Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3098839265> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W3098839265 endingPage "983" @default.
- W3098839265 startingPage "973" @default.
- W3098839265 abstract "Abstract Studies with infant siblings of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder have attempted to identify early markers for the disorder and suggest that autistic symptoms emerge between 12 and 24 months of age. Yet, a reliable first‐year marker remains elusive. We propose that in order to establish first‐year manifestations of this inherently social disorder, we need to develop research methods that are sufficiently socially demanding and realistically interactive. Building on Keemink et al. [2019, Developmental Psychology , 55, 1362–1371], we employed a gaze‐contingent eye‐tracking paradigm in which infants could interact with face stimuli. Infants could elicit emotional expressions (happiness, sadness, surprise, fear, disgust, anger) from on‐screen faces by engaging in eye contact. We collected eye‐tracking data and video‐recorded behavioural response data from 122 (64 male, 58 female) typically developing infants and 31 infant siblings (17 male, 14 female) aged 6‐, 9‐ and 12‐months old. All infants demonstrated a significant Expression by AOI interaction ( F (10, 1470) = 10.003, P < 0.001, ŋ p 2 = 0.064). Infants' eye movements were “expression‐specific” with infants distributing their fixations to AOIs differently per expression. Whereas eye movements provide no evidence of deviancies, behavioural response data show significant aberrancies in reciprocity for infant siblings. Infant siblings show reduced social responsiveness at the group level ( F (1, 147) = 4.10, P = 0.042, ŋ p 2 = 0.028) and individual level (Fischer's Exact, P = 0.032). We conclude that the gaze‐contingency paradigm provides a realistically interactive experience capable of detecting deviancies in social responsiveness early, and we discuss our results in relation to subsequent infant sibling development. Lay Summary We investigated how infant siblings of children with autism spectrum disorder respond to interactive faces presented on a computer screen. Our study demonstrates that infant siblings are less responsive when interacting with faces on a computer screen (e.g., they smile and imitate less) in comparison to infants without an older sibling with autism. Reduced responsiveness within social interaction could potentially have implications for how parents and carers interact with these infants. Autism Res 2021, 14: 973–983 . © 2020 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC." @default.
- W3098839265 created "2020-11-23" @default.
- W3098839265 creator A5020889716 @default.
- W3098839265 creator A5022609437 @default.
- W3098839265 creator A5067720950 @default.
- W3098839265 creator A5074961145 @default.
- W3098839265 creator A5088001065 @default.
- W3098839265 date "2020-11-10" @default.
- W3098839265 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W3098839265 title "Eye Movements and Behavioural Responses to Gaze‐Contingent Expressive Faces in Typically Developing Infants and Infant Siblings" @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1492870567 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1911773504 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1970540441 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1972139731 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1975893854 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1991340784 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W1997469637 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2000385120 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2013701006 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2019909657 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2031371003 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2034556675 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2034621560 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2054490346 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2056869965 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2060275002 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2062328738 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2067434788 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2072951888 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2081839422 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2082490348 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2087204502 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2089150509 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2091981433 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2097538272 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2099585587 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2105628924 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2105839926 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2106906975 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2109321734 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2109531568 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2111874514 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2113820755 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2127870165 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2130157722 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2133978628 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2138812056 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2141035083 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2143361733 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2143858405 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2144236040 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2150261429 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2151822194 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2156482149 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2157143678 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2157183647 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2162051753 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2162633858 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2170894824 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2227824320 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2256699077 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2323313422 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2489557975 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2566348154 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2738365047 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2743796680 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2793486252 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2793682204 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2795453678 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2803397645 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2924844526 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W2943849190 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W3000603564 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W4205225999 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W4238151551 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W4247665917 @default.
- W3098839265 cites W4255368251 @default.
- W3098839265 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.2432" @default.
- W3098839265 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33170549" @default.
- W3098839265 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3098839265 type Work @default.
- W3098839265 sameAs 3098839265 @default.
- W3098839265 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W3098839265 countsByYear W30988392652021 @default.
- W3098839265 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3098839265 hasAuthorship W3098839265A5020889716 @default.
- W3098839265 hasAuthorship W3098839265A5022609437 @default.
- W3098839265 hasAuthorship W3098839265A5067720950 @default.
- W3098839265 hasAuthorship W3098839265A5074961145 @default.
- W3098839265 hasAuthorship W3098839265A5088001065 @default.
- W3098839265 hasBestOaLocation W30988392652 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C10090317 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C11171543 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C120665830 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C138496976 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C143110190 @default.
- W3098839265 hasConcept C153050134 @default.