September 2, 2010

Infant's Gaze May Be an Early, but Subtle, Marker for Autism Risk

ScienceDaily for September 1, 2010 reported on a correlation between infrequent gazing by infants and risk of Autism.

Researchers found that, like the low risk group, the high-risk siblings exhibited typical levels of social gazing when their caregivers actively engaged them, such as pointing at the toy and expressing excitement. However, high-risk sibs spent less time looking to their caregivers and more time fixated on the non-social stimuli (toy or joystick) when the caregiver was not engaging them, which could indicate a disruption in development related to joint attention. Joint attention is often a core deficit for children with autism.