16410
Behavioral and Electrophysiological Evidence of Impaired Social Orienting in ‘Unaffected' Siblings of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Objectives: To investigate behavioral and electrophysiological indices of orienting to social and non-social information in high-risk children (defined as having an older sibling with ASD) with (HRA+) and without (HRA-) a diagnosis of ASD and low-risk typically developing (TD) children (defined as having a TD older sibling).
Methods: Data collection for the current project is ongoing. To date, participants are nine 4 to 5 year old HRA- and 10 age- and IQ-matched low-risk, TD children. The study consisted of separate behavioral orienting and auditory odd-ball ERP experiments. For the behavioral orienting paradigm (modeled after Dawson et al., 1998; 2004), one experimenter engaged the child’s attention, while a second experimenter administered a series of 12 possible social or non-social sounds. Social sounds (hum, clap, laugh, yawn, snap, and the child’s name) and non-social sounds (toy rattle, car horn, toy squeak, vacuum, referee whistle, and a phone ring) were equated in intensity (70 dB) and duration (approximately 1 second). Child’s orienting behavior, defined by either a head movement or a gaze shift was coded online by experimenters. For the auditory odd-ball task, auditory stimuli were identical to those used in the behavioral orienting paradigm. EEG was recorded using 128-channel high-density Geodesic electrode arrays, sampled at 500 Hz, and referenced to single vertex electrode. Data were segmented into 1200ms epochs (200ms pre- and 1000ms post-stimulus onset), trial/artifact rejected, and re-referenced to average reference. Mean amplitude and latency of the P3a component was measured for both social and non-social sounds.
Results: Paired t-tests showed that TD children oriented more frequently to social compared to non-social sounds, p < .01; In contrast, HRA- children shifted attention to both social and non-social sound at similar rates, p = .3. Independent samples t-tests demonstrated that, compared to HRA- children, TD children shifted attention more frequently to social stimuli, p < .01, but not non-social stimuli, p < .1. Electrophysiological data revealed a similar pattern of results; for the TD group, there was a larger P3a response to social stimuli than to non-social sounds, p < 0.05. However, for the HRA- group there was no significant difference in P3a amplitude for social compared to non-social sounds, p > 0.5.
Conclusions: Behavioral and electrophysiological indices of orienting suggest social information is perceived as more salient and captures attention to a greater degree in TD but not HRA- children. Similar to prior findings of impaired social orienting in children with ASD, our preliminary results suggest that social orienting deficits may be present in clinically ‘unaffected’ siblings, and therefore represent a potential endophenotype.