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The Predictive Relationship Between Sensory Reactivity and Depressive Symptoms in Young Autistic Children with Few to No Words

Timothy Rossow, Keren MacLennan, Teresa Tavassoli

2022Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Depression and sensory reactivity are both common in autism. However, there is little understanding of the predictive relationship between these factors, or the nature of this relationship in autistic children who speak few to no words. This study set out to explore the longitudinal relationship between sensory reactivity and depressive symptoms in 33 young autistic children who speak few to no words. We found positive correlations between depressive symptoms and hyper-reactivity and sensory seeking at both timepoints, and across timepoints. We further found a bidirectional predictive relationship between depressive symptoms and sensory seeking. These results implicate sensory seeking in the development of depressive symptoms in young autistic children who use few to no words. Our findings have important implications for preventative mental health interventions, especially for those with a developmental language delay.

Topics & Concepts

AutismPsychologySensory systemReactivity (psychology)Depressive symptomsPsychological interventionSensory processingDepression (economics)Set (abstract data type)Clinical psychologyLongitudinal studyDevelopmental disorderDevelopmental psychologyMental healthPsychiatryCognitionCognitive psychologyMedicineMacroeconomicsEconomicsComputer scienceProgramming languagePathologyAlternative medicineAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchChild Nutrition and Feeding IssuesBehavioral and Psychological Studies
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