The kids were shown a one-minute video clip. One half of the screen showed some kids doing yoga, while the other was a set of ever-changing complex patterns. A bit like a screensaver or a kaleidoscope. Eye-tracking apparatus was used to determine which side of the screen each child was looking at.
What happened? Both the healthy control children, and the developmentally delayed children, showed a strong preference for the "social" stimuli - the yoga kids. However, the toddlers with an autism spectrum disorder showed a much wider range of preferences. 40% of them preferred the geometric patterns. Age wasn't a factor.
A preference for geometric patterns early in life may be a novel and easily detectable early signature of infants and toddlers at risk for autism.But only a minority of the autism group showed this preference, remember. As you can see from the plot above, they spanned the whole range - and over half behaved entirely normally.
There was no difference between the "social" and "geometrical" halves of the autism group on measures of autism symptoms or IQ, so it wasn't just that only "more severe" autism was associated with an abnormal preference.
They re-tested many of the kids a couple of weeks later, and found a strong correlation between their preference on both occasions, suggesting that it is a real fondness for one over the other - rather than just random eye-wandering.
So this is an interesting result, but it's not clear that it would be of much use for diagnosis.

6 comments:
Hmm,
I think the labeling illustrations on the graph are exchanged....
Aaaagh, well spotted. Fixed.
That was my mistake, not the original author's.
Us Aspies have to make sure the art is displayed correctly (crooked pictures and all that)....
Didn't you say you have a cat?
Beware...
Heh, I saw that. Actually I said the same thing last year...
Hi, I do yoga and I have asperger's, I can't help feeling that I love yoga because it makes mechanised patterns out of people.
I feel that the 'social' video should have contained people standing around chatting like they normally always do. I think yoga was a poor choice for the study.
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