Abstract

BackgroundSelective mutism (SM) has been conceptualized as an extreme variant of social anxiety disorder (SAD), in which the failure to speak functions as an avoidance mechanism leading to a reduction of intense fear arousal. However, psychophysiological studies in children with SM are scarce and physiological mechanisms underlying the failure to speak are largely unknown. In contrast, children with SAD are characterized by a combination of a chronically elevated physiological arousal and a blunted physiological fear response to social stress. Due to the large overlap between SM and SAD, similar mechanisms might apply to both disorders, while differences might explain why children with SM fail to speak. The aim of our study is to investigate psychophysiological mechanisms of the failure to speak in children with SM.MethodsWe assessed in a total of N = 96 children [8–12 years, SM: n = 31, SAD: n = 32, typical development (TD): n = 33] resting baseline arousal in absence of social threat and the course of physiological fear response in two social stress paradigms, differing in terms of whether the children are expected to speak (verbal task) or not (nonverbal task).ResultsChildren with SM were characterized by increased tonic arousal compared to the other two groups, and by a more inflexible stress response in the nonverbal but not in the verbal task compared to TD-children. Further analyses revealed that children with SM who did not speak during the verbal task already demonstrated reduced arousal in anticipation of the verbal task.ConclusionThe increased tonic arousal generalized to non-social situations in SM could indicate a long-term alteration of the autonomic nervous system. Furthermore, the differential physiological stress response may indicate that silence acts as a maladaptive compensatory mechanism reducing stress in verbal social situations, which does not function in nonverbal situations. Our findings support the idea that the failure to speak might function as an avoidance mechanism, which is already active in anticipation of a verbal situation. Treatment of SM should take into account that children with SM may suffer from chronically elevated stress levels and that different mechanisms might operate in verbal and nonverbal social situations.

Highlights

  • Selective mutism (SM) is a mental health disorder in which affected children fail to speak in certain social situations where they are expected to, but their speech remains unaffected in other situations [1]

  • BI was assessed through parent-report based on the Retrospective Infant Behavioral Inhibition Scale (RIBI) and social anxiety through self-report based on the Social Phobia and Fear Inventory for Children (SPAI-C)

  • The number of spoken words was not related to heart rate (HR) (p = 0.396), skin conductance level (SCL) (p = 0.374), and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) (p = 0.850) during the performance phase of the verbal stress paradigm in which speech production was required

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Summary

Introduction

Selective mutism (SM) is a mental health disorder in which affected children fail to speak in certain social situations where they are expected to, but their speech remains unaffected in other situations [1]. With the introduction of the DSM-5 [1], SM was classified among anxiety disorders for the first time The reason for this was evidence that SM shares numerous similarities with other anxiety disorders, social anxiety disorder (SAD) [5]. Selective mutism (SM) has been conceptualized as an extreme variant of social anxiety disorder (SAD), in which the failure to speak functions as an avoidance mechanism leading to a reduction of intense fear arousal. Psychophysiological studies in children with SM are scarce and physiological mechanisms underlying the failure to speak are largely unknown. Due to the large overlap between SM and SAD, similar mechanisms might apply to both disorders, while differences might explain why children with SM fail to speak.

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