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Goal Anticipation in Toddlers with ASD and High-Risk Siblings of Children with ASD
Objectives: Using an established paradigm developed by Cannon and Woodward (2011), we aim to determine whether toddlers with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and those at high-risk for ASD attribute goals to a reaching action performed by a human arm vs. a mechanical claw.
Methods: Toddlers with autism (N=8) and siblings of a child with autism (N=21; Mean age=30.80 months, range: 23.9-39.6) were randomly assigned to watch a short video of a reaching action performed by either a hand (N=16) or a mechanical claw (N=13). Gaze data was recorded using a Tobii infrared eye tracker. Four identical blocks included 3 familiarization trials (hand or claw reaches toward one of two toys) and 1 test trial each. In test trials, the toys switched places, and the video showed the hand or claw beginning to reach, but stopping short of choosing an object. An experimenter blind to diagnostic status coded children’s anticipatory looks during the test trials.
Results: A multivariate GLM controlling for nonverbal mental age revealed that, in contrast to prior research with typical infants, toddlers across both groups looked equally at the goal object and the location of the familiarized reach during test trials in both conditions, F(2,25)=2.28, p=0.14. This suggests that children with ASD and high-risk siblings do not demonstrate differential goal attribution to human actors vs. mechanical claws, which is consistent with prior studies showing reduced attention to social information and less automated interpretation of actions as goal-oriented. Thus, this finding could relate to symptoms of ASD and features of the broader autism phenotype. An alternative explanation is that older children simply do not make anticipatory looks to goal objects in this paradigm; data on matched typical toddlers is currently being collected to tease apart these two possibilities.
Conclusions: These results have implications for how we understand the development of social cognition and social skill in ASD and siblings at risk, as understanding goals and intentions is a building block for later theory of mind. Current data collection with a typically developing control group of the same age and developmental level will shed further light on our findings.