Yale Researchers Discover Mechanism for Social Development That is Absent in Autistic Children |
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New Haven, Conn. — Two-year-olds with autism lack an important building block of social interaction that prompts newborn babies to pay attention to other people. |
Instead, these children pay attention to
physical relationships between movement and sound and miss critical social
information. Researchers at the Yale School of Medicine report their results in
the March 29 online issue of Nature. “Human infants are born in a fragile state.
They are entirely dependent on their caregivers for survival, and so it makes
sense that infants would possess very early-emerging predispositions to seek
their caregivers, to pay special attention to movements in the environment that
are associated with human actions and gestures,” said Ami
Klin, director of the Autism Program at Yale and the Harris Associate
Professor of Child Psychology at the Yale Child Study Center. |
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Klin, who conducted the study with research
scientist Warren Jones and colleagues at Yale, said that two-year-olds with
autism showed no signs of this selective attention to these types of human
movements. Instead, the children with autism focused on a different
environmental cue: they paid attention only to movements that were physically
synchronous with sounds. “Rather than attending to human biological
motion, and the social cues in that motion,” said Klin, “children with
autism were very sensitive to non-social information: to synchronies between
sounds and motion in what they were watching.” Klin, Jones and colleagues tracked the eye
movements of two-year-olds with and without autism while they watched cartoon
animations. The animations were created with a technique borrowed from the
video game industry in which movements of real people are recorded and then used
to animate characters. In this case, the body movements were recreated as
points of light on a black background, with one point of light at each joint in
the body. “The eye-tracking data revealed that
typically-developing two-year-olds perceived human motion in these moving points
of light. They saw people,” said Jones. “But children with
autism were insensitive to the socially relevant cues in that motion, and they
focused instead on physical cues that typically-developing children
disregarded.” Previous studies by the Yale team have shown
that when looking at other people, toddlers with autism looked less at eyes and
more at mouths. “The current results suggest something very important
about that earlier research,” said Klin. “Rather than looking at the
social cues expressed in people’s eyes, two-year-olds with autism may be
paying attention, as in the current study, to synchronies between sound and
motion. So rather than the eyes, they are focusing on the synchrony
between lip motion and speech sounds.” “This suggests that from very early in life,
children with autism are seeking experiences in the physical rather than the
social world, and this in turn has far-reaching implications for the development
of social mind and brain,” said Jones. The Yale group is now using this finding in
their work with infant siblings of children with autism who are at greater
genetic risk of also developing autism. “Because this mechanism emerges
in the first days of life for typical children, we hope to use similar
techniques to identify early signs of vulnerability in autism. This could
be an aid for early diagnosis, which in turn allows for early intervention to
maximize positive outcomes for these children,” said Klin. The next step is to study this phenomenon at
earlier stages of development, and to combine the behavioral work with
simultaneous neuroimaging through collaboration with another Yale colleague,
Kevin Pelphrey. Other authors on the study included David J.
Lin, Phillip Gorrindo and Gordon Ramsay, who is also affiliated with the Haskins
Laboratories at Yale. The study was funded by the National Institutes
of Health’s National Institute of Mental Health. |
| Source: http://www.yale.edu |
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