Intellectual development in young children with autism spectrum disorders: A longitudinal study

Author:

Peristeri Eleni1ORCID,Andreou Maria2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, School of English Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

2. Department of Speech and Language Therapy University of Peloponnese Kalamata Greece

Abstract

AbstractIntelligence profiles in autism have been characterized by great variability. The questions of how autistic children's intelligence changes over time, and what factors influence these changes deserve study as part of efforts to document child autism profiles, but also because the relationship between intellectual functioning and children's background characteristics is poorly understood, particularly in a longitudinal context. A total of 39 autistic children and 39 age‐matched neurotypical children (5–9 years old) completed two IQ assessments at preschool age and up to 4 years later. Repeated‐measures analyses assessed longitudinal changes in the children's verbal (VIQ), performance (PIQ), and full‐scale IQ (FSIQ) at group level. We further sought to identify clusters with distinct profiles in each group by adopting an unsupervised K‐means clustering approach, and detect possible between‐subgroup differences in terms of children's socioeconomic status and autism severity. The largest cluster in the autistic group was composed of children whose PIQ significantly dropped at follow‐up, while the second largest cluster improved in all quotients; the smallest cluster, wherein children had more highly educated mothers than the rest of the clusters, was characterized by large improvement in VIQ. For the neurotypical children, there was a two‐cluster division; the majority of them improved in the three quotients, while very few dropped in PIQ at follow‐up. The relation between socioeconomic status and IQ changes was significant for both groups. The findings demonstrate both the complexity of intelligence changes in autism and the need to view this complexity through the lens of the children's socioeconomic diversity.

Publisher

Wiley

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