Brief Report: Visual Acuity in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders
Male
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Child Development Disorders, Pervasive
150
Visual Acuity
Humans
Female
Child
DOI:
10.1007/s10803-014-2086-x
Publication Date:
2014-03-18T02:18:02Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Recently, there has been heightened interest in suggestions of enhanced visual acuity in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) which was sparked by evidence that was later accepted to be methodologically flawed. However, a recent study that claimed children with ASD have enhanced visual acuity (Brosnan et al. in J Autism Dev Disord 42:2491-2497, 2012) repeated a critical methodological flaw by using an inappropriate viewing distance for a computerised acuity test, placing the findings in doubt. We examined visual acuity in 31 children with ASD and 33 controls using the 2 m 2000 Series Revised Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study chart placed at twice the conventional distance to better evaluate possible enhanced acuity. Children with ASD did not demonstrate superior acuity. The current findings strengthen the argument that reports of enhanced acuity in ASD are due to methodological flaws and challenges the reported association between visual acuity and systemising type behaviours.
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