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Brief Report: Infants Developing with ASD Show a...
Journal article

Brief Report: Infants Developing with ASD Show a Unique Developmental Pattern of Facial Feature Scanning

Abstract

Infants are interested in eyes, but look preferentially at mouths toward the end of the first year, when word learning begins. Language delays are characteristic of children developing with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). We measured how infants at risk for ASD, control infants, and infants who later reached ASD criterion scanned facial features. Development differed across groups. The preference for the eyes region decreased with age in infants who were at risk of ASD. For the control group the change in feature preference was marginally significant for a quadratic model, reflecting a decrease in the preference for eyes at 9 months followed by a recovery. The infants who later reached ASD criterion did not show a significant change across time.

Authors

Rutherford MD; Walsh JA; Lee V

Journal

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, Vol. 45, No. 8, pp. 2618–2623

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

August 27, 2015

DOI

10.1007/s10803-015-2396-7

ISSN

0162-3257

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