2023
The Selective Social Attention task in children with autism spectrum disorder: Results from the Autism Biomarkers Consortium for Clinical Trials (ABC‐CT) feasibility study
Shic F, Barney E, Naples A, Dommer K, Chang S, Li B, McAllister T, Atyabi A, Wang Q, Bernier R, Dawson G, Dziura J, Faja S, Jeste S, Murias M, Johnson S, Sabatos‐DeVito M, Helleman G, Senturk D, Sugar C, Webb S, McPartland J, Chawarska K, Trials T. The Selective Social Attention task in children with autism spectrum disorder: Results from the Autism Biomarkers Consortium for Clinical Trials (ABC‐CT) feasibility study. Autism Research 2023, 16: 2150-2159. PMID: 37749934, PMCID: PMC11003770, DOI: 10.1002/aur.3026.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAutism spectrum disorderSocial attention taskSchool-aged childrenAttention taskASD groupSpectrum disorderEye-tracking taskTotal T-scoreAttentional patternsAutism spectrumTD groupPresentation timeTrial feasibility studyGroup differencesPercent of timeOlder childrenTaskComparison groupToddlersT-scoreChildrenChildren 4Outcome variablesFaceCondition effectsEvaluation of clinical assessments of social abilities for use in autism clinical trials by the autism biomarkers consortium for clinical trials
Faja S, Sabatos‐DeVito M, Sridhar A, Kuhn J, Nikolaeva J, Sugar C, Webb S, Bernier R, Sikich L, Hellemann G, Senturk D, Naples A, Shic F, Levin A, Seow H, Dziura J, Jeste S, Chawarska K, Nelson C, Dawson G, McPartland J, Trials A. Evaluation of clinical assessments of social abilities for use in autism clinical trials by the autism biomarkers consortium for clinical trials. Autism Research 2023, 16: 981-996. PMID: 36929131, PMCID: PMC10192100, DOI: 10.1002/aur.2905.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2021
Preference for biological motion is reduced in ASD: implications for clinical trials and the search for biomarkers
Mason L, Shic F, Falck-Ytter T, Chakrabarti B, Charman T, Loth E, Tillmann J, Banaschewski T, Baron-Cohen S, Bölte S, Buitelaar J, Durston S, Oranje B, Persico A, Beckmann C, Bougeron T, Dell’Acqua F, Ecker C, Moessnang C, Murphy D, Johnson M, Jones E. Preference for biological motion is reduced in ASD: implications for clinical trials and the search for biomarkers. Molecular Autism 2021, 12: 74. PMID: 34911565, PMCID: PMC8672507, DOI: 10.1186/s13229-021-00476-0.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAutism spectrum disorderBiological motion preferenceBiological motionASD groupNeurotypical participantsMotion preferencesSocial-communicative symptomsSocial-communicative skillsBiological motion stimuliSocial brain functionSocial brain regionsLow-IQ individualsLow average IQNeurocognitive mechanismsAutistic differencesIndividual differencesMotion stimuliControl stimuliLater symptomatologySpectrum disorderAverage IQCommunicative skillsVisual preferenceSocial autismControl participants