Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Autism Res. 2022 Jul;15(7):1324-1335. doi: 10.1002/aur.2760. Epub 2022 Jun 1.
While previous work has identified the early predictors of language skills in infants at elevated familial risk (ER) and low familial risk (LR) for autism spectrum disorder (ASD), no studies to date have explored whether these predictors vary based on diagnostic outcome of ASD or no ASD. The present study used a large, multisite dataset to examine associations between a set of commonly studied predictor variables (infant gesture abilities, fine motor skills, nonverbal cognition, and maternal education level), measured at 12 months, and language skills, measured at 3 years, across three diagnostic outcome groups-infants with ASD ("ASD"), ER infants without ASD ("ER-no ASD"), and LR infants without ASD ("LR-no ASD"). Findings revealed that the predictors of language skills differed across groups, as gesture abilities were positively associated with language skills in the ER-no ASD group but negatively associated with language skills in the ASD group. Furthermore, maternal education level was positively associated with language skills in the ASD and LR-no ASD groups only. Variability in these early predictors may help explain why language skills are heterogeneous across the autism spectrum, and, with further study, may help clinicians identify those in need of additional and/or specialized intervention services that support language development. LAY SUMMARY: The present study identified predictors of language skills in infants with and without autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Maternal education level and 12-month gesture abilities predicted 3-year language skills in infants with ASD. Measuring these predictors early in life may help identify infants and families in need of additional and/or specialized intervention services that support language development.
虽然之前的研究已经确定了具有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)高家族风险(ER)和低家族风险(LR)的婴儿语言技能的早期预测因素,但迄今为止尚无研究探讨这些预测因素是否因 ASD 或非 ASD 的诊断结果而有所不同。本研究使用了一个大型多站点数据集,检查了在三个诊断结果组(ASD 婴儿“ASD”、无 ASD 的 ER 婴儿“ER-no ASD”和无 ASD 的 LR 婴儿“LR-no ASD”)中,一组常见研究预测变量(婴儿手势能力、精细运动技能、非言语认知和母亲教育水平)与 12 个月时的语言技能和 3 岁时的语言技能之间的关联。研究结果表明,预测因素在不同组别之间存在差异,因为手势能力与 ER-no ASD 组的语言技能呈正相关,与 ASD 组的语言技能呈负相关。此外,母亲教育水平仅与 ASD 和 LR-no ASD 组的语言技能呈正相关。这些早期预测因素的变异性可能有助于解释为什么语言技能在自闭症谱系中存在异质性,并且随着进一步的研究,可能有助于临床医生确定那些需要额外和/或专门干预服务以支持语言发展的人。
简单来说,本研究确定了具有和不具有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的婴儿的语言技能预测因素。母亲教育水平和 12 个月时的手势能力预测了 ASD 婴儿 3 岁时的语言技能。早期测量这些预测因素可能有助于识别需要额外和/或专门干预服务以支持语言发展的婴儿和家庭。