Plasticity of temporal binding in children with autism spectrum disorder: A single case experimental design perceptual training study

•We report on the first experimental study of multisensory integration (i.e., temporal binding of audiovisual speech) in children with ASD.•Results indicate that audiovisual integration for speech-related stimuli may be malleable in children with ASD.•Future experimental research using group researc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Research in autism spectrum disorders 2020-06, Vol.74, p.101555, Article 101555
Hauptverfasser: Feldman, Jacob I., Dunham, Kacie, Conrad, Julie G., Simon, David M., Cassidy, Margaret, Liu, Yupeng, Tu, Alexander, Broderick, Neill, Wallace, Mark T., Woynaroski, Tiffany G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We report on the first experimental study of multisensory integration (i.e., temporal binding of audiovisual speech) in children with ASD.•Results indicate that audiovisual integration for speech-related stimuli may be malleable in children with ASD.•Future experimental research using group research designs is warranted to further evaluate the promise of multisensory perceptual training approaches in ASD. Many children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate atypical responses to multisensory stimuli. These disruptions, which are frequently seen in response to audiovisual speech, may produce cascading effects on the broader development of children with ASD. Perceptual training has been shown to enhance multisensory speech perception in typically developed adults. This study was the first to examine the effects of perceptual training on audiovisual speech perception in children with ASD. A multiple baseline across participants design was utilized with four 7- to 13-year-old children with ASD. The dependent variable, which was probed outside the training task each day using a simultaneity judgment task in baseline, intervention, and maintenance conditions, was audiovisual temporal binding window (TBW), an index of multisensory temporal acuity. During perceptual training, participants completed the same simultaneity judgment task with feedback on their accuracy after each trial in easy-, medium-, and hard-difficulty blocks. A functional relation between the multisensory perceptual training program and TBW size was not observed. Of the three participants who were entered into training, one participant demonstrated a strong effect, characterized by a fairly immediate change in TBW trend. The two remaining participants demonstrated a less clear response (i.e., longer latency to effect, lack of functional independence). The first participant to enter the training condition demonstrated some maintenance of a narrower TBW post-training. Results indicate TBWs in children with ASD may be malleable, but additional research is needed and may entail further adaptation to the multisensory perceptual training paradigm.
ISSN:1750-9467
1878-0237
DOI:10.1016/j.rasd.2020.101555