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Repetitive Behavior and Object Exploration in Young Autistic Children: How Are They Associated?
Objectives: Building on our previous findings, and within the same sample of children, to determine whether repetitive behaviors and object explorations (their frequency and duration) are associated in young autistic children; and to determine whether these associations are similar to or different from those found in age-matched typical children.
Methods: 49 autistic (mean age=47.1 months, SD=10.49; mean MSEL=63.7, SD=19.14) and 43 typical (mean age=42.8 months, SD=13.65, p=.09; mean MSEL=110.7, SD=16.9, p<.001) children were assessed with MSPS. Four play periods (one free-play, one semi-free play, one semi-structured play, and a second free-play period) including 34-40 objects of potential interest to autistic children were filmed. Two naïve typical raters coded duration (in seconds) and frequency (number of occurrences) of repetitive behaviors and object explorations on Observer XT 11©. Correlations between repetitive behaviors and object explorations were calculated for autistic and typical groups for the full MSPS (4 correlations), and for each play period (16 correlations).
Results:
For the full MSPS, in typical children, frequency of repetitive behaviors was significantly and positively correlated with frequency of object explorations (r=.336, p=.028), but this was not the case for autistic children, where no significant correlation was found (r=.146, p=.32). Similarly, duration of repetitive behaviors was significantly and positively correlated with duration of object explorations in typical (r=.358, p=.018) but not autistic (r=.058, p=.69) children. The difference between groups was significant for duration (p=.028) but not for frequency (p=.35) correlations.
For the 4 MSPS play periods, correlations were either significantly positive (5 for autistic and 4 for typical children) or not significant (the remaining 7). Significant positive correlations were weak to moderate (r=.296 to .564). There were no significant negative correlations.
Conclusions: Across the full MSPS, we found weak but significant positive correlations between repetitive behaviors and object explorations in young typical children, such that increased repetitive behavior was weakly associated with increased object exploration. No significant correlations were found in age-matched autistic children, who in this sample displayed significantly more repetitive behaviors than their typical controls. Within individual MSPS play periods, some significant positive correlations were found in both groups. However, we found no significant negative correlations. We found no evidence that repetitive behavior reduces or interferes with object exploration in either autistic or typical young children.
See more of: Sensory, Motor, and Repetitive Behaviors and Interests