4.5 Article

Testing the Predictive Power of Cognitive Atypicalities in Autistic Children: Evidence from a 3-Year Follow-Up Study

Journal

AUTISM RESEARCH
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 258-267

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/aur.1286

Keywords

predictive; outcome; theory of mind; executive function; central coherence

Funding

  1. British Academy
  2. UK's Experimental Psychology Society
  3. University College, Oxford
  4. Clothworkers' Foundation
  5. Pears Foundation

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This follow-up study investigated the predictive power of early cognitive atypicalities. Specifically, it examined whether early individual differences in specific cognitive skills, including theory of mind, executive function, and central coherence, could uniquely account for variation in autistic children's behaviorssocial communication, repetitive behaviors, and interests and insistence on samenessat follow-up. Thirty-seven cognitively able children with an autism spectrum condition were assessed on tests tapping verbal and nonverbal ability, theory of mind (false-belief prediction), executive function (planning ability, cognitive flexibility, and inhibitory control), and central coherence (local processing) at intake and their behavioral functioning (social communication, repetitive behaviors and interests, insistence on sameness) 3 years later. Individual differences in early executive but not theory of mind skills predicted variation in children's social communication. Individual differences in children's early executive function also predicted the degree of repetitive behaviors and interests at follow-up. There were no predictive relationships between early central coherence and children's insistence on sameness. These findings challenge the notion that distinct cognitive atypicalities map on to specific behavioral features of autism. Instead, early variation in executive function plays a key role in helping to shape autistic children's emerging behaviors, including their social communication and repetitive behaviors and interests. (c) 2013 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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