4.5 Article

Visualization and Analysis of Eye Movement Data from Children with Typical and Atypical Development

Journal

JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS
Volume 43, Issue 10, Pages 2249-2258

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10803-013-1776-0

Keywords

Learning; Eye tracking; Scientific visualization; Bottom-up; Knowledge generation; Autism spectrum disorder; Diagnosis; Attention; Social dominance; Social hierarchies; Conflict; Goals

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Looking at other children's interactions provides rich learning opportunities for a small child. How children with autism look at other children is largely unknown. Using eye tracking, we studied gaze performance in children with autism and neurotypical comparison children while they were watching videos of semi-naturalistic social interactions between young children. Using a novel, bottom-up approach we identified event-related measures that distinguished between groups with high accuracy. The observed effects remained in a subset of the total sample matched on IQ, and were replicated across several different stimuli. The described method facilitates the detection of meaningful patterns in complex eye tracking data. Also, the approach significantly improves visualization, which will help investigators understand, illustrate, and generate new hypotheses.

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