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The Autism-Spectrum Quotient in Siblings of People With Autism.
Authors
Allison
Auyeung
+32 more
Auyeung
Baird
Baron-Cohen
Baron-Cohen
Baron-Cohen
Baron-Cohen
Bishop
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Constantino
Constantino
Donaldson
Furlano
Happé
Hoekstra
Holmboe
Hurley
Kanne
La Marche
Lombardo
Nishiyama
Pisula
RCoreTeam.
Robinson
Ruzich
Ruzich
Spencer
Wade
Wheelwright
Wheelwright
Wing
Wing
Woodbury-Smith
Publication date
22 June 2016
Publisher
Autism Res
Doi
Cite
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
This study measures the distribution of autistic traits, using the autism-spectrum quotient (AQ), in siblings of individuals with autism spectrum conditions (ASC). Total AQ scores, along with AQ subscales, were collected from child, adolescent and adult controls, siblings, and volunteers with ASC using one of the three age-appropriate versions of the instrument: the AQ (adult self-report), the AQ-adolescent and AQ-child (both parent-reports). We examined the effect of Group (case, sibling and control) and AQ version (adult, adolescent and adult) on total and subscale scores. In addition, we tested for sex differences in all groups and on all versions. We found that in male and female adults, AQ scores in siblings fell between cases and controls (cases > siblings > controls). In children and adolescents, female siblings also scored higher than control females (female cases > female siblings > female controls), but there was no difference between male siblings and controls (male cases > male siblings = male controls). An investigation of subscale scores revealed that male siblings only differed from controls on the "Communication" subscale (male cases > male siblings > male controls), while female siblings differed from controls on all subscales except "Imagination" (female cases > female siblings > female controls). This study confirms the broader autism phenotype in siblings, and reveals this is modulated by sex and AQ version. Autism Res 2017, 10: 289-297. © 2016 The Authors Autism Research published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Autism Research.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Wiley via https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.165
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