cascading effects of attention disengagement and sensory seeking on social symptoms in a community sample of infants at-risk for a future diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder
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2018
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Abstract
Recent work suggests sensory seeking predicts later social symptomatology through reduced social orienting in infants who are at high-risk for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) based on their status as younger siblings of children diagnosed with ASD. We drew on extant longitudinal data from a community sample of at-risk infants who were identified at 12 months using the First Year Inventory, and followed to 3ā5 years. We replicate findings of Damiano et al. (in this issue) that a) high-risk infants who go on to be diagnosed with ASD show heightened sensory seeking in the second year of life relative to those who do not receive a diagnosis, and b) increased sensory seeking indirectly relates to later social symptomatology via reduced social orienting. We extend previous findings to show that sensory seeking has more clinical utility later in the second year of life (20ā24 months) than earlier (13ā15 months). Further, this study suggests that diminished attention disengagement at 12ā15 months may precede and predict increased sensory seeking at 20ā24 months. Findings add support for the notion that sensory features produce cascading effects on social development in infants at risk for ASD, and suggest that reduced attention disengagement early in life may set off this cascade. Keywords: Sensory features, Autism, Infants, Social, Longitudinal, Attention, Risk markersReference Key |
baranek2018developmentalcascading
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Authors | ;Grace T. Baranek;Tiffany G. Woynaroski;Sallie Nowell;Lauren Turner-Brown;Michaela DuBay;Elizabeth R. Crais;Linda R. Watson |
Journal | Scientometrics |
Year | 2018 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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