Habituation of auditory responses in young autistic and neurotypical children

Author:

Dwyer Patrick123ORCID,Williams Zachary J.45678ORCID,Vukusic Svjetlana29ORCID,Saron Clifford D.23ORCID,Rivera Susan M.12310ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology UC Davis Davis California USA

2. Center for Mind and Brain UC Davis Davis California USA

3. MIND Institute UC Davis Davis California USA

4. Medical Scientist Training Program Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Nashville Tennessee USA

5. Department of Hearing & Speech Sciences Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

6. Vanderbilt Brain Institute Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

7. Frist Center for Autism and Innovation Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

8. Vanderbilt Kennedy Center Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

9. Department of General Practice, Melbourne Medical School The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

10. College of Behavioral and Social Sciences University of Maryland, College Park MD USA

Abstract

AbstractPrior studies suggest that habituation of sensory responses is reduced in autism and that diminished habituation could be related to atypical autistic sensory experiences, for example, by causing brain responses to aversive stimuli to remain strong over time instead of being suppressed. While many prior studies exploring habituation in autism have repeatedly presented identical stimuli, other studies suggest group differences can still be observed in habituation to intermittent stimuli. The present study explored habituation of electrophysiological responses to auditory complex tones of varying intensities (50–80 dB SPL), presented passively in an interleaved manner, in a well‐characterized sample of 127 autistic (MDQ = 65.41, SD = 20.54) and 79 typically developing (MDQ = 106.02, SD = 11.50) children between 2 and 5 years old. Habituation was quantified as changes in the amplitudes of single‐trial responses to tones of each intensity over the course of the experiment. Habituation of the auditory N2 response was substantially reduced in autistic participants as compared to typically developing controls, although diagnostic groups did not clearly differ in habituation of the P1 response. Interestingly, the P1 habituated less to loud 80 dB sounds than softer sounds, whereas the N2 habituated less to soft 50 dB sounds than louder sounds. No associations were found between electrophysiological habituation and cognitive ability or participants' caregiver‐reported sound tolerance (Sensory Profile Hyperacusis Index). The results present study results extend prior research suggesting habituation of certain sensory responses is reduced in autism; however, they also suggest that habituation differences observed using this study's paradigm might not be a primary driver of autistic participants' real‐world sound intolerance.

Funder

Autism Speaks

MIND Institute, University of California, Davis

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Institutes of Health

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

University of California, Davis

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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