Abstract

In typical development, infants often alternate their gaze between their interaction partners and interesting stimuli, increasing the probability of joint attention toward surrounding objects and creating opportunities for communication and learning. Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) have been found to engage less in behaviors that can initiate joint attention compared to typically developing children, but the role of such atypicalities in the development of ASD during infancy is not fully understood. Here, using eye tracking technology in a live setting, we show that 10-month-olds at high familial risk for ASD engage less in alternating gaze during interaction with an adult compared to low risk infants. These differences could not be explained by low general social preference or slow visual disengagement, as the groups performed similarly in these respects. We also found that less alternating gaze at 10 months was associated with more social ASD symptoms and less showing and pointing at 18 months. These relations were similar in both the high risk and the low risk groups, and remained when controlling for general social preference and disengagement latencies. This study shows that atypicalities in alternating gaze in infants at high risk for ASD emerge already during the first 10 months of life - a finding with theoretical as well as potential practical implications.

Highlights

  • MethodsA total of 67 infants participated in the study (final sample after exclusion; for participant characteristics, see Table 1)

  • A significant negative correlation between disengagement and alternating gaze was found in the low risk (LR) group, r(10) = − 0.77, p = 0.004, suggesting that longer latencies to disengage were associated with less alternating gaze

  • In line with the results from the parametric analysis above, significant non-parametric associations between alternating gaze and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Toddler Module (ADOS-T) Social Affect (SA) scores were found in both the high risk (HR) group, rs(49) = − 0.29, p = 0.036, and the LR group, rs(14) = − 0.63, p = 0.008. These analyses indicate that the frequency of gaze alternations at 10 months is related to the social affect domain of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), but not to the restricted and repetitive behavior (RRB) domain

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Summary

Methods

A total of 67 infants participated in the study (final sample after exclusion; for participant characteristics, see Table 1). Fifty-one infants (29 girls, 22 boys) were HR infants, having at least one older full sibling with ASD. Sixteen infants (6 girls, 10 boys) were LR infants, having at least one older typically developing full sibling and no family history of ASD. The HR group was recruited through advertisements, the project’s webpage and clinical units. The LR group was recruited from a database of families who had indicated interest in participating in research with their infants. Both groups consisted primarily of infants from the larger Stockholm, Sweden, area. Exclusion criteria were pre-term birth (< 36 weeks) and confirmed or suspected medical problems, including visual/auditory impairment

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