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Individual Cognitive Strengths and Weaknesses in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Diversity Is the Rule
Objectives: Our objective was to seek evidence for one or more characteristic ASD profiles based on standard cognitive tests, which could serve as means to supporting diagnosis and as a step towards the elucidation of ASD biomarkers. The discovery of sub-groups defined by their cognitive profile would have profound implications for understanding distinct etiologies, treatment needs and prognoses.
Methods: Participants comprised 104 children (81% male; mean age = 11.4 years, SD=2.96, range = 6.2 to 16.9), diagnosed with ASD by a team of expert clinicians on the basis of ADI-R and ADOS scores. IQ was measured using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children – Fourth UK Edition (WISC-IV). All participants had fluent language and were in mainstream education; 82% had a full-scale IQ >70.
Results: Previous literature indicated relatively strong Picture Concepts, Similarities and Matrix Reasoning characterize a ‘typical’ WISC-IV profile, in combination with relatively weak Comprehension and Symbol Search. We searched for children with this profile, defined according to Flanagan-Kaufman criteria (a standardized measure of discrepancy within WISC profiles). Just 1/104 participants had this ‘typical’ WISC-IV profile. Diverse patterns of relative strengths and difficulties were common. Only 14 children (13%) had neither strengths nor difficulties; 76 (73%) had both at least one strength and at least one difficulty. Greatest diversity was seen in verbal similarities, comprehension and coding (proportions with strengths and weaknesses differed at p<0.001). Block design, often cited as a relative strength in ASD, was not discriminating; 14 (13%) had a weakness and just 18 (17%) had a relative strength in this task.
Conclusions: Unevenness of WISC-IV subscale scores is the norm in children with ASD. Using cognitive profiles as potential endophenotypes for distinctive biomarkers, such as characteristic patterns of neural activity, is unlikely to be productive. A typically ‘autistic’ WISC-IV profile is rare even among high-functioning children. There is no consistent strength in any verbal or non-verbal subtest. Cognitive testing has no predictive value in the evaluation of ASD in diagnostic terms.
See more of: Cognition: Attention, Learning, Memory