The purpose of this study is to compare two different treatment approaches to social skills groups for high-functioning children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). This project will examine changes in both behavior and the brain following treatment.
Despite the fact that social skills impairments are the most persistent and pervasive symptoms affecting individuals with ASD, treatments targeting social skills have been the subject of few controlled investigations. The available literature suggests that cognitive behavioral techniques are commonly used and may improve targeted social skills in individuals with ASD. However, drawing firm conclusions about the efficacy of social skills treatment remains difficult, particularly with respect to maintenance of skills and generalization to natural settings, owing to methodological limitations of extant studies (e.g., small sample size, lack of manual-based curricula, minimal assessment of generalization or maintenance). Several neuroimaging studies have found that individuals with ASD underactivate key brain regions involved in social cognition. However, there is also evidence to suggest that factors that increase attention to or interest in social stimuli are associated with more normal brain activity. The purpose of this investigation is to examine the acute and sustained effects of social skills treatment on social cognition and the neural architecture that supports it. High-functioning children with ASD will be randomly assigned to a 12-week cognitive behavioral social skills group or a social play-based therapy group. For both types of groups, a parent session will be held concurrently. Functional MRI scans as well as behavioral assessments of social cognition, adaptive functioning, and symptom severity will be acquired at baseline, immediately following treatment, and at a 3-month follow-up.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
50
The CBT social skills curriculum is manualized and anchored in CBT strategies, such as problem identification, affective education, performance feedback, and weekly homework activities to facilitate generalization. The curriculum is a compilation of lessons targeting key social deficits in children with ASD, such as nonverbal communication, emotion recognition, and theory of mind. Structured teaching includes defining skills, breaking them down into simple, concrete steps, modeling the skill through role-play, and introducing a game or activity to practice the target skill. The approach to the parent group will be psychoeducational with a focus on reviewing target skills, rationale for teaching target skills, homework, progress or obstacles, and identifying strategies to promote generalization. Parent information handouts will be provided.
The social play group is manualized, led by a trained clinician and support staff, follows a specific routine, and contains a parent group component. Group leaders will follow participants' interests and suggestions for games. Group leaders utilize strategies such as reflective functioning statements on the child's behaviors to build emotion-focused play skills. The therapeutic setting incorporates play designed to encourage emotion-focused play including make-believe (dolls, houses), sensory (e.g. play-doh), and cooperative play (e.g. board games) toys. The approach to the parent group will be supportive rather than psychoeducational. Parents will set the agenda for discussion, facilitated by the group leader.
Mount Sinai School of Medicine - Seaver Autism Center
New York, New York, United States
Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy-2* (DANVA2)
Assesses emotion recognition from facial expression, tone of voice, and posture. This instrument allows for the assessment of basic emotions conveyed by both adult and child models at high and low intensity. Nowicki and Carton \[50\] have shown that the DANVA2 has acceptable internal consistency for school age children and good test-retest reliability.
Time frame: Week 0
Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy-2* (DANVA2)
Assesses emotion recognition from facial expression, tone of voice, and posture. This instrument allows for the assessment of basic emotions conveyed by both adult and child models at high and low intensity. Nowicki and Carton \[50\] have shown that the DANVA2 has acceptable internal consistency for school age children and good test-retest reliability.
Time frame: Week 12
Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy-2* (DANVA2)
Assesses emotion recognition from facial expression, tone of voice, and posture. This instrument allows for the assessment of basic emotions conveyed by both adult and child models at high and low intensity. Nowicki and Carton \[50\] have shown that the DANVA2 has acceptable internal consistency for school age children and good test-retest reliability.
Time frame: Week 24
Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task - Child Version
The computerized children's version of the Eyes test is a reduced battery of 28-items measuring an individual's ability to interpret intentions and 'mentalizing' abilities, a hallmark social cognitive deficit in ASD. The adult RMET has shown sensitivity to change in clinical trials and the child version showed promising results in our preliminary analyses (see Preliminary Studies).
Time frame: Week 0
Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task - Child Version
The computerized children's version of the Eyes test is a reduced battery of 28-items measuring an individual's ability to interpret intentions and 'mentalizing' abilities, a hallmark social cognitive deficit in ASD. The adult RMET has shown sensitivity to change in clinical trials and the child version showed promising results in our preliminary analyses (see Preliminary Studies).
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Time frame: Week 12
Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task - Child Version
The computerized children's version of the Eyes test is a reduced battery of 28-items measuring an individual's ability to interpret intentions and 'mentalizing' abilities, a hallmark social cognitive deficit in ASD. The adult RMET has shown sensitivity to change in clinical trials and the child version showed promising results in our preliminary analyses (see Preliminary Studies).
Time frame: Week 24
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
We previously developed two activation tasks that tap different aspects of social cognition: 1) Interpreting Communicative Intent: Participants will view cartoon drawings of children while listening to short vignettes ending with a potentially ironic remark. Participants decide whether the speaker really meant what s/he said. 2) Affect and eye contact: Participants will view full-face pictures of people displaying happy, angry, fearful, or neutral affect. For each emotion, half of the faces show a direct gaze and half show a gaze aversion.
Time frame: Week 0
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
We previously developed two activation tasks that tap different aspects of social cognition: 1) Interpreting Communicative Intent: Participants will view cartoon drawings of children while listening to short vignettes ending with a potentially ironic remark. Participants decide whether the speaker really meant what s/he said. 2) Affect and eye contact: Participants will view full-face pictures of people displaying happy, angry, fearful, or neutral affect. For each emotion, half of the faces show a direct gaze and half show a gaze aversion.
Time frame: Week 12
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
We previously developed two activation tasks that tap different aspects of social cognition: 1) Interpreting Communicative Intent: Participants will view cartoon drawings of children while listening to short vignettes ending with a potentially ironic remark. Participants decide whether the speaker really meant what s/he said. 2) Affect and eye contact: Participants will view full-face pictures of people displaying happy, angry, fearful, or neutral affect. For each emotion, half of the faces show a direct gaze and half show a gaze aversion.
Time frame: Week 24
Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS)
The SRS measures the severity of social impairment in natural settings, assessing social awareness, social information processing, reciprocal social communication, social anxiety/avoidance, and autistic preoccupations. This assessment will be completed by the child's parents and a classroom teacher, blind to intervention status, to reflect the opinion of more than one rater and allow for assessment of generalization across settings.
Time frame: Week 0
Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS)
The SRS measures the severity of social impairment in natural settings, assessing social awareness, social information processing, reciprocal social communication, social anxiety/avoidance, and autistic preoccupations. This assessment will be completed by the child's parents and a classroom teacher, blind to intervention status, to reflect the opinion of more than one rater and allow for assessment of generalization across settings.
Time frame: Week 12
Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS)
The SRS measures the severity of social impairment in natural settings, assessing social awareness, social information processing, reciprocal social communication, social anxiety/avoidance, and autistic preoccupations. This assessment will be completed by the child's parents and a classroom teacher, blind to intervention status, to reflect the opinion of more than one rater and allow for assessment of generalization across settings.
Time frame: Week 24
Strange Stories Task
These stories assess the ability to interpret nonliteral statements. Stories requiring the interpretation of a speaker's communicative intent will be read to participants. Questions probe whether the child understands that (a) a nonliteral statement has been made and (b) the intent behind the statement (i.e., was the speaker was lying, being sarcastic, joking?)
Time frame: Week 0
Strange Stories Task
These stories assess the ability to interpret nonliteral statements. Stories requiring the interpretation of a speaker's communicative intent will be read to participants. Questions probe whether the child understands that (a) a nonliteral statement has been made and (b) the intent behind the statement (i.e., was the speaker was lying, being sarcastic, joking?)
Time frame: Week 12
Strange Stories Task
These stories assess the ability to interpret nonliteral statements. Stories requiring the interpretation of a speaker's communicative intent will be read to participants. Questions probe whether the child understands that (a) a nonliteral statement has been made and (b) the intent behind the statement (i.e., was the speaker was lying, being sarcastic, joking?)
Time frame: Week 24
Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, Second Edition (Vineland II)
The Vineland II measures personal and social skills needed for everyday living. The Survey Form will be administered to the child's parents in a semi-structured interview format and the Teacher Checklist will be completed by a teacher blind to intervention status.
Time frame: Week 0
Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, Second Edition (Vineland II)
The Vineland II measures personal and social skills needed for everyday living. The Survey Form will be administered to the child's parents in a semi-structured interview format and the Teacher Checklist will be completed by a teacher blind to intervention status.
Time frame: Week 12
Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS)
Time frame: Week 0
Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS)
Time frame: Week 12
Direct Observation
Structured direct observation procedures by blinded observers will be used to evaluate the following target behaviors: instrumental initiations, social initiations, response to initiations, and nonverbal behaviors. Direct observations will also be conducted during unstructured free-play sessions at baseline, mid-point, and endpoint.
Time frame: 12 weeks (during treatment sessions)
Peer generalization assessment
An analogue play group will be used to evaluate generalization of treatment effects to unaffected, unfamiliar peers. The play group will consist of 4 children: 2 TD peers and 2 children with ASD (1 enrolled in CBT, 1 enrolled in social play). The analogue play session will consist of a 20-minute videotaped free-play period in which children are provided with cooperative play toys (e.g., make-believe, construction, and board games).
Time frame: Week 0
Peer generalization assessment
An analogue play group will be used to evaluate generalization of treatment effects to unaffected, unfamiliar peers. The play group will consist of 4 children: 2 TD peers and 2 children with ASD (1 enrolled in CBT, 1 enrolled in social play). The analogue play session will consist of a 20-minute videotaped free-play period in which children are provided with cooperative play toys (e.g., make-believe, construction, and board games).
Time frame: Week 12