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Eye-Tracking Measures of Executive Functioning Correlate with Academic Achievement in Adolescents with ASD
Objectives: The current study aims to extend our understanding of cognitive and academic difficulties among adolescents with ASD by investigating the correlations between an eye-tracking measure of executive functioning ability and academic achievement. Findings will help clarify the nature of the relationship between cognitive and functional deficits in adolescents with ASD.
Methods: Data collection was conducted on 40 adolescents (20 ASD and 20 TD), 11-18 years of age. The ASD and TD groups were matched on cognitive age. The Eyelink 1000 eye tracking system was used to collect data on saccadic eye-movements during a memory-guided eye-tracking task. This task is reflective of working memory and shifting abilities. Academic achievement was assessed using the Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Academic Achievement. Specifically five subtests were selected from this battery: Story Recall, Understanding Directions, Writing Fluency, Math Calculations, and Math Fluency.
Results: Partial correlations were conducted to assess whether the percent of saccadic eye-movement errors during the memory-guided task was correlated with the five subtests of academic achievement for both the ASD and TD groups while controlling for the effect of full-scale IQ. For the ASD group, percent of saccadic errors significantly negatively correlated with Math Calculations scores (r = -.54, p = .03) and Math Fluency scores (r = -.69, p = .002), and also negatively correlated with Writing Fluency scores (r = -.47, p = .06) with marginal significance. For the TD group, percent of saccadic errors was only significantly negatively correlated with Math Calculations scores (r = -.51, p = .04).
Conclusions: Working memory and shifting ability, as assessed using eye-tracking technology, is significantly related to academic achievement across a number of domains in adolescents with ASD. Specifically, for adolescents with ASD, an increase in errors on the delayed-memory eye-tracking task corresponded with a decrease in math- and fluency-based academic achievement. These findings, along with further investigation regarding this relationship, may help to clarify the nature of the development of academic abilities in ASD.
See more of: Cognition: Attention, Learning, Memory