Department of Psychology & Kinney Center for Autism Education and Support, Saint Joseph's University, Philadelphia, USA.
Center for Autism Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, USA.
Mol Autism. 2023 Mar 4;14(1):10. doi: 10.1186/s13229-023-00541-w.
Autism was formally recognized by the medical community in the first half of the twentieth century. Almost 100 years later, a small but growing literature has reported sex differences in the behavioral expression of autism. Recent research has also begun to explore the internal experiences of individuals with autism, including social and emotional insight. The current study examines sex differences in language-based markers of social and emotional insight in girls and boys with autism and non-autistic peers during semi-structured clinical interviews. Sixty-four participants aged 5 to 17 years were individually matched on chronological age and full-scale IQ to form four groups: autistic girls, autistic boys, non-autistic girls, and non-autistic boys. Transcribed interviews were scored using four scales that index aspects of social and emotional insight. Results revealed the main effects of diagnosis, such that youth with autism exhibited lower insight than non-autistic youth on scales indexing social cognition and object relations, emotional investment, and social causality. With regards to sex differences, across diagnoses, girls were rated higher than boys on the social cognition and object relations, emotional investment, and social causality scales. Examined within each diagnosis separately, clear sex differences emerged: both autistic and non-autistic girls demonstrated better social cognition and understanding of social causality than boys in their respective diagnostic groups. No within-diagnosis sex differences were found on the emotional insight scales, however. These results suggest that relatively enhanced social cognition and understanding of social causality in girls may be a population-level sex difference that is preserved in autism, despite the core social challenges that characterize this condition. The current findings reveal critical new information about insight into social and emotional thinking and relationships in autistic girls versus boys that have important implications for improving identification and designing effective interventions.
自闭症在 20 世纪上半叶被医学界正式承认。近 100 年后,越来越多的文献报道了自闭症在行为表现上的性别差异。最近的研究也开始探索自闭症个体的内在体验,包括社交和情感洞察力。本研究在半结构化临床访谈中,检查了自闭症女孩和男孩以及非自闭症同龄人的语言社交和情感洞察力的性别差异。共有 64 名年龄在 5 至 17 岁的参与者,按年龄和全量表智商进行个体匹配,分为四个组:自闭症女孩组、自闭症男孩组、非自闭症女孩组和非自闭症男孩组。转录的访谈使用四个量表进行评分,这些量表可以评估社交和情感洞察力的各个方面。结果显示了诊断的主要影响,即自闭症青少年在社会认知和客体关系、情绪投入和社会因果关系等评估社交和情感洞察力的量表上的得分低于非自闭症青少年。关于性别差异,在所有诊断中,女孩在社会认知和客体关系、情绪投入和社会因果关系量表上的得分均高于男孩。在每个诊断中分别检查时,性别差异明显:自闭症和非自闭症女孩在各自的诊断组中,均表现出比男孩更好的社会认知和对社会因果关系的理解。然而,在情感洞察力量表上没有发现性别差异。这些结果表明,在自闭症中,女孩相对较高的社会认知和对社会因果关系的理解可能是一种人群水平的性别差异,尽管自闭症具有核心的社交挑战。目前的研究结果揭示了自闭症女孩与男孩在社交和情感思维和关系方面的洞察力的关键新信息,这对改善自闭症的识别和设计有效的干预措施具有重要意义。