Landa Rebecca J, Haworth Joshua L, Nebel Mary Beth
Center for Autism and Related Disorders, Kennedy Krieger Institute, BaltimoreMD, USA; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, BaltimoreMD, USA.
Center for Neurodevelopmental and Imaging Research, Kennedy Krieger Institute, BaltimoreMD, USA; Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, BaltimoreMD, USA.
Front Psychol. 2016 May 25;7:721. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00721. eCollection 2016.
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate a host of motor impairments that may share a common developmental basis with ASD core symptoms. School-age children with ASD exhibit particular difficulty with hand-eye coordination and appear to be less sensitive to visual feedback during motor learning. Sensorimotor deficits are observable as early as 6 months of age in children who later develop ASD; yet the interplay of early motor, visual and social skill development in ASD is not well understood. Integration of visual input with motor output is vital for the formation of internal models of action. Such integration is necessary not only to master a wide range of motor skills, but also to imitate and interpret the actions of others. Thus, closer examination of the early development of visual-motor deficits is of critical importance to ASD. In the present study of infants at high risk (HR) and low risk (LR) for ASD, we examined visual-motor coupling, or action anticipation, during a dynamic, interactive ball-rolling activity. We hypothesized that, compared to LR infants, HR infants would display decreased anticipatory response (perception-guided predictive action) to the approaching ball. We also examined visual attention before and during ball rolling to determine whether attention engagement contributed to differences in anticipation. Results showed that LR and HR infants demonstrated context appropriate looking behavior, both before and during the ball's trajectory toward them. However, HR infants were less likely to exhibit context appropriate anticipatory motor response to the approaching ball (moving their arm/hand to intercept the ball) than LR infants. This finding did not appear to be driven by differences in motor skill between risk groups at 6 months of age and was extended to show an atypical predictive relationship between anticipatory behavior at 6 months and preference for looking at faces compared to objects at age 14 months in the HR group.
患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的儿童表现出一系列运动障碍,这些障碍可能与ASD核心症状有着共同的发育基础。患有ASD的学龄儿童在手眼协调方面表现出特别的困难,并且在运动学习过程中对视觉反馈的敏感度似乎较低。早在6个月大时,就可以观察到后来发展为ASD的儿童存在感觉运动缺陷;然而,ASD早期运动、视觉和社交技能发展之间的相互作用尚未得到充分理解。视觉输入与运动输出的整合对于动作内部模型的形成至关重要。这种整合不仅是掌握广泛运动技能所必需的,也是模仿和解读他人动作所必需的。因此,更深入地研究视觉运动缺陷的早期发展对ASD至关重要。在本研究中,我们对ASD高风险(HR)和低风险(LR)的婴儿进行了研究,在一项动态的、互动的滚球活动中检查了视觉运动耦合,即动作预期。我们假设,与LR婴儿相比,HR婴儿对接近的球的预期反应(感知引导的预测动作)会减少。我们还在滚球之前和过程中检查了视觉注意力,以确定注意力参与是否导致了预期差异。结果表明,在球朝着他们运动的轨迹之前和过程中,LR和HR婴儿都表现出符合情境的注视行为。然而,与LR婴儿相比,HR婴儿对接近的球表现出符合情境的预期运动反应(移动手臂/手去接球)的可能性较小。这一发现似乎不是由6个月大时风险组之间的运动技能差异驱动的,并且进一步表明,在HR组中,6个月时的预期行为与14个月时对面孔而非物体的注视偏好之间存在非典型的预测关系。