Friday, December 9, 2016

Attention and written expression in school-age, high-functioning children with autism spectrum disorders


Attention and written expression in school-age, high-functioning children with autism spectrum disorders

Abstract

High-functioning  children  with  autism  spectrum  disorders  often  find  writing  challenging.  

These  writing  difficulties  may be specific to autism spectrum disorder or to a more general clinical effect of attention disturbance, as these children are often comorbid for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptomatology (and children  with attention- deficit/hyperactivity  disorder  often  also  find  writing  challenging).  To  examine  this  issue,  this  study  investigated  the role  of  attention  disturbance  on  writing  in  155  school-age  children  across  four   diagnostic  groups:  high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (HFASD)  with lower ADHD  symptoms  (HFASD-L), HFASD with higher  ADHD symptoms (HFASD-H),  ADHD  symptoms  but  no  autism  spectrum  disorder  symptoms,  and  typical  development.  Both  HFASD subgroups and the ADHD group displayed lower word production writing scores than the typical development group, but the clinical groups did not differ. The HFASD-H and ADHD groups had significantly lower theme development and text organization writing scores than the typical development group, but the HFASD-L and typical  development groups were not significantly different. The findings support prior research reporting writing problems in children with autism spectrum  disorder  but  also  suggest  that  children  with  HFASD-H  may  be  at  greater  risk  for  writing  difficulties  than children with HFASD-L. Better understanding the role of attention in writing development could  advance methods for assessment and intervention for children with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder at risk for  writing difficulties.


CLICK HERE TO SEE FULL PDF


Share: