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ASD and Development Patricia Rakovic Differences in language development in the child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) a. Joint attention b. Verbal.

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Presentation on theme: "ASD and Development Patricia Rakovic Differences in language development in the child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) a. Joint attention b. Verbal."— Presentation transcript:

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2 ASD and Development Patricia Rakovic

3 Differences in language development in the child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) a. Joint attention b. Verbal development c. Non-verbal language development d. Theory of mind e. Pro-social communication f. Conversational skills g. Early differences in development in a child with ASD h. Differences in brain development i. Dyspraxia j. Theory of mind difficulties k. How the combination of verbal, non-verbal communication and motor planning difficulties impacts social communication. How to take a language sample

4 Autism Spectrum Disorders Problems with socialization Problems with communication Unusual behaviors

5 It’s more than height and weight Observing how children play, learn, speak and act Different areas of development – Social, communication, cognitive, gross motor, fine motor, adaptive Monitoring milestones can offer early signs of delay including signs of autism spectrum disorders Child Development

6 Accurate diagnosis of autism required significant knowledge of typical development in the following areas: social, communication, cognitive skills, and play skills. Understanding developmental profiles: must know what is typical for development and atypical for development at any age. Autism is a Developmental Disorder

7 Methodological Approaches to Studying Emergence of Autism Retrospective studies of affected children – Parental report – Video diaries analysis Prospective studies of infant siblings at risk for ASD – Recurrence risk for autism: 5-10% – High risk for other developmental problems: Language or cognitive delays Broader Autism Phenotype, BAP

8 Potential Areas of Dysfunction in the 1 st Year 1.Typical Development –0 to 3 months: Sensitivity to and preference for face-like stimuli and speech-like sound –3 to 6 months: Emergence of dyadic social interactions –6 to 9 months: Development of face processing skills (identity, affect, gender) Response to name Anticipatory social games –9 to 12 months: Social monitoring and imitation Social referencing Joint attention 2. Many skills affected in toddlers with ASD emerge typically in the first year

9 Patterns of Onset Early onset (1 st year): –“Inborn autistic disturbances of affective contact” (Kanner, 1943) Later onset (2 nd year): –Regression (15-27% of cases) (Eisenberg & Kanner, 1955; Dawson et al., 2006; Landa et al., 2007) –Plateau (Ozonoff et al., 2008; Hansen et al., 2008)

10 Age of Onset: Parental Perception Average age at first concern: – 15 months (SD=6.5) Primary concerns: – Social difficulties – Speech delays Why such a variability? Chawarska, Paul, Klin et al., 2007, JADD.

11 Recent study by CDC indicated most children with an ASD diagnosis had signs of a developmental problem before the age of 3, but average age of diagnosis was 5 years. Parental Concerns (Wiggins, Baio, Rice, 2006)

12 Early Development Babies start communicating and relating to other people at birth Continued social-emotional development is key to forming strong relationships and continued learning


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