Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Section I Fundamentals of pediatric neuropsychological intervention
- Section II Managing neurocognitive impairments in children and adolescents
- 6 Traumatic brain injury
- 7 Neuropsychological sequelae in children treated for cancer
- 8 Seizure disorders
- 9 Autism spectrum disorders and social disabilities
- 10 Diagnosing and treating right hemisphere disorders
- 11 Genetic syndromes associated with intellectual disability
- 12 Remediating specific learning disabilities
- 13 Managing attentional disorders
- 14 Managing dysexecutive disorders
- 15 Pediatric movement disorders
- 16 Management of children with disorders of motor control and coordination
- Section III Medical, rehabilitative and experimental interventions
- Section IV Future directions
- Index
- Plate section
- References
9 - Autism spectrum disorders and social disabilities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Section I Fundamentals of pediatric neuropsychological intervention
- Section II Managing neurocognitive impairments in children and adolescents
- 6 Traumatic brain injury
- 7 Neuropsychological sequelae in children treated for cancer
- 8 Seizure disorders
- 9 Autism spectrum disorders and social disabilities
- 10 Diagnosing and treating right hemisphere disorders
- 11 Genetic syndromes associated with intellectual disability
- 12 Remediating specific learning disabilities
- 13 Managing attentional disorders
- 14 Managing dysexecutive disorders
- 15 Pediatric movement disorders
- 16 Management of children with disorders of motor control and coordination
- Section III Medical, rehabilitative and experimental interventions
- Section IV Future directions
- Index
- Plate section
- References
Summary
Autism was first described by Leo Kanner in 1943. He described 11 children with “extreme autistic aloneness” p. 242, failure to use language in a communicative fashion, and an obsessive desire for the maintenance of sameness. In the 60 years since this classic paper, there have been numerous studies on every aspect of autism, with the pace of research accelerating greatly in the last 15 years. Kanner's original description has held up remarkably well, and forms the basis for the three domains of diagnostic criteria found in DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000).
Impairment in social relationships, the first domain, has four behavioral markers: (a) impaired nonverbal communication, including eye contact and gesture, (b) poor peer relationships, including lack of interest in peers when young, and odd, one-sided relationships later on, (c) lack of joint attention (pointing to indicate interest, bringing items to show others, following a point), and (d) lack of emotional reciprocity, such as failure to notice or share another's distress.
The second domain is impairment in language and symbolic capacity, and includes: (a) language delay, (b) impaired ability to carry on a two-way conversation (when there is sufficient language), (c) perseverative and repetitive language, such as repeating what others say or what the child has heard in commercials or videos, or repeating favorite phrases over and over, and (d) absent, delayed, or repetitive pretend play.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Pediatric Neuropsychological Intervention , pp. 151 - 174Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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