Oppenheim David, Mottes-Peleg Michal, Dolev Smadar, Yirmiya Nurit
University of Haifa, Israel.
Oranim Academic College of Education, Israel.
Autism. 2025 Aug;29(8):1987-1997. doi: 10.1177/13623613251329975. Epub 2025 Apr 3.
Observations of parent-child play with toys are often used to assess interactions between parents and non-autistic as well as autistic children, but some research indicates that play without toys may elicit more positive interactions than play with toys. The first goal of the study was to examine whether this is true in the case of autistic preschoolers by comparing their play with their parents with versus without toys. The second goal was to compare mother- and father-child interactions. Seventy-eight autistic preschooler boys were observed interacting in counterbalanced mother- and father-child play with or without toys, and interactions were coded using the Emotional Availability scales. Results revealed that for both mothers and fathers scores on all of the EA scales in the play episode without toys were higher than scores in the episode with toys. Also, almost no differences were found between children's interactions with their mothers and fathers in both play with or without toys. Both findings broaden our understanding of the early social experiences of autistic children with their parents.Lay AbstractResearchers that study the development of young children often observe them playing with their parents with toys. However, a few studies and clinical experience suggest that the interactions between parents and children are often more positive when they play toys. The first goal of the study was to find out if this is true for autistic preschoolers. We observed 78 children playing with each of their parents, and compared their play with and without toys. The second goal of the study was to compare mother- and father-child interactions to discover if they are similar or different from one another. We measured the emotional quality of parent-child interactions using scales that measure the behavior of both parents and children toward one another. We studied only boys because autism may present differently in girls. We discovered that both parents' and children's behavior were more positive when they were playing without toys compared to when they were playing with toys. Also, when we compared the emotional quality of how children played with their mothers and their fathers we found almost no differences, both in how the parents and the children behaved. The findings are important because they can guide researchers, clinicians, and parents to include both play with toys and play without toys in studies, interventions, and daily life. They also emphasize the importance of fathers, because although the fathers in the study were somewhat less involved in everyday caregiving with their children compared to mothers, they had interactions with the children that were as positive as those children had with their mothers. Importantly, we do not know if the findings apply to autistic girls as well.
观察亲子玩玩具的情况常被用于评估父母与非自闭症儿童以及自闭症儿童之间的互动,但一些研究表明,无玩具玩耍可能比有玩具玩耍引发更多积极互动。该研究的首要目标是,通过比较自闭症学龄前儿童与父母在有玩具和无玩具情况下的玩耍,来检验这一情况是否属实。第二个目标是比较母婴和父子互动。研究人员观察了78名自闭症学龄前男孩在有玩具和无玩具的情况下,与父母进行的平衡式母婴和父子玩耍互动,并使用情感可及性量表对互动进行编码。结果显示,对于母亲和父亲而言,在无玩具玩耍环节中,情感可及性量表的所有得分均高于有玩具环节。此外,在有玩具和无玩具的玩耍中,孩子与母亲和父亲的互动几乎没有差异。这两个发现拓宽了我们对自闭症儿童与父母早期社交体验的理解。
研究幼儿发展的研究人员经常观察他们与父母玩玩具的情况。然而,一些研究和临床经验表明,父母与孩子在无玩具玩耍时的互动往往更积极。该研究的首要目标是弄清楚这对自闭症学龄前儿童是否属实。我们观察了78名儿童与各自父母的玩耍情况,并比较了他们有玩具和无玩具时的玩耍。该研究的第二个目标是比较母婴和父子互动,以发现它们彼此是否相似或不同。我们使用测量父母和孩子相互行为的量表来衡量亲子互动的情感质量。我们只研究了男孩,因为自闭症在女孩身上的表现可能不同。我们发现,与有玩具玩耍相比,父母和孩子在无玩具玩耍时的行为都更积极。此外,当我们比较孩子与母亲和父亲玩耍时的情感质量时,我们发现无论是父母还是孩子的行为,几乎都没有差异。这些发现很重要,因为它们可以指导研究人员、临床医生和家长在研究、干预和日常生活中纳入有玩具玩耍和无玩具玩耍。它们还强调了父亲的重要性,因为尽管研究中的父亲与孩子日常照料的参与度比母亲略低,但他们与孩子的互动和孩子与母亲的互动一样积极。重要的是,我们不知道这些发现是否也适用于自闭症女孩。