4.3 Article

The Development and Validation of Attention Constructs From the First Year Inventory

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 568-581

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/pas0000380

Keywords

infant attention; rating scale; construct development; statistical validation; autism spectrum disorder

Funding

  1. Autism Speaks
  2. Institute of Education Sciences (U.S. Department of Education) [R324A100305]
  3. Carolina Consortium on Human Development [T32-HD07376]
  4. Ireland Family Foundation

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Individual differences in early attention are associated with later social, cognitive, and emotional development, and attentional deficits in the first year are associated with risk for developmental disorders such as Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). The First Year Inventory (FYI; Baranek, Watson, Crais, & Reznick, 2003) was developed to identify 12-month-olds at risk for an ASD diagnosis. The current study identifies FYI items that reflect aspects of early attention that might predict future typical and atypical social, cognitive, and emotional development. Using a series of theoretical and statistical methods, we developed 3 attention-based constructs from the FYI: Responding to Social Attention (RSA), Initiating Social Attention (ISA), and Nonsocial Sensory Attention (NSA). A database with completed FYIs was analyzed using these constructs to determine the strength of relations among items. Cronbach's alpha analyses indicated good internal consistency, and item distribution was further supported using a confirmatory factor analysis. Data analyses showed statistically significant relations between the scores on these domains at 12 months and subsequent social responsiveness scores at 3 years. Analyses demonstrating the statistical and predictive validity of these 3 FYI attention constructs support their use for innovative explorations of infant behavioral patterns that can be used to predict typical and atypical individual trajectories in the development of later social, cognitive, and emotional skills.

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