Department of Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
Br J Clin Psychol. 2023 Mar;62(1):129-145. doi: 10.1111/bjc.12398. Epub 2022 Oct 27.
Approximately 50% of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) develop comorbid social anxiety disorder, and this comorbidity predicts poorer treatment outcomes than either syndrome alone. ASD and social anxiety are both associated with reduced social competence as evidenced by difficulties implementing fundamental social skills for successful social interactions, but it remains unclear whether reduced social competence reflects a mechanism that explains the increased risk for social anxiety associated with elevated autism spectrum symptoms.
DESIGN/METHODS: To address this gap in the literature, the current study combined multi-informant measures (child, parent and teacher report) with a sample of 194 children with and without psychiatric disorders (ages 8-13; 68 girls; 69% White/Non-Hispanic). Autism spectrum traits, social competence and social anxiety symptoms were measured continuously.
Bias-corrected, bootstrapped conditional effects modelling indicated that elevated parent-reported autism spectrum symptoms predicted reduced teacher-perceived social competence (β = -.21) and elevated child self-reported social anxiety (β = .17); reduced social competence accounted for 20% of the autism/social anxiety link (indirect pathway β = .04, ER = .20), and reduced social competence also predicted higher social anxiety independent of autism symptoms (β = -.16; all 95% CIs exclude 0.0, indicating significant effects). Exploratory analyses suggested that these findings were driven primarily by autism spectrum social communication difficulties rather than restricted/repetitive behaviours/interests.
The current findings are consistent with prior work implicating reduced social competence as a risk factor for the development of social anxiety among children with ASD, and extend prior work by demonstrating that this link is robust to control for mono-informant/mono-measure bias, age, sex, SES, majority/minoritized race/ethnicity status, clinical comorbidities, and item overlap across measures.
大约 50%的自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)儿童会并发社交焦虑障碍,这种共病会导致治疗效果不如单独患有任何一种疾病。ASD 和社交焦虑都与社交能力下降有关,这表现在实施成功社交互动所需的基本社交技能方面存在困难,但目前尚不清楚社交能力下降是否反映了一种机制,该机制解释了与自闭症谱系症状升高相关的社交焦虑风险增加的原因。
设计/方法:为了解决文献中的这一空白,本研究结合了多信息源测量(儿童、家长和教师报告),对 194 名患有和不患有精神障碍的儿童(年龄 8-13 岁;女孩 68 名;69%为白人和非西班牙裔)进行了研究。自闭症谱系特征、社交能力和社交焦虑症状均进行了连续测量。
经过偏倚校正、自举条件效应模型分析表明,家长报告的自闭症谱系症状升高预测了教师感知的社交能力下降(β=-.21)和儿童自我报告的社交焦虑升高(β=0.17);社交能力下降解释了自闭症/社交焦虑关联的 20%(间接途径β=0.04,ER=0.20),并且社交能力下降也独立于自闭症症状预测了更高的社交焦虑(β=-.16;所有 95%CI 均排除 0.0,表明存在显著影响)。探索性分析表明,这些发现主要是由自闭症谱系的社交沟通困难引起的,而不是由受限/重复行为/兴趣引起的。
本研究结果与先前研究一致,表明社交能力下降是 ASD 儿童社交焦虑发展的风险因素,并通过证明该关联在控制单信息源/单测量偏差、年龄、性别、SES、多数/少数族裔地位、临床共病和跨测量的项目重叠后仍然稳健,扩展了先前的研究。