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Temporal Synchrony in Autism: a Systematic Review

Mina Murat Baldwin, Zhuoni Xiao, Aja Louise Murray

2021Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Temporal synchrony is the alignment of processes in time within or across individuals in social interaction and is observed and studied in various domains using wide-ranging paradigms. Evidence suggesting reduced temporal synchrony in autism (e.g. compared to neurotypicals) has hitherto not been reviewed. To systematically review the magnitude and generalisability of the difference across different tasks and contexts, EBSCO, OVID, Web of Science, and Scopus databases were searched. Thirty-two studies were identified that met our inclusion criteria in audio-visual, audio-motor, visuo-tactile, visuo-motor, social motor, and conversational synchrony domains. Additionally, two intervention studies were included. The findings suggest that autistic participants showed reduced synchrony tendencies in every category of temporal synchrony reviewed. Implications, methodological weaknesses, and evidence gaps are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

AutismPsychologyCognitive psychologyScopusIntervention (counseling)Developmental psychologyMEDLINEPolitical sciencePsychiatryLawAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchTactile and Sensory InteractionsBehavioral and Psychological Studies
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