Children with autism are known to have difficulties in
sharing attention with others. Yet one
joint attention behaviour, the ability to follow another person's
head turn and gaze direction,
may be achieved without necessarily sharing attention. Why, then, should
autistic children
have difficulties with it? In this study we examined the extent of this
difficulty by testing
school-aged autistic children across three different contexts; experiment,
observation, and
parent interview. We also tested whether the ability to orient to another
person's head and
gaze could be facilitated by increasing children's attention to environmental
targets and
social cues. Results for experiment and observation demonstrate that a
sizeable proportion
of children with autism did not have difficulties with following another's
head turn. There
was a difference between children with high and low verbal mental ages,
however. Whereas
children with higher mental ages (over 48 months) were able to orient spontaneously
to
another person's head turn, children with lower mental ages had difficulties
with this
response. When cues were added (pointing, language) or when feedback from
targets was
given, however, their performance improved. Parent interview data indicated
that children
with autism, whatever their mental age, began to follow head turn and gaze
direction years
later than typically developing children. Developments in attention and
language are
proposed as possible factors to account for this developmental delay.