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Examining a model of anxiety in autistic adults.

Saskia RiedelbauchSebastian B GaiggTobias ThielVeit RoessnerMelanie Ring
Published in: Autism : the international journal of research and practice (2023)
 = 100) completed a battery of self-report questionnaires. Only when applied to each group separately, the broad predictions of the model were confirmed for the autistic group. The model confirmed that difficulties with uncertain situations and in regulating emotions play a central role in anxiety in autism. Difficulties understanding own emotions and differences in processing sensory input both contribute to anxiety indirectly through their respective interrelation with the other two factors (difficulties with uncertain situations and in regulating emotions). Importantly, the results imply that sensory processing differences contribute not only indirectly but also directly to individual differences in anxiety. For the non-autistic group, model fit could only be achieved after removing autism-related traits and sensory processing differences as predictors of anxiety. These results suggest that cause/development and expression of anxiety in autism partially overlap with what is observed in the general population except that sensory processing differences appear to play a relatively unique role in the context of autism.
Keyphrases
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • sleep quality
  • intellectual disability
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation