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A Randomized Controlled Trial for Audiovisual Multisensory Perception in Autistic Youth.

Jacob I FeldmanKacie DunhamGabriella E DiCarloMargaret CassidyYupeng LiuEvan SuzmanZachary J WilliamsGrace PulliamSophia KaiserMark T WallaceTiffany G Woynaroski
Published in: Journal of autism and developmental disorders (2022)
Differences in audiovisual integration are commonly observed in autism. Temporal binding windows (TBWs) of audiovisual speech can be trained (i.e., narrowed) in non-autistic adults; this study evaluated a computer-based perceptual training in autistic youth and assessed whether treatment outcomes varied according to individual characteristics. Thirty autistic youth aged 8-21 were randomly assigned to a brief perceptual training (n = 15) or a control condition (n = 15). At post-test, the perceptual training group did not differ, on average, on TBWs for trained and untrained stimuli and perception of the McGurk illusion compared to the control group. The training benefited youth with higher language and nonverbal IQ scores; the training caused widened TBWs in youth with co-occurring cognitive and language impairments.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • virtual reality
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • working memory
  • machine learning
  • dna binding