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By
Victoria Katsarou
Research at the Yale Developmental Disabilities
Clinic promises to revolutionize physicians' approach
to autism by providing an opportunity for earlier
diagnosis of the disorder. Dr. Fred Volkmar, co-head
of the clinic, said the research offers an entirely
new way of thinking about and treating the condition.
The two-part experiment was led by Dr. Rhea Paul
and subjected 30 autistic and 30 unaffected toddlers
between the ages of 18 and 36 months to the same
auditory stimuli in order to discern the extent
to which autistic and other children reveal the
same sound preference. According to Paul, at the
age of seven to ten months, toddlers normally
"tune in to the language
they are learning and show preference towards
the specific kinds of sound
structures that they are attempting to learn."
Paul holds a joint appointment at Southern Connecticut
State
University and the Yale Child Study Center. She
is a professor of
communication disorders and pursues research on
autism and related
disabilities, attempting to compare the auditory
preferences of toddlers
with autism to those of other children in similar
age groups.
The experiment's first part focused on toddlers
sitting in their mothers' laps in a booth while
various sounds were broadcast from one of two
sides. Parents wore headphones so as to not influence
the children's reactions to the sounds. Paul measured
the how often and for how long toddlers turned
their heads in response to those sound structures
resembling normal speech.
Children with autism revealed a preference toward
speech-resembling
sound structures, but they responded less strongly
than normal children.
Additionally, autistic children kept their heads
turned in the same
direction for much longer periods of time.
Paul also measured the amount of time that toddlers
concentrated on
speech with pauses placed at the end of clauses
and sentences, as opposed to speech with abnormal
pauses. Again, the preferences of autistic children
were very similar to those of normal ones, but
much weaker.
"Distinguishing between these two forms of
speech is an important
ability: it represents one of the ways through
which children learn about
grammar," Paul said. "These results
reveal that autistic children have no
defects in their basic equipment for breaking
language down. They have the
tools, but they are unable to spend the same time
listening."
The discovery shed light on new ways of dealing
with autism.
Historically, researchers have placed the greatest
focus on developing
autistic children's speaking skills. But Paul
said autistic children's
exposure to language proves more beneficial than
efforts to make them talk.
"It wouldn't help to just talk more to them,"
Paul said. "When the
child is looking at you while you're talking,
you have to give it some form
of reinforcement in order to capture its attention."
These results suggest a means of measuring the
different preferences
displayed by autistic children, which could contribute
to earlier diagnosis
of the condition. Dr. Ami Klin, co-head of the
Developmental Disabilities
Clinic at the Yale Child Studies Center, identified
this possibility of earlier diagnosis as the most
important contribution of the experiment.
"Children's preference for speech sounds
as opposed to other sounds in
their environment is one of their most important
mechanisms of socialization," Klin said.
"We knew that children with autism are born
without this preferential attention. The trick
was how to measure that. By being able to measure
it, we can maximize the outcome of our treatment.
The earlier we identify children with autism,
the earlier we can provide treatment and the better
the response that we will get."
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