Relations of Restricted and Repetitive Behaviors to Social Skills in Toddlers with Autism

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Abstract

We examined the relations of restricted and repetitive behaviors (RRB; insistence on sameness, repetitive sensory-motor, self-injurious behavior) to social skills overall and aspects that comprise social skills as measured by the VABS-II (coping skills, play/leisure time, interpersonal relationships) in 24- (n = 63) and 36-month old (n = 35), high-familial-risk toddlers with ASD. Hierarchical linear regression results indicated that repetitive sensory-motor was the best predictor of social skills overall. Secondary results indicated that all three RRB subtypes were associated with each subdomain of social skills; however, repetitive sensory-motor was the strongest and most consistent among these effects. While our results suggests a general negative relation of subtypes of RRB to aspects of adaptive social function, repetitive sensory-motor behaviors may be of particular relevance to the development of social skills during toddlerhood.

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Chaxiong, P., Burrows, C., Botteron, K. N., Dager, S. R., Estes, A. M., Hazlett, H. C., … Shen, M. (2022). Relations of Restricted and Repetitive Behaviors to Social Skills in Toddlers with Autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 52(4), 1423–1434. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-021-05014-8

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