Operationalizing Social Communication in Autism and Related Neurodevelopmental Research: a Scoping Review Over 20 Years

AbstractPurpose of ReviewAutism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by persistent deficits in social communication/interaction and restricted set of interests, activities, and/or repetitive patterns of behaviour. Although a deficit in social communication is a hallmark characteristic of ASD, it is inconsistently defined in research. This review examined research over 20 years to report how studies have defined/operationalized social communication in ASD and the related disorders.Recent FindingsSearches of key databases (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Educational Resources Information Center, PsycINFO, andMEDLINE) yielded 576 sources of which 293 met the inclusion criteria. Results demonstrated a lack of consensus defining social communication, a range of associated skills measured as an index of social communication (e.g., joint attention), and a lack of clarity on which associated constructs to measure at different developmental stages. The majority of studies used assessments to describe social communication (49.8%), but a wide range of instruments have been used without a clear understanding of whether social communication described by each instrument represents the same construct captured by the other instruments. The results also highlight the interdisciplinary interest in social communication involving at least 31 disciplines.SummaryIn order to tailor interdisciplinary treatments to the needs of the client, i...
Source: Current Developmental Disorders Reports - Category: Child Development Source Type: research