Social attention during object engagement: toward a cross-species measure of preferential social orienting

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SUMMARY

    Objective quantification of social orienting using eye-tracking while children view dynamic video clips has found a decline in social orienting to eyes within the first year of life among infants who develop ASD. Similarly, toddlers with ASD spend less time attending to social stimuli like eyes and faces compared to controls, and social orienting has been shown to correlate with social competence in children with ASD. Contrary to the hypothesis regarding SADOE relative to familial liability for ASD, diminished SADOE in toddlers, whether considering all social looks or spontaneous social looks, appears to . . .

     

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