Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, 406 Babbidge Road, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA.
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA.
Mol Autism. 2024 Nov 13;15(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s13229-024-00627-z.
"Frank autism," recognizable through the first minutes of an interaction, describes a behavioral presentation of a subset of autistic individuals that is closely tied to social communication challenges, and may be linked to so-called "prototypical autism." To date, there is no research on frank autism presentations of autistic adolescents and young adults, nor individuals diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in childhood who do not meet diagnostic criteria during or after adolescence (loss of autism diagnosis, LAD). In addition, there are currently no data on the factors that drive frank autism impressions in these adolescent groups.
This study quantifies initial impressions of autistic characteristics in 24 autistic, 24 LAD and 26 neurotypical (NT) individuals ages 12 to 39 years. Graduate student and expert clinicians completed five-minute impressions, rated confidence in their own impressions, and scored the atypicality of behaviors associated with impressions; impressions were compared with current gold-standard diagnostic outcomes.
Overall, clinicians' impressions within the first five minutes generally matched current gold-standard diagnostic status (clinical best estimate), were highly correlated with ADOS-2 CSS, and were driven primarily by prosodic and facial cues. However, this brief observation did not detect autism in all cases. While clinicians noted some subclinical atypicalities in the LAD group, impressions of the LAD and NT groups were similar.
The brief observations in this study were conducted during clinical research, including some semi-structured assessments. While results suggest overall concordance between initial impressions and diagnoses following more thorough evaluation, findings may not generalize to less structured, informal contexts. In addition, our sample was demographically homogeneous and comprised only speaking autistic participants. They were also unmatched for sex, with more females in the non-autistic group. Future studies should recruit samples that are diverse in demographic variables and ability level to replicate these findings and explore their implications.
Results provide insights into the behavioral characteristics that contribute to the diagnosis of adolescents and young adults and may help inform diagnostic decision making in the wake of an increase in the demand for autism evaluations later than childhood. They also substantiate claims of an absence of apparent autistic characteristics in individuals who have lost the diagnosis.
“弗兰克自闭症”可以通过互动的前几分钟识别出来,描述了自闭症患者亚群体的一种行为表现,这种表现与社交沟通挑战密切相关,可能与所谓的“典型自闭症”有关。迄今为止,尚未有研究关注自闭症青少年和年轻成人的“弗兰克自闭症”表现,也没有研究关注那些在儿童时期被诊断为自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)但在青少年时期或之后不再符合诊断标准(自闭症诊断丧失,LAD)的个体。此外,目前尚无关于这些青少年群体中“弗兰克自闭症”印象形成因素的相关数据。
本研究量化了 24 名自闭症患者、24 名 LAD 患者和 26 名神经典型(NT)个体在 12 至 39 岁时的自闭症特征初始印象。研究生和专家临床医生进行了五分钟的印象评估,对自己印象的可信度进行评分,并对与印象相关的行为的非典型性进行评分;将印象与当前的金标准诊断结果进行比较。
总体而言,临床医生在最初五分钟内的印象通常与当前的金标准诊断结果(临床最佳估计)相符,与 ADOS-2 CSS 高度相关,主要受韵律和面部线索驱动。然而,这种短暂的观察并不能在所有情况下都发现自闭症。虽然临床医生在 LAD 组中注意到一些亚临床非典型性,但 LAD 和 NT 组的印象相似。
本研究中的短暂观察是在临床研究中进行的,包括一些半结构化评估。虽然结果表明,在更全面的评估后,初始印象与诊断之间总体一致,但研究结果可能无法推广到不太结构化、非正式的情境中。此外,我们的样本在人口统计学上较为单一,只包括了会说话的自闭症参与者。他们的性别也不匹配,非自闭症组中女性更多。未来的研究应招募在人口统计学变量和能力水平上多样化的样本,以复制这些发现并探讨其影响。
研究结果为青少年和年轻成人的诊断提供了行为特征方面的见解,并可能有助于为儿童后期自闭症评估需求增加后做出诊断决策提供信息。研究结果还证实了那些已经失去诊断的个体没有明显自闭症特征的说法。