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Cited by 388 publications
(105 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…This fact could indicate a tendency to avoid faces during speech and it could be explained by the deficits in speech auditory processing, highlighted in numerous studies ( [9], [59], [60], [61]). In addition, this result seems to be in line with the retrospective studies that report a lack of social orienting in children with autism ( [51], [52], [53]). It is important to underline that, the co-occurrence of two social stimuli: visual and auditory, require multisensory processing of the social cues.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…This fact could indicate a tendency to avoid faces during speech and it could be explained by the deficits in speech auditory processing, highlighted in numerous studies ( [9], [59], [60], [61]). In addition, this result seems to be in line with the retrospective studies that report a lack of social orienting in children with autism ( [51], [52], [53]). It is important to underline that, the co-occurrence of two social stimuli: visual and auditory, require multisensory processing of the social cues.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…They find that people with ASD show poor visual attention and aversion to social touch and they respond less often to their names. Werner et al [51] and Dawson et al [52] report on impaired spontaneous attention shifting (i. e., social orienting) to social stimuli (e.g., calling their names and clapping of hands) in 10-month old children later diagnosed with ASD. In toddlers with autism, Dawson et al [53] also find social orienting impairment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Bernabei et al 1998);11 (e.g. Baranek 1999;Osterling and Dawson 1994); 12 (Adrien et al 1992); 15 (Werner et al 2000); 20 (Osterling et al 2002); and 25 (e.g., Maestro et al 1999). A related issue is that although the sample did include some high functioning children, overall, the group was relatively low functioning; thus generalisation to children without comorbid intellectual disability is limited.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Suggestionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Retrospective parent interviews (Young, Brewer, & Pattison, 2003) and studies of home movies of infants later diagnosed with autism (Baranek, 1999;Osterling & Dawson, 1994;Werner, Dawson, Osterling, & Dinno, 2000) suggest that abnormalities in development are evident in the first 2 yr of life. However, the higher incidence of ASD in infant siblings of children with autism provides a unique opportunity to look prospectively at the development of ASD from infancy and inform us of potential early signs that may be of diagnostic importance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%