Development of an interactive tool of early social responsiveness to track autism risk in infants and toddlers

Aim To evaluate the psychometric properties of a 4‐minute assessment designed to identify early autism spectrum disorder (ASD) status through evaluation of early social responsiveness (ESR). Method This retrospective, preliminary study included children between 13 and 24 months (78 males, 79 females...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental medicine and child neurology 2022-03, Vol.64 (3), p.323-330
Hauptverfasser: Factor, Reina S, Arriaga, Rosa I, Morrier, Michael J, Mathys, Jennifer B, Dirienzo, Monica, Miller, Chanel A, Southerland, Audrey M, Abowd, Gregory D, Ousley, Opal Y
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container_end_page 330
container_issue 3
container_start_page 323
container_title Developmental medicine and child neurology
container_volume 64
creator Factor, Reina S
Arriaga, Rosa I
Morrier, Michael J
Mathys, Jennifer B
Dirienzo, Monica
Miller, Chanel A
Southerland, Audrey M
Abowd, Gregory D
Ousley, Opal Y
description Aim To evaluate the psychometric properties of a 4‐minute assessment designed to identify early autism spectrum disorder (ASD) status through evaluation of early social responsiveness (ESR). Method This retrospective, preliminary study included children between 13 and 24 months (78 males, 79 females mean age 19.4mo, SD 3.1) from two independent data sets (an experimental/training sample [n=120] and a validation/test sample [n=37]). The ESR assessment examined social behaviors (e.g. eye contact, smiling, ease‐of‐social‐engagement) across five common play activities (e.g. rolling a ball, looking at a book). Data analyses examined reliability and accuracy of the assessment in identifying ESR abilities and in discriminating children with and without ASD. Results Results indicated adequate internal consistency and test–retest reliability of the ESR assessment. Receiver operator curve analysis identified a cutoff score that discriminated infants with ASD‐risk from peers in the training sample. This score yielded moderate sensitivity and high specificity for best‐estimate ASD diagnosis in the validation sample. Interpretation Preliminary findings indicated that brief, systematic observation of ESR may assist in discriminating infants with and without ASD, providing concrete evidence to validate or supplement parents’, pediatricians’, or clinicians’ concerns. Future studies could examine the utility of ESR ‘growth curves’.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/dmcn.15035
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Wiley Free Content
subjects Autism Spectrum Disorder - diagnosis
Child Behavior - physiology
Child, Preschool
Female
Humans
Infant
Male
Neuropsychological Tests - standards
Play and Playthings
Psychometrics - instrumentation
Psychometrics - standards
Reproducibility of Results
Retrospective Studies
Risk
Social Behavior
title Development of an interactive tool of early social responsiveness to track autism risk in infants and toddlers
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