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A comparison of visual attention to pictures in the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in children and adolescents with ADHD and/or autism

A comparison of visual attention to pictures in the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in children and adolescents with ADHD and/or autism
A comparison of visual attention to pictures in the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in children and adolescents with ADHD and/or autism

Background: Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) are neurodevelopmental conditions which frequently co-occur. The Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) is commonly used to aid with diagnostic assessment of ASD but was not originally designed for use in those with comorbid ADHD. Visual attention to social stimuli has been often studied in ASD using eye-tracking, to obtain quantitative indices of how attention is deployed to different parts of a social image/scene. As the ADOS includes tasks that rely on attending to and processing images of social scenes, these measures of visual attention could provide useful additional objective measurement alongside ADOS scores to enhance the characterisation of autistic symptoms in those with ADHD.

Methods: children with ASD, comorbid ASD and ADHD, ADHD and Neurotypical (NT) controls were recruited (n=84). Visual attention was measured using eye-tracking during free viewing of social scenes selected from the ADOS. The full ADOS was then administered. Stimulant medication was temporarily withdrawn during this assessment. Research diagnoses were based on the Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA), ADOS, Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ, a measure of ASD severity) and Conners' Rating Scales (CRS-3, a measure of ADHD severity) following clinical consensus.

Results: using factorial ANOVAs to model ADHD, Autism and their interaction, we found that fixation duration to faces was reduced in those with ASD (ASD and ASD+ADHD) compared to those without ASD (ADHD and NT). Reduced visual attention to faces in the whole sample was associated with Autism symptom severity (SCQ subscale scores) but not ADHD symptom severity (CRS-3 scores).

Discussion: our findings provide preliminary evidence in support of implementing visual attention measurement during assessment of ASD in the context of comorbidity with ADHD. For example, if a child with ADHD was found to reduce attention to faces in ADOS pictures this may suggest additive difficulties on the autism spectrum. Replication across a larger sample would be informative. This work has future potential in the clinic to help with complex cases, including those with co-occurring ADHD and ASD.

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, autism, autistic spectrum disorder, comorbidity, diagnosis, eye-tracking
1664-0640
Kochhar, Puja
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Arora, Iti
0e82c245-276b-4fe7-861b-b360a177297e
Bellato, Alessio
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Ropar, Danielle
9b2bfacc-9047-4961-9cf3-874993e7c021
Hollis, Chris
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Groom, Madeleine Maddie J.
25c2585f-749f-451b-b220-375f55fbfb26
Kochhar, Puja
79055bcb-b251-409a-87ac-c8d62a5e4faa
Arora, Iti
0e82c245-276b-4fe7-861b-b360a177297e
Bellato, Alessio
0ee4c34f-3850-4883-8b82-5717b74990f7
Ropar, Danielle
9b2bfacc-9047-4961-9cf3-874993e7c021
Hollis, Chris
87dc4f91-3052-429e-9683-2c6db56a5209
Groom, Madeleine Maddie J.
25c2585f-749f-451b-b220-375f55fbfb26

Kochhar, Puja, Arora, Iti, Bellato, Alessio, Ropar, Danielle, Hollis, Chris and Groom, Madeleine Maddie J. (2024) A comparison of visual attention to pictures in the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in children and adolescents with ADHD and/or autism. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 15, [1378593]. (doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1378593).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) are neurodevelopmental conditions which frequently co-occur. The Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) is commonly used to aid with diagnostic assessment of ASD but was not originally designed for use in those with comorbid ADHD. Visual attention to social stimuli has been often studied in ASD using eye-tracking, to obtain quantitative indices of how attention is deployed to different parts of a social image/scene. As the ADOS includes tasks that rely on attending to and processing images of social scenes, these measures of visual attention could provide useful additional objective measurement alongside ADOS scores to enhance the characterisation of autistic symptoms in those with ADHD.

Methods: children with ASD, comorbid ASD and ADHD, ADHD and Neurotypical (NT) controls were recruited (n=84). Visual attention was measured using eye-tracking during free viewing of social scenes selected from the ADOS. The full ADOS was then administered. Stimulant medication was temporarily withdrawn during this assessment. Research diagnoses were based on the Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA), ADOS, Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ, a measure of ASD severity) and Conners' Rating Scales (CRS-3, a measure of ADHD severity) following clinical consensus.

Results: using factorial ANOVAs to model ADHD, Autism and their interaction, we found that fixation duration to faces was reduced in those with ASD (ASD and ASD+ADHD) compared to those without ASD (ADHD and NT). Reduced visual attention to faces in the whole sample was associated with Autism symptom severity (SCQ subscale scores) but not ADHD symptom severity (CRS-3 scores).

Discussion: our findings provide preliminary evidence in support of implementing visual attention measurement during assessment of ASD in the context of comorbidity with ADHD. For example, if a child with ADHD was found to reduce attention to faces in ADOS pictures this may suggest additive difficulties on the autism spectrum. Replication across a larger sample would be informative. This work has future potential in the clinic to help with complex cases, including those with co-occurring ADHD and ASD.

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 April 2024
Published date: 29 April 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2024 Kochhar, Arora, Bellato, Ropar, Hollis and Groom.
Keywords: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, autism, autistic spectrum disorder, comorbidity, diagnosis, eye-tracking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490498
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490498
ISSN: 1664-0640
PURE UUID: 07d40cb6-d372-4b21-97da-047159c1d039
ORCID for Alessio Bellato: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5330-6773

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Date deposited: 29 May 2024 16:30
Last modified: 15 Jun 2024 02:09

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Contributors

Author: Puja Kochhar
Author: Iti Arora
Author: Alessio Bellato ORCID iD
Author: Danielle Ropar
Author: Chris Hollis
Author: Madeleine Maddie J. Groom

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