Social Smiling and Its Components in High-Risk Infant Siblings Without Later ASD Symptomatology

被引:0
|
作者
Caitlin McMahon Nichols
Lisa V. Ibañez
Jennifer H. Foss-Feig
Wendy L. Stone
机构
[1] Vanderbilt University,Department of Psychology and Human Development
[2] University of Miami,Department of Psychology
[3] Vanderbilt University,Department of Pediatrics
[4] Beacon ABA Services,Beacon Assessment Center
[5] University of Washington,Department of Psychology
[6] Yale University,Child Study Center
关键词
Autism; High-risk siblings; Infants; Social smiling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Impaired affective expression, including social smiling, is common in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and may represent an early marker for ASD in their infant siblings (Sibs-ASD). Social smiling and its component behaviors (eye contact and non-social smiling) were examined at 15 months in Sibs-ASD who demonstrated later ASD symptomatology (Sibs-ASD/AS), those who did not (Sibs-ASD/NS), and low-risk controls (Sibs-TD). Both Sibs-ASD subgroups demonstrated lower levels of social smiling than Sibs-TD, suggesting that early social smiling may reflect elevated genetic vulnerability rather than a specific marker for ASD. Only the Sibs-ASD/AS demonstrated less eye contact and non-social smiling than Sibs-TD, suggesting that different processes, threshold effects, or protective factors may underlie social smiling development in the two Sibs-ASD subgroups.
引用
收藏
页码:894 / 902
页数:8
相关论文
共 31 条
  • [1] Social Smiling and Its Components in High-Risk Infant Siblings Without Later ASD Symptomatology
    Nichols, Caitlin McMahon
    Ibanez, Lisa V.
    Foss-Feig, Jennifer H.
    Stone, Wendy L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS, 2014, 44 (04) : 894 - 902
  • [2] Observed Social Emotional Behavior at 22 Months Predicts a Later ASD Diagnosis in High-Risk Siblings
    Northrup, Jessie B.
    Leezenbaum, Nina B.
    Campbell, Susan B.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS, 2021, 51 (09) : 3187 - 3198
  • [3] Observed Social Emotional Behavior at 22 Months Predicts a Later ASD Diagnosis in High-Risk Siblings
    Jessie B. Northrup
    Nina B. Leezenbaum
    Susan B. Campbell
    [J]. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2021, 51 : 3187 - 3198
  • [4] The Effect of Parenting Style on Social Smiling in Infants at High and Low Risk for ASD
    Harker, Colleen M.
    Ibanez, Lisa V.
    Nguyen, Thanh P.
    Messinger, Daniel S.
    Stone, Wendy L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS, 2016, 46 (07) : 2399 - 2407
  • [5] The Effect of Parenting Style on Social Smiling in Infants at High and Low Risk for ASD
    Colleen M. Harker
    Lisa V. Ibañez
    Thanh P. Nguyen
    Daniel S. Messinger
    Wendy L. Stone
    [J]. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2016, 46 : 2399 - 2407
  • [6] Failure to Thrive in an Infant With a High-Risk Social Situation
    Butters, Olivia
    Lew, Judy
    Lawrence, Robert
    Washam, Matthew
    Bhatt, Avni
    Lossius, Michele
    Ryan, Kathleen A.
    [J]. CLINICAL PEDIATRICS, 2020, 59 (08) : 827 - 830
  • [7] Mid-childhood outcomes of infant siblings at familial high-risk of autism spectrum disorder
    Shephard, Elizabeth
    Milosavljevic, Bosiljka
    Pasco, Greg
    Jones, Emily J. H.
    Gliga, Teodora
    Happe, Francesca
    Johnson, Mark H.
    Charman, Tony
    [J]. AUTISM RESEARCH, 2017, 10 (03) : 546 - 557
  • [8] Childbearing depressive symptomatology in high-risk pregnancies: The roles of working models and social support
    Besser, A
    Priel, B
    Wiznitzer, A
    [J]. PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS, 2002, 9 (04) : 395 - 413
  • [9] A SOCIAL PROBLEM-SOLVING INTERVENTION FOR CHILDREN AT HIGH-RISK FOR LATER PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
    YU, P
    HARRIS, GE
    SOLOVITZ, BL
    FRANKLIN, JL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 1986, 15 (01): : 30 - 40
  • [10] SOCIAL SUPPORT IN HIGH-RISK ADOLESCENTS - STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS AND ADAPTIVE IMPACT
    CAUCE, AM
    FELNER, RD
    PRIMAVERA, J
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY, 1982, 10 (04) : 417 - 428