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What is Social Stimuli

Cutting-Edge Language and Literacy Tools for Students on the Autism Spectrum
Environmental stimuli that carry social information. People’s voices, faces and, especially, their eyes, are common sources of social stimuli. Multiple studies show attention to social stimuli to be diminished in autism starting in infancy.
Published in Chapter:
Introduction to the Core Attention and Socio-Cognitive Deficits of Autism
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9442-1.ch002
Abstract
This chapter surveys the core attention and socio-cognitive deficits of autism. It begins by discussing the key characteristics as reflected in the standard diagnostic criteria and screening tools. It then turns to research on attention-related differences in infants and toddlers later diagnosed with autism, including diminished attention to voices and faces, diminished eye contact, stimulus over-selectivity, and difficulties with attention shifting and joint attention. It then turns to later-stage socio-cognitive difficulties, particularly issues with emotional and cognitive perspective-taking, weak central coherence, executive function, and complex information processing. It concludes with a discussion of comorbidities like sensory issues, motor control difficulties, and intellectual impairment; of other skills that may be intact; and of open questions about central vs. peripheral symptoms of autism.
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