 22 (17.6%) | 17 (14.0%) | 5 (4.0%) | 4 (3.3%)2 | – | 8 (6.6%) | ||
| EL-ASD | 51 (63.0%) | 22 (55.0%) | 9 (11.1%) | 2 (5.0%) | 13 (16.0%) | 6 (15.0%) | 8 (9.9%) | 5 (12.5%)2 | – | 5 (12.5%) | ||
Superscripts indicate which groups have lower SRS and CBCL-ADHD scores, or higher Vineland ABC scores, based on significant (p < .05) chi-square tests
*Significant after a Benjamani–Hochberg correction for 3 family-wise tests, with a false discovery rate of 5%
†Only when infants with missing data were excluded.
‡Only when the full dataset was used (i.e. not excluding infants with missing data)
§Proportions in each class are calculated within outcome group (i.e. for each row). Values are based on most-likely class estimates
¶Comprises EL-ASD, EL-No ASD and EL-Outcome not known
1Significant association between likelihood group and membership of the low focus, high shifting class: p = .025 (exploratory analysis)
2Significant association between ASD diagnosis and membership of the plateaued attention development class: p = .043 (exploratory analysis)
Fig. 3Attention scores by class and likelihood group for the 4-class LCA model of parent report of attentional control in the first 3 years of life (based on most likely class); Sample 1. EL elevated likelihood, TL typical likelihood. Class a: Normative; Class b: High attentional control; Class c: Low attentional control; Class d: Plateaued attention development
Fig. 4Attention scores by class and likelihood group for the 5-class LCA model of parent report of attentional control in the first 3 years of life (based on most likely class); Sample 2. EL elevated likelihood, TL typical likelihood. Class a: Normative; Class b: High attentional control; Class c: Low attentional control; Class d: Plateaued attention development; Class d: Low focus, high shifting