Why is joint attention a pivotal skill in autism?

Joint attention abilities play a crucial role in the development of autism. Impairments in joint attention are among the earliest signs of the disorder and joint attention skills relate to outcome, both in the 'natural course' of autism and through being targeted in early intervention prog...

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Veröffentlicht in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 2003-02, Vol.358 (1430), p.315-324
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description Joint attention abilities play a crucial role in the development of autism. Impairments in joint attention are among the earliest signs of the disorder and joint attention skills relate to outcome, both in the 'natural course' of autism and through being targeted in early intervention programmes. In the current study, concurrent and longitudinal associations between joint attention and other social communication abilities measured in a sample of infants with autism and related pervasive developmental disorders at age 20 months, and language and symptom severity at age 42 months, were examined. Extending the findings from previous studies, joint attention ability was positively associated with language gains and (lower) social and communication symptoms, and imitation ability was also positively associated with later language. Some specificity in the association between different aspects of joint attention behaviours and outcome was found: declarative, triadic gaze switching predicted language and symptom severity but imperative, dyadic eye contact behaviours did not. Further, although joint attention was associated with later social and language symptoms it was unrelated to repetitive and stereotyped symptoms, suggesting the latter may have a separate developmental trajectory. Possible deficits in psychological and neurological processes that might underlie the impaired development of joint attention in autism are discussed.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; PubMed Central
subjects Attention
Autism
Autistic disorder
Autistic Disorder - diagnosis
Autistic Disorder - psychology
Child Behavior
Child development
Child, Preschool
Children
Humans
Imitation
Imitative Behavior
Infant
Joint Attention
Language
Pervasive child development disorders
Play and Playthings
Predictive Value of Tests
Severity of Illness Index
Social Behavior
Social communication
Symptom Severity
Toys
Visual fixation
title Why is joint attention a pivotal skill in autism?
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