Cynthia E. Brown, Courtney J. Bernardin, Marshall T. Beauchamp, Stephen M. Kanne, Kerri P. Nowell
{"title":"More similar than different: Characterizing special interests in autistic boys and girls based on caregiver report","authors":"Cynthia E. Brown, Courtney J. Bernardin, Marshall T. Beauchamp, Stephen M. Kanne, Kerri P. Nowell","doi":"10.1002/aur.3216","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Almost all autistic youths have special interests (SIs), which are focused, intense areas of passion and interest in a particular topic. Emerging research suggests that there are gender differences in SIs among autistic youth; however, commonly used measures that assess for the presence of SIs may not fully capture the granular nature of those differences between autistic boys and girls. Characterizing these differences is important for autism identification in girls, as SIs in autistic girls may often be overlooked by caregivers, teachers, and clinicians due to their more “typical” and more socially oriented content areas compared to autistic boys. This study therefore aimed to more fully characterize gender differences in SIs using a newly developed caregiver-report measure of SIs (the Special Interests Survey; SIS). Caregivers of 1921 autistic youth completed the SIS. Analyses revealed many similarities between boys and girls; there were no gender differences in mean age SI onset, caregivers' perceptions of uniqueness or interferences of endorsed SIs, or duration of previous SIs. There were gender differences in endorsement of less than half (39%) of the SI categories measured, and there were minor differences in the number of endorsed current and past SIs. Categories with significant gender differences fell along typical gender lines (e.g., more boys interested in math and construction, more girls interested in animals and arts/crafts). This study extends the growing literature on SIs and gender differences in autism and has important implications for supporting autistic youth and their families.</p>","PeriodicalId":131,"journal":{"name":"Autism Research","volume":"17 11","pages":"2333-2345"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Autism Research","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aur.3216","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Almost all autistic youths have special interests (SIs), which are focused, intense areas of passion and interest in a particular topic. Emerging research suggests that there are gender differences in SIs among autistic youth; however, commonly used measures that assess for the presence of SIs may not fully capture the granular nature of those differences between autistic boys and girls. Characterizing these differences is important for autism identification in girls, as SIs in autistic girls may often be overlooked by caregivers, teachers, and clinicians due to their more “typical” and more socially oriented content areas compared to autistic boys. This study therefore aimed to more fully characterize gender differences in SIs using a newly developed caregiver-report measure of SIs (the Special Interests Survey; SIS). Caregivers of 1921 autistic youth completed the SIS. Analyses revealed many similarities between boys and girls; there were no gender differences in mean age SI onset, caregivers' perceptions of uniqueness or interferences of endorsed SIs, or duration of previous SIs. There were gender differences in endorsement of less than half (39%) of the SI categories measured, and there were minor differences in the number of endorsed current and past SIs. Categories with significant gender differences fell along typical gender lines (e.g., more boys interested in math and construction, more girls interested in animals and arts/crafts). This study extends the growing literature on SIs and gender differences in autism and has important implications for supporting autistic youth and their families.
几乎所有自闭症青少年都有特殊兴趣(SIs),即对某一特定主题的专注、强烈的热情和兴趣。新近的研究表明,自闭症青少年在特殊兴趣方面存在性别差异;然而,评估是否存在特殊兴趣的常用方法可能无法完全捕捉到自闭症男孩和女孩之间这些差异的细微差别。由于与自闭症男孩相比,自闭症女孩更 "典型"、更注重社交,因此她们的社交障碍可能经常被照顾者、教师和临床医生忽视。因此,本研究旨在使用一种新开发的由照护者报告的特殊兴趣测量方法(特殊兴趣调查,SIS),更全面地描述特殊兴趣的性别差异。1921 名自闭症青少年的照顾者完成了 SIS。分析结果表明,男孩和女孩之间有很多相似之处;在特殊兴趣爱好的平均开始年龄、照顾者对所认可的特殊兴趣爱好的独特性或干扰性的看法以及之前特殊兴趣爱好的持续时间等方面没有性别差异。在不到一半(39%)的被测 SI 类别中,认可度存在性别差异,在认可的当前和过去 SI 的数量上也存在微小差异。具有明显性别差异的类别属于典型的性别界线(例如,对数学和建筑感兴趣的男生较多,对动物和艺术/手工感兴趣的女生较多)。这项研究扩展了有关自闭症患者社交活动和性别差异的文献,对支持自闭症青少年及其家庭具有重要意义。
期刊介绍:
AUTISM RESEARCH will cover the developmental disorders known as Pervasive Developmental Disorders (or autism spectrum disorders – ASDs). The Journal focuses on basic genetic, neurobiological and psychological mechanisms and how these influence developmental processes in ASDs.