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Components of Limited Activity Monitoring in Toddlers and Children with ASD
Objectives: To use eye tracking to examine activity monitoring in toddlers and children with ASD and to decompose factors that impact activity monitoring.
Methods: Toddlers with ASD (N=10; Age: M=23, SD=3 months) and typical development (TD; N=23; Age: M=21, SD=3 months) and children with ASD (N=17; Age: M=37, SD=1 month) and TD (N=9; Age: M=38, SD=3 months) were shown 16 20s video clips and 16 10s static images depicting two female adults interacting over a shared activity. Stimuli varied along 3 dimensions: (1) Gaze: mutual towards each other or towards the activity; (2) Distractors: many distractors or no distractors, where distractors were colorful toys; and (3) Motion: static image or video clip. Stimuli were counterbalanced across and within participants and eye tracking was used to evaluate patterns of attention. A 2nd order linear mixed model approach was used to examine attention to the scene, activities, people, and background elements.
Results: Decreased looking at the scene overall was associated with ASD (p<.01), fewer distractors (p<.05), and no motion (p<.01). TD participants looked more at the scene when motion was present (Group x motion interaction, p<.01). Decreased looking at activities was associated with ASD (p<.01), being in the younger age group (p<.01), the presence of more distractors (p<.01), and the lack of motion (p<.01). Older TD children looked more at activities than other groups (Group x age interaction, p<.01). Increased looking at the background was associated with ASD (p<.01), being younger (p<.05), more distractors (p<.01), and no motion (p<.01). Decreased looking at the people in the scene was associated with ASD (p<.01), being older (p<.01), more distractors (p<.01), and presence of motion (p<.01). Younger TD toddlers looked more at people than all other groups (Group x age interaction, p<.01). Eye tracking outcome measure associations with clinical characterization in ASD replicated previously observed findings.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that toddlers and children with ASD show a general pattern of diminished attention towards people and their activities. In typical development but not ASD, transitions consistent with a sharpening of attention towards the activities of others appear between 2 and 3 years of age. Interestingly, an effect of gaze direction was not present in the results of any outcome measures, suggesting that dynamic and complexity cues may play a greater role in shaping attention to scene-relevant context at these ages.