11 results
382 Unitary neural correlates of self-control in pediatric transdiagnostic psychopathology
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- Adam Kaminski, Hua Xie, Brylee Hawkins, Laura Campos, Madison Berl, Lauren Kenworthy, Chandan J. Vaidya
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- Journal:
- Journal of Clinical and Translational Science / Volume 8 / Issue s1 / April 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 03 April 2024, p. 114
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OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Childhood psychopathology is a worsening public health crisis leading to negative life outcomes, including self-harm and suicide. Difficulty in self-control as early as 3 years old predicts psychopathology, but the mediating mechanisms of brain function are unknown. Here, we tested one mechanism: functional connectivity (FC) integration. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We studied a sample of 204 children [53 F/149 M/2 NC; mean age (SD)=11 years (1.7)] with diverse self-control difficulties (e.g., attention deficit disorder [n=80]; autism spectrum disorders [n=91]). We extracted a general factor of psychopathology (“p-factor”) from the parent-reported Child Behavior Checklist. For participants with high quality fMRI data on 3 self-control tasks (n=79), testing flexibility, working memory, and inhibition, we calculated FC connectomes reflecting a general self-control state, and applied connectome predictive modeling (CPM) to reveal connections predicting overall task impairment. We then measured individual variance in cross-network integration of regions with the most predictive connections and tested for association with p-factor in a multiple linear regression. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We repeated CPM 1,000 times with 10-fold cross validation to generate a distribution of accuracies for predicted vs. observed task impairment scores (mean r=0.25, permutation p=0.02). Connections selected a maximum of 10,000 times (10 folds * 1,000 repetitions) were strongly predictive of task impairment (r=-0.5, p<0.001), highlighting connectivity of canonical executive networks as well as the default mode network. Regions (n=22) with the top 5% most selected connections were in lateral parietal and frontal cortices and implicated motor control. Between-network integration, operationalized with the graph theory metric participation coefficient, of one of these regions in left posterior superior frontal gyrus significantly predicted p-factor (R2=0.26, F(22,56) = 0.87; B =-0.49, p<0.05). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: A portion of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, associated with executive control, explained individual variance in p-factor. We plan to test alternative predictive models. Identification of such a neuro behavioral mechanism underlying psychopathology may lead to novel intervention targets.
80 Implications of Body Mass Index on Executive Functioning in Clinically Diagnosed Neurodiverse Children
- Laura A Campos, Sri Vaishnavi Konagalla, Jessica Smith, Jordan Linde, Madison Berl, Chandan Vaidya, Lauren Kenworthy
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 72-73
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Objective:
Childhood obesity is a serious health epidemic affecting the world today. Children who are obese earlier in life are more likely to stay obese and have an increased risk of poorer health outcomes later in life, such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Obesity is also associated with deficits in executive function. Executive function (EF) is comprised of several distinct but interrelated abilities including working memory, planning, inhibition, and flexibility. Prior research suggests that obesity drives brain changes which implicate executive function structures. Our aim is to examine the relationship between childhood obesity and executive function in children with neurodevelopmental disorders.
Participants and Methods:These data are from an ongoing study on neural and behavioral phenotypes of executive functioning in children with developmental disabilities, primarily Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Only study participants with complete BMI and BRIEF data were included in these analyses (n = 184). 134 representing (72.8%) of the participants were Male, 49 representing (26.6%) were Female, and 1 representing (.5%) were Gender nonconforming. 50 representing (27.2%) of the participants were between 8-9 years, 55 representing (29.9%) were between 10-11 years, and 80 representing (43.0%) were between 12-13 years. Average age was 11 years. 11 representing (6.0%) of the participants were underweight, 115 representing (62.5%) were healthy, 29 representing (15.8%) were overweight, and 29 representing (15.8%) were obese. Average BMI was 19.0, ranging from 13.2 to 36.3. 106 representing (57.6%) of the participants identified as White, 65 representing (35.3%) identified as BIPOC (2 Asian, 31 Hispanic/Latinx, 32 Black) and 13 representing (4.4%) identified as other/unspecified. 114 representing (61.9%) of the participants had a diagnosis of ADHD, ASD, or comorbid ASD and ADHD, 70 representing (38.1%) had a diagnosis of other. Average FSIQ-2 score was 106.98. Parents were asked to complete the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF-2) and the Inhibit, Shift, Working Memory (WM), Planning, and Global Executive Composite (GEC) scales were used as the dependent measure in analyses. BMI (kg/mA2) was calculated based on CDC 2000 growth charts and classified into 4 mutually exclusive categories—underweight, healthy, overweight, and obese. There was a prediction that higher BMI would be associated with lower executive function.
Results:A one-way ANOVA revealed a statistically significant difference between groups (F(3,180) = 3.649, p = .014). A Tukey post hoc test revealed more Shift problems in the obese group (74.55 ± 11.7) compared to the overweight group (65.79 ± 11.6, p = .026). There was no statistically significant difference between the underweight/healthy and obese groups (p = .999/p = .054). There was no statistically significant difference in mean T-scores for the Inhibit, WM, Planning, or GEC scales.
Conclusions:Childhood obesity and executive function deficits are significant risk factors for adult health outcomes. Obesity and elevated executive function T-scores for flexibility are related in a group of children with neurodevelopmental disorders. Future investigation will explore the role of cortical thickness and medication in these data.
12 Does Executive Functioning Predict Diagnostic Timing of Autism?
- Alexis Khuu, Lauren Kenworthy, Allison Ratto
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 622-623
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Objective:
Executive functioning (EF) is impaired in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and EF challenges are exacerbated in youth with ASD and ADHD (ASD+ADHD), which may impact diagnostic timing. We hypothesized youth with ASD+ADHD would be more impaired in EF (as opposed to other functional domains) compared to autistic youth without ADHD (ASD-only), with particular deficits in metacognition and inhibition. We also predicted youth with ASD+ADHD would be at significant risk for delayed ASD diagnosis and that greater EF challenges would predict earlier age of ASD diagnosis across groups.
Participants and Methods:Data from a clinical database was extracted for 400 youth who received a new diagnosis of ASD after age 5, either with a co-occurring diagnosis of ADHD (ASD+ADHD group: n=297; Mage of ASD diagnosis=10.49; 25.9% female; 48.1% white) or without a co-occurring ADHD diagnosis (ASD-only group: n=100; Mage of ASD diagnosis=12.02; 34.0% female; 44.7% white). EF was measured with the BRIEF-2 parent-report, and ASD symptom strength was measured with the SRS-2 School Age form. Independent samples t-tests investigated whether a) the ASD+ADHD group was uniquely impaired in EF compared to the ASD-only group, b) parents of ASD+ADHD report elevated EF problems, and c) the ASD+ADHD group was at significant risk for delayed ASD diagnosis. Pearson correlations examined the association between age of ASD diagnosis and EF for each diagnostic group. Hierarchical linear regressions further analyzed whether specific EF domains concurrently predicted age of ASD diagnosis, after controlling for the known predictors of assigned sex at birth, FSIQ, and ASD symptom strength.
Results:The ASD+ADHD group had greater challenges in overall EF (t=-6.42, p<.001), metacognitive skills (t=-6.47, p <.001), and inhibition skills (t=-7.06, p<.001). There was no significant difference in parent-reported autism symptoms between the ASD and ASD+ADHD groups (t=0.973, p=.331). The ASD+ADHD group received ASD diagnoses earlier than the ASD-only group (t=4.194, p<.001). In the ASD-only group, age of ASD diagnosis was not significantly correlated to overall EF, metacognitive skills, nor inhibition skills (ps>.05). In the ASD+ADHD group, ASD diagnosis was significantly related to overall EF (r(297)=.128, p=.027) and metacognitive skills (r(297)=.329, p<.001) but not inhibition skills (r(297)=.078, p=.180). Hierarchical linear regressions controlling for assigned sex at birth, FSIQ, and SRS-2 T-scores were used to determine whether these EF components significantly predicted age of ASD diagnosis. Overall EF did not predict age of ASD diagnosis in the ASD+ADHD group (ß=.034, t=1.417, p=.157), but metacognitive skills did (ß=.123, t=5.582, p<.001).
Conclusions:Our findings suggest youth with ASD+ADHD have greater impairment in overall EF, metacognition, and inhibition compared to ASD-only youth, despite similar levels of ASD traits, consistent with hypotheses. Contrary to our hypothesis, youth with ASD+ADHD in this sample were diagnosed with ASD earlier. However, results also suggest EF problems, specifically metacognitive deficits, predict later age of ASD diagnosis. Future research is needed to replicate findings and better understand how EF and other functional domains predict ASD diagnostic timing.
13 Verbal Memory and Learning Strategies in an Autistic Sample Using the CVLT
- Andrea Lopez, Rebecca Handsman, Alyssa Verbalis, Jordan Linde, Lauren Kenworthy
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 623
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Objective:
The present study aims to better understand learning strategies and difficulties in autistic youth. Previous studies have found that autistic youth have difficulties with executive function skills and poorer performance in memory and learning tasks, especially those that require spontaneous retrieval of information compared to memory tasks that provide external retrieval cues. Additionally, it has been theorized that autistic youth employ a serial approach rather than a semantic approach to learning. The current study hypothesized that the autistic sample will have (a) significant difficulties in learning and memory, (b) employ a serial approach more frequently and a semantic approach less frequently than the CVLT normative sample, and (c) will benefit significantly when provided with external retrieval cues.
Participants and Methods:Archival data from a mixed clinical and research database were examined for this study. Participants include 740 autistic individuals between the ages of 5.50 and 24.3 (M = 10.90, SD = 2.98). The sample consisted of 22.2% girls and 34.0% Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC). All individuals had a FSIQ > 70 (M = 99.91, SD = 16.09) and were clinically diagnosed with autism using DSM-IV-TR or DSM-V criteria by a clinician at an autism diagnostic center. Participants completed the age-appropriate California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT, Delis et al. 1987) which is a neuropsychological measure that examines verbal memory and learning. One-sample t-tests were used to examine the sample's verbal memory abilities and their learning strategies. A paired sample t-test was used to evaluate the sample's performance before and after an external retrieval cue was given.
Results:Results from the one-sample t-tests indicate that the autistic sample performed worse than the CVLT normative data with a large effect size (t(739)= -9.440, p <.001, Cohen's d = 1.292). Secondly, the autistic sample was less likely to use a semantic learning approach (t(739) = -1.841, p = .033, Cohen's d = 1.234), but not more likely to use a serial approach (t(739)=-.040, p=.484) compared to the normative sample. Lastly, the paired sample t-test results show that the sample performed significantly better after receiving the external retrieval cue (t(739)=-2.570, p=.005, Cohen's d = .770).
Conclusions:The data supported the first hypothesis; autistic individuals have increased difficulties with learning and verbal memory. However, the data only partially support the second hypothesis. The sample was less likely to use a semantic approach to learning but was not more likely to use serial learning. This finding is opposed to the Weak Central Coherence (WCC) theory, which suggests that autistic individuals are more likely to have detail-oriented, bottom-up cognitive thinking styles, consistent with a serial learning strategy. Lastly, data showed improvement when autistic individuals received a retrieval cue. This result supports the Task Support Hypothesis (TSH) and indicates that autistic individuals benefit from cues for memory recall, particularly those that capitalize on their areas of strength. This study did not use a control group and is limited in ethno-racial diversity; therefore, these are preliminarily findings that require further replication.
72 Bringing Neuropsychology to the Community: Adaptation of a Rey Osterreith Complex Figure Scoring System for Use in Large-Scale Community-Based Clinical Trials
- Rebecca Handsman, Alyssa Verbalis, Alexis Khuu, Andrea Lopez, Lucy S McClellan, Cara E Pugliese, Lauren Kenworthy
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 747-748
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Objective:
The Rey Osterreith Complex Figure (ROCF) is a neuropsychological task used to measure visual-motor integration, visual memory, and executive functioning (EF) in autistic youth. The ROCF is a valued clinical tool because it provides an insight into the way an individual approaches and organizes complex visual stimuli. The constructs measured by the ROCF such as planning, organization, and working memory are highly relevant for research in, but the standardized procedures for scoring the ROCF can be challenging to implement in large scale clinical trials due to complex and lengthy scoring rubrics. We present preliminary data on an adaptation to an existing scoring system that provides quantifiable scores, can be implemented with reliability, and reduces scoring time.
Participants and Methods:Data was taken from two large-scale clinical trials focusing on EF in autistic youth. All participants completed the ROCF following standard administration guidelines. The research team reviewed commonly used scoring systems and determined that the Boston Qualitative Scoring System (BQSS) was the best fit due to its strengths in measuring EF, the process-related variables generated, and the available normative data. Initially, the BQSS full scoring system was used, which resulted in comprehensive scores but was not feasible due to the time required (approximately 1-1.5 hours per figure for research assistants to complete scoring). Then, the BQSS short form was used, which was successful at solving the timing problem, but resulted in greater subjectivity in the scores impacting the team’s ability to become reliable. Independent reliability could not be calculated for this version because of the large number of discrepancies among scorers which included 2 neuropsychologists and 4 research assistants. A novel checklist was then developed that combined aspects of both scoring systems to help promote objectivity and reliability. In combination with this checklist the team created weekly check in meetings where challenging figures could be brought to discuss. Independent reliability was calculated amongst all research assistant team members (n=4) for the short form and novel checklist. Reliability was calculated based on (1) if the drawing qualified for being brought to the whole team and (2) individual scores on the checklist.
Results:Independent reliability was calculated for 10 figures scored utilizing the novel checklist by a team of 4 trained research assistants. All scorers were able to achieve 80% reliability with a high average (80-86%). Study team members reported that scoring took less time taking on average 30-45 minutes per figure.
Conclusions:Inter-rater reliability was strong on the checklist the study team created, indicating its potential as a useful adaptation to the BQSS scoring system that reduces time demands, making the tool feasible for use in large-scale clinical research studies with initially positive reliability factors. The checklist was easy to use, required little training and could be completed quickly. Future research should continue to examine the reliability of the checklist and the time it takes to complete. Additionally, the ROCF should be studied more broadly in research and examined as a potential outcome measure for large scale research studies.
2 The Role of Flexibility in Learning in Autistic Teens
- Rebecca Handsman, Jordan Linde, Alyssa Verbalis, Cara Pugliese, Chandan Vaidya, Lauren Kenworthy
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 790-791
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Objective:
Autistic youth have impaired executive functioning (EF) and these challenges increase throughout adolescence. Deficits in EF have been associated with poor adult outcomes, decreased availability for learning, and linked to academic outcomes. Specifically, flexible problem solving is greatly reduced in autistic youth. We aim to investigate how flexibility contributes to learning in autistic youth and their typically developing peers.
Participants and Methods:Participants included 44 teens with (n=22) and without (n=22) ASD. All teens were 14-18 years old (ASD M = 15.77, SD = 1.05; TD M = 15.73, SD = .96) with FSIQ 3 70 (ASD M = 105.92, SD= 16.17; TD M = 107.93, SD = 10.14). Teens with ASD met DSM-5 criteria for autism supported by the SCQ and/or ADOS-2. All participants completed the California Verbal Learning Task (Child or Third Edition) over zoom. Parents reported on their child’s flexibility skills on the Flexibility Questionnaire (FQ) which encompasses 5 subscales: routines/rituals, transitions, special interests, social flexibility, and generativity. Independent samples t-tests examined group differences in performance on the CVLT, measured by the long delay recall and learning slope. Bivariate correlations examined the relationship between learning and flexibility in the autistic group. Linear regression was used to determine how flexibility contributes to learning above and beyond age, gender, and diagnosis.
Results:Autistic youth had significantly lower scores on the CVLT long-delay recall (t = 2.311, p = .026) and the learning slope (t = 1.186, p = .038) than their typically developing peers. Special interests on the FQ were related to both performance on the first trial of the CVLT (r = -.482 p = .023) and the short delay cued recall (r = -.469 p = .028) in the autistic group. Fewer transition related problems were predictive of higher scores on the CVLT above and beyond age, gender, and diagnosis (R2 = .366, B = - .088, p = .030).
Conclusions:Learning was significantly lower in autistic teens compared to their typically developing peers. Additionally, autistic youth had a less steep learning slope than their typically developing peers. Autistic youth may focus on the first group of words only and don’t flexibly update their list to add new words as the trials go on. Autistic youth with more restricted interests have difficulty with the first trial due to the shifting required when starting a new unfamiliar task. Additionally, youth with a greater focus on their own interests had more difficulty on cued recall indicating that these youth may have had trouble shifting when prompted to use semantic categories. Fewer challenges with transitions were a significant predictor of learning above and beyond age, gender, and diagnosis. Previous research has shown large discrepancies between parent-report and laboratory-based tasks in autistic youth. This project highlights two unique measures of different modalities that show similarities in their ratings emphasizing their potential as good representations of overall skills. Future research should utilize a larger sample size to continue to examine the role of flexible problem solving in working memory and learning in autistic youth.
354 Unitary neural correlates of executive control in pediatric transdiagnostic psychopathology
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- Adam Kaminski, Hua Xie, Xiaozhen You, Kathryn Flaharty, Charlotte Jeppsen, Sufang Li, Junaid S. Merchant, Madison M. Berl, Lauren Kenworthy, Chandan J. Vaidya
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- Journal:
- Journal of Clinical and Translational Science / Volume 7 / Issue s1 / April 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 24 April 2023, pp. 104-105
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OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Childhood psychiatric symptoms are highly comorbid. Their co-occurrence and association with negative life outcomes is partially explained by deficits in executive control, or processes enabling self-regulation. Here, we test a novel executive neural target in three fMRI tasks and its relevance to shared psychopathology. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We studied 60 children [15 F/45 M; mean age (SD)=11.6 years (1.62)] with diverse diagnoses including attention deficit disorder (n=26) and autism spectrum disorder (n=22). We extracted a latent general factor of psychopathology using principal component analyses applied to parent-report Child Behavior Checklist syndrome scores. Subjects completed 3 executive control fMRI probes, tapping adaptive control, working memory, and inhibition. Correlational psychophysiological interaction (cPPI) analysis measured correlations between executive control-related modulations of activity in 414 network-affiliated parcels. We selected parcels exhibiting control-related cross-network correlations as well as control-related activity across all tasks and tested them for association with psychopathology. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: cPPI connectivity matrices were thresholded and graphs were identified using the Network-Based Statistic toolbox (p90th percentile PC) as well as control-related activation (>10% activated voxels; p DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results examine cross-network interactions between brain regions during 3 fMRI tasks and their role in explaining individual variation in psychopathology. As executive control links to both comorbidity and life outcomes, identifying the clinically-relevant neural correlates of controlled behavior may lead to transdiagnostic treatments.
Preliminary Psychometrics for the Executive Function Challenge Task: A Novel, “Hot” Flexibility, and Planning Task for Youth
- Lauren Kenworthy, Andrew Freeman, Allison Ratto, Katerina Dudley, Kelly K. Powell, Cara E. Pugliese, John F. Strang, Alyssa Verbalis, Laura G. Anthony
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- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 26 / Issue 7 / August 2020
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 17 March 2020, pp. 725-732
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Objective:
Executive functions (EF) drive health and educational outcomes and therefore are increasingly common treatment targets. Most treatment trials rely on questionnaires to capture meaningful change because ecologically valid, pediatric performance-based EF tasks are lacking. The Executive Function Challenge Task (EFCT) is a standardized, treatment-sensitive, objective measure which assesses flexibility and planning in the context of provocative social interactions, making it a “hot” EF task.
Method:We investigate the structure, reliability, and validity of the EFCT in youth with autism (Autism Spectrum Disorder; n = 129), or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder with flexibility problems (n = 93), and typically developing (TD; n = 52) youth.
Results:The EFCT can be coded reliably, has a two-factor structure (flexibility and planning), and adequate internal consistency and consistency across forms. Unlike a traditional performance-based EF task (verbal fluency), it shows significant correlations with parent-reported EF, indicating ecological validity. EFCT performance distinguishes youth with known EF problems from TD youth and is not significantly related to visual pattern recognition, or social communication/understanding in autistic children.
Conclusions:The EFCT demonstrates adequate reliability and validity and may provide developmentally appropriate, treatment-sensitive, and ecologically valid assessment of “hot” EF in youth. It can be administered in controlled settings by masked administrators.
Interests in high-functioning autism are more intense, interfering, and idiosyncratic than those in neurotypical development
- Laura Gutermuth Anthony, Lauren Kenworthy, Benjamin E. Yerys, Kathryn F. Jankowski, Joette D. James, Madeline B. Harms, Alex Martin, Gregory L. Wallace
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- Development and Psychopathology / Volume 25 / Issue 3 / August 2013
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 23 July 2013, pp. 643-652
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Although circumscribed interests are pathognomonic with autism, much about these interests remains unknown. Using the Interests Scale (IS), this study compares interests between 76 neurotypical (NT) individuals and 109 individuals with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (HF-ASD) matched groupwise on age, IQ, and gender ratio. Participants and their parents/caregivers completed diagnostic measures (the Autism Diagnostic Interview—Revised and the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule; HF-ASD only), cognitive tests (Wechsler IQ Scales), and questionnaires (the Repetitive Behavior Scale—Revised, the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, and the Social Responsiveness Scale), in addition to the IS. Consistent with previous research, HF-ASD and NT individuals did not differ in number of interest areas, but the types of interests and intensity of those interests differed considerably. Using only the IS intensity score, 81% of individuals were correctly classified (NT or HF-ASD) in a logistic regression analysis. Among individuals with HF-ASD, Interests Scale scores were significantly related to Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Repetitive Behavior Scale—Revised, and Social Responsiveness Scale scores, but they were not related to Autism Diagnostic Interview—Revised scores, IQ, gender, age, or psychotropic medication use. The type and intensity, but not the number, of interests distinguish high-functioning individuals with ASD from NT individuals.
Chapter 6 - Executive functions in autism spectrum disorders
- from Section II - Executive Dysfunction in the Neurodevelopmental and Acquired Disorders
- Edited by Scott J. Hunter, University of Chicago, Elizabeth P. Sparrow
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- Executive Function and Dysfunction
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- 05 October 2012
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- 04 October 2012, pp 101-108
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Summary
Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder that is behaviorally defined by the presence of a triad of behavioral impairments affecting social abilities, communication skills, and rigid, repetitive behaviors and interests. The DSM-IV-TR divides autism, or in its terminology, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, into diagnostic subcategories, including Asperger's Disorder, Autistic Disorder, and Pervasive Developmental Disorder–Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS; a category for individuals who do not meet full criteria for autism). The application of these subcategories is inconsistent across clinics in the United States, however, and there is confusion about associated features and additional diagnoses, such as ADHD. The proposed criteria for a new category, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), in the DSM-5 include dropping all subcategories of diagnosis and utilizing a dimensional approach to complement the single categorical label of ASD. This dimensional approach would allow for the designation of associated features as qualifiers, such as intellectual or language difficulties and ADHD. The term “ASD” is used throughout this chapter to describe research findings for Asperger's Disorder, Autistic Disorder, and PDD-NOS.
Executive dysfunction in ASD
Damasio and Maurer first linked ASD to EdF when they described behavioral similarities between individuals with ASD and those with frontal lesions, including lack of social motivation, poor communication, and perseverative behavior. Although EdF has not been demonstrated as a causal factor in ASD, it has been related to symptoms that define ASD, as well as to lower adaptive functioning in ASD. Findings of EdF are robust in school age children with ASD, who show specific impairment with tasks that require cognitive flexibility and organization. Reviews also highlight numerous studies where children with ASD demonstrate an impaired ability to plan on tasks such as the Tower of London.
Memory in Autism: Strengths, Weaknesses, and Different Approaches to Learning - Memory in Autism: Theory and Evidence, Jill Boucher and Dermot Bowler (Eds.). 2008. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 358 pp., $110.00 (HB)
- Lauren Kenworthy
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- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 15 / Issue 5 / September 2009
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 September 2009, pp. 815-817
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