Differential habituation to repeated sounds in infants at high risk for autism

Male Auditory Perceptual Disorders 150 610 Infant Risk Assessment Sensitivity and Specificity 03 medical and health sciences Early Diagnosis 0302 clinical medicine Acoustic Stimulation Auditory Perception Humans Female Autistic Disorder Habituation, Psychophysiologic
DOI: 10.1097/wnr.0b013e32834c0bec Publication Date: 2011-10-04T19:12:42Z
ABSTRACT
It has been suggested that poor habituation to stimuli might explain atypical sensory behaviours in autism. We investigated habituation to repeated sounds using an oddball paradigm in 9-month-old infants with an older sibling with autism and hence at high risk for developing autism. Auditory-evoked responses to repeated sounds in control infants (at low risk of developing autism) decreased over time, demonstrating habituation, and their responses to deviant sounds were larger than responses to standard sounds, indicating discrimination. In contrast, neural responses in infants at high risk showed less habituation and a reduced sensitivity to changes in frequency. Reduced sensory habituation may be present at a younger age than the emergence of autistic behaviour in some individuals, and we propose that this could play a role in the over responsiveness to some stimuli and undersensitivity to others observed in autism.
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