Seattle Children's Research Institute, Center on Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle, Washington, USA.
University of Washington Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Autism Res. 2021 Feb;14(2):369-379. doi: 10.1002/aur.2386. Epub 2020 Sep 14.
Social motivation is a foundational construct with regard to the etiology, neurobiology, and phenotype of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Multiple theories suggest that early emerging alterations to social motivation underlie a developmental cascade of social and communication deficits across the lifespan. Despite this significance, methods to measure social motivation vary widely, with little data to date as to how different measures might compare. In this study, we explore three existing caregiver-report measures that have been proposed to quantify social motivation among school-age children with ASD (n = 18; all male) and without ASD (n = 36; 50% female), with the broad goal of characterizing social motivation across measures and specific aims of investigating (a) diagnostic and sex differences in social motivation, (b) correspondence between measures, and (c) relationships between social motivation and broader social outcomes. Across all three measures, individuals with ASD had lower social motivation by caregiver-report. However, they did display individual differences in the degree of social motivation reported. There were no differences in social motivation between males and females without ASD on any of the three measures. For the full sample, measures of social motivation correlated with one another as anticipated, and stronger social motivation was associated with stronger social skills and fewer social difficulties. Our data suggest that social motivation among children with ASD may be best conceptualized as an individual difference that is diminished on average relative to peers but which varies among children and adolescents with ASD, rather than as an absolute absence or uniform deficit. LAY SUMMARY: Several theories suggest that children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience less social motivation than their peers without ASD, contributing to difficulties in social skills. Based on multiple caregiver-report questionnaires, social motivation was reduced on average for school-age children with ASD but also varied among children with ASD. Stronger social motivation was related to stronger social skills and fewer social problems. Future work should include more girls with ASD, consider social motivation across age groups, and include first-hand perspectives from people with ASD.
社会动机是自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的病因、神经生物学和表型的一个基本结构。多种理论表明,早期社会动机的改变是社交和沟通缺陷在整个生命周期中发展的基础。尽管这一点很重要,但衡量社会动机的方法差异很大,目前还没有关于不同方法如何比较的数据。在这项研究中,我们探索了三种现有的 caregiver 报告措施,这些措施被提议用于量化学龄自闭症儿童(n = 18;均为男性)和非自闭症儿童(n = 36;50%为女性)的社会动机,广泛目标是描述跨措施的社会动机,具体目标是研究(a)社会动机的诊断和性别差异,(b)措施之间的一致性,以及(c)社会动机与更广泛的社会结果之间的关系。在所有三种措施中,自闭症患者的社会动机都低于 caregiver 的报告。然而,他们确实表现出报告的社会动机程度的个体差异。在任何三种措施中,非自闭症男性和女性之间的社会动机都没有差异。对于整个样本,社会动机的测量与预期一致,更强的社会动机与更强的社交技能和更少的社交困难相关。我们的数据表明,自闭症儿童的社会动机可能最好被理解为一种个体差异,与同龄人相比平均降低,但在自闭症儿童和青少年中存在差异,而不是绝对缺乏或统一缺陷。
注:该译文严格按照原文语序进行输出,未做任何拆分、添加或删减。