Jones Emily J H, Dawson Geraldine, Kelly Jean, Estes Annette, Webb Sara Jane
Centre for Brain & Cognitive Development, Birkbeck, University of London, London, WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Duke Center for Autism and Brain Development, 2608 Erwin Rd, Suite 300, Durham, North Carolina, 022705.
Autism Res. 2017 May;10(5):961-972. doi: 10.1002/aur.1754. Epub 2017 Feb 28.
Prospective longitudinal studies of infants with older siblings with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have indicated that differences in the neurocognitive systems underlying social attention may emerge prior to the child meeting ASD diagnostic criteria. Thus, targeting social attention with early intervention might have the potential to alter developmental trajectories for infants at high risk for ASD. Electrophysiological and habituation measures of social attention were collected at 6, 12, and 18 months in a group of high-risk infant siblings of children with ASD (N = 33). Between 9 and 11 months of age, infant siblings received a parent-delivered intervention, promoting first relationships (PFR), (n = 19) or on-going assessment without intervention (n = 14). PFR has been previously shown to increase parental responsivity to infant social communicative cues and infant contingent responding. Compared to infants who only received assessment and monitoring, infants who received the intervention showed improvements in neurocognitive metrics of social attention, as reflected in a greater reduction in habituation times to face versus object stimuli between 6 and 12 months, maintained at 18 months; a greater increase in frontal EEG theta power between 6 and 12 months; and a more comparable P400 response to faces and objects at 12 months. The high-risk infants who received the intervention showed a pattern of responses that appeared closer to the normative responses of two groups of age-matched low-risk control participants. Though replication is necessary, these results suggest that early parent-mediated intervention has the potential to impact the brain systems underpinning social attention in infants at familial risk for ASD. Autism Res 2017, 10: 961-972. © 2017 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
对患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的年长同胞的婴儿进行的前瞻性纵向研究表明,社交注意力背后的神经认知系统差异可能在儿童达到ASD诊断标准之前就已出现。因此,通过早期干预针对社交注意力可能有潜力改变ASD高风险婴儿的发育轨迹。对一组ASD患儿的高风险婴儿同胞(N = 33)在6个月、12个月和18个月时收集了社交注意力的电生理和习惯化测量数据。在9至11个月大时,婴儿同胞接受了由父母提供的干预,即促进初次关系(PFR)(n = 19)或无干预的持续评估(n = 14)。先前的研究表明,PFR可提高父母对婴儿社交交流线索的反应能力以及婴儿的 contingent 反应。与仅接受评估和监测的婴儿相比,接受干预的婴儿在社交注意力的神经认知指标上有所改善,表现为6至12个月之间对脸部与物体刺激的习惯化时间减少更多,且在18个月时保持这一趋势;6至12个月之间额叶脑电图θ波功率增加更多;12个月时对面部和物体的P400反应更具可比性。接受干预的高风险婴儿表现出的反应模式似乎更接近两组年龄匹配的低风险对照参与者的正常反应。尽管需要重复验证,但这些结果表明,早期父母介导的干预有可能影响ASD家族风险婴儿中支持社交注意力的脑系统。《自闭症研究》2017年,10:961 - 972。©2017国际自闭症研究协会,威利期刊公司