Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
The A.J. Drexel Autism Institute, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Autism Res. 2021 Feb;14(2):301-314. doi: 10.1002/aur.2355. Epub 2020 Aug 18.
This study documents the early adverse effects of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) on auditory joint engagement-the sharing of sounds during interactions. A total of 141 toddlers (49 typically developing [TD], 46 with ASD, and 46 with non-ASD developmental disorders [DD]; average age 22.6 months) were observed during a semi-naturalistic play session with a parent. Reactions to four types of sounds-speech about the child, instrumental music, animal calls, and mechanical noises-were observed before and as parents tried to scaffold joint engagement with the sound. Toddlers with ASD usually appeared aware of a new sound, often alerting to and orienting toward it. But compared to TD toddlers and toddlers with DD, they alerted and oriented less often to speech, a difference not found with the other sounds. Furthermore, toddlers with ASD were far less likely to spontaneously try to share the sound with the parents and to engage with the parent and the sound when parents tried to share it with them. These findings reveal how ASD can have significant effects on shared experiences with nonvisible targets in the environment that attract toddlers' attention. Future studies should address the association between auditory joint engagement difficulties and variations in multimodal joint engagement, sensory profiles, and ASD severity and the reciprocal influence over time of auditory joint engagement experience and language development. LAY SUMMARY: Like most toddlers, toddlers with autism spectrum disorder often alert when they hear sounds like a cat's meow or a train's rumble. But they are less likely to alert when they hear their own name, and they are far less likely to share new sounds with their parents. These findings raise important questions about how toddlers with autism spectrum disorder experience their everyday auditory world, including how they share it with parents who can enrich this experience.
本研究记录了自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)对听觉联合参与(互动中声音的共享)的早期不良影响。共有 141 名幼儿(49 名典型发育[TD],46 名 ASD,46 名非 ASD 发育障碍[DD];平均年龄 22.6 个月)在与父母的半自然游戏中被观察。在父母试图用声音搭建联合参与的过程中,观察了四种声音(关于孩子的言语、乐器音乐、动物叫声和机械噪音)的反应。与 TD 幼儿和 DD 幼儿相比,ASD 幼儿通常对新声音有明显的意识,通常会对其保持警觉并进行定向。但是,与其他声音不同,他们对言语的警觉和定向频率较低。此外,ASD 幼儿自发尝试与父母分享声音以及与父母和声音互动的可能性要小得多,而父母试图与他们分享声音时则没有这种情况。这些发现揭示了 ASD 如何对环境中吸引幼儿注意力的非可见目标的共同体验产生重大影响。未来的研究应该解决听觉联合参与困难与多模态联合参与、感官特征、ASD 严重程度以及听觉联合参与体验和语言发展之间的变化之间的关联,以及随着时间的推移这些因素的相互影响。