20039
Attention to Conspecific Auditory Information in Infants at-Risk for Autism
Objectives: To examine whether 7 to 9-month-old infant siblings of children diagnosed with ASD (SIBS-A) attend to auditory conspecific information in the same way as infant siblings of typically developing children (SIBS-TD). Approximately 19% of SIBS-A will also be diagnosed with ASD by 3 years of age, thus representing a high-risk population of interest to researchers examining the early development of ASD (Ozonoff, et al., 2011).
Methods: Infants were tested using the Infant-controlled Sequential Looking Preference Procedure (see Cooper & Aslin, 1990, 1994). The infants viewed 6 test trials consisting of 3 human speech (‘keev’, ‘ploo’, ‘boola’, etc.) and 3 monkey call (coos, girneys, warbles) trials paired with the static image of a bullseye on a monitor. Stimulus presentation was contingent on infants looking toward the monitor. We hypothesized that SIBS-TD would look longer to the human speech test trials and that SIBS-A would not differentially attend to either trial type.
Results: We found a significant interaction between risk group status and attention to the human speech versus monkey calls, F(1, 63) = 4.16, p = .046. Follow-up comparisons revealed that SIBS-TD (n = 41) looked significantly longer during the monkey call trials (M = 19.75s, SD = 9.01) versus the human speech trials (M = 16.49s, SD = 9.16; t(1, 40)=2.77, p = .009); whereas SIBS-A (n = 24) did not demonstrate a clear preference for either stimulus (human: M = 17.71s, SD = 9.01; monkey: M = 17.27s, SD = 8.45; p = .729).
Conclusions: Our hypothesis was partially supported in that SIBS-A did not demonstrate a clear preference for either trial type, whereas SIBS-TD preferred the monkey calls. Stimulus preferences may shift during development such that younger infants prefer familiarity whereas older infants prefer novelty (Hunter & Ames, 1988). Compared with younger infants who prefer human speech over monkey calls (Vouloumanos et al., 2010), our results suggest a possible shift toward preferences for novelty by 7 to 9 months in TD infants in favour of monkey calls. These findings may have implications for the development of social communication.