Cargando…

Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder

Social motivation—the psychobiological predisposition for social orienting, seeking social contact, and maintaining social interaction—manifests in early infancy and is hypothesized to be foundational for social communication development in typical and atypical populations. However, the lack of infa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stallworthy, Isabella C., Berry, Daniel, Davis, Savannah, Wolff, Jason J., Burrows, Catherine A., Swanson, Meghan R., Grzadzinski, Rebecca L., Botteron, Kelly, Dager, Stephen R., Estes, Annette M., Schultz, Robert T., Piven, Joseph, Elison, Jed T., Pruett, John R., Marrus, Natasha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36222317
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/desc.13336
_version_ 1785124234271391744
author Stallworthy, Isabella C.
Berry, Daniel
Davis, Savannah
Wolff, Jason J.
Burrows, Catherine A.
Swanson, Meghan R.
Grzadzinski, Rebecca L.
Botteron, Kelly
Dager, Stephen R.
Estes, Annette M.
Schultz, Robert T.
Piven, Joseph
Elison, Jed T.
Pruett, John R.
Marrus, Natasha
author_facet Stallworthy, Isabella C.
Berry, Daniel
Davis, Savannah
Wolff, Jason J.
Burrows, Catherine A.
Swanson, Meghan R.
Grzadzinski, Rebecca L.
Botteron, Kelly
Dager, Stephen R.
Estes, Annette M.
Schultz, Robert T.
Piven, Joseph
Elison, Jed T.
Pruett, John R.
Marrus, Natasha
author_sort Stallworthy, Isabella C.
collection PubMed
description Social motivation—the psychobiological predisposition for social orienting, seeking social contact, and maintaining social interaction—manifests in early infancy and is hypothesized to be foundational for social communication development in typical and atypical populations. However, the lack of infant social-motivation measures has hindered delineation of associations between infant social motivation, other early-arising social abilities such as joint attention, and language outcomes. To investigate how infant social motivation contributes to joint attention and language, this study utilizes a mixed longitudinal sample of 741 infants at high (HL = 515) and low (LL = 226) likelihood for ASD. Using moderated nonlinear factor analysis (MNLFA), we incorporated items from parent-report measures to establish a novel latent factor model of infant social motivation that exhibits measurement invariance by age, sex, and familial ASD likelihood. We then examined developmental associations between 6- and 12-month social motivation, joint attention at 12–15 months, and language at 24 months of age. On average, greater social-motivation growth from 6–12 months was associated with greater initiating joint attention (IJA) and trend-level increases in sophistication of responding to joint attention (RJA). IJA and RJA were both positively associated with 24-month language abilities. There were no additional associations between social motivation and future language in our path model. These findings substantiate a novel, theoretically driven approach to modeling social motivation and suggest a developmental cascade through which social motivation impacts other foundational skills. These findings have implications for the timing and nature of intervention targets to support social communication development in infancy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10591497
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105914972023-10-23 Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder Stallworthy, Isabella C. Berry, Daniel Davis, Savannah Wolff, Jason J. Burrows, Catherine A. Swanson, Meghan R. Grzadzinski, Rebecca L. Botteron, Kelly Dager, Stephen R. Estes, Annette M. Schultz, Robert T. Piven, Joseph Elison, Jed T. Pruett, John R. Marrus, Natasha Dev Sci Article Social motivation—the psychobiological predisposition for social orienting, seeking social contact, and maintaining social interaction—manifests in early infancy and is hypothesized to be foundational for social communication development in typical and atypical populations. However, the lack of infant social-motivation measures has hindered delineation of associations between infant social motivation, other early-arising social abilities such as joint attention, and language outcomes. To investigate how infant social motivation contributes to joint attention and language, this study utilizes a mixed longitudinal sample of 741 infants at high (HL = 515) and low (LL = 226) likelihood for ASD. Using moderated nonlinear factor analysis (MNLFA), we incorporated items from parent-report measures to establish a novel latent factor model of infant social motivation that exhibits measurement invariance by age, sex, and familial ASD likelihood. We then examined developmental associations between 6- and 12-month social motivation, joint attention at 12–15 months, and language at 24 months of age. On average, greater social-motivation growth from 6–12 months was associated with greater initiating joint attention (IJA) and trend-level increases in sophistication of responding to joint attention (RJA). IJA and RJA were both positively associated with 24-month language abilities. There were no additional associations between social motivation and future language in our path model. These findings substantiate a novel, theoretically driven approach to modeling social motivation and suggest a developmental cascade through which social motivation impacts other foundational skills. These findings have implications for the timing and nature of intervention targets to support social communication development in infancy. 2023-05 2022-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10591497/ /pubmed/36222317 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/desc.13336 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Stallworthy, Isabella C.
Berry, Daniel
Davis, Savannah
Wolff, Jason J.
Burrows, Catherine A.
Swanson, Meghan R.
Grzadzinski, Rebecca L.
Botteron, Kelly
Dager, Stephen R.
Estes, Annette M.
Schultz, Robert T.
Piven, Joseph
Elison, Jed T.
Pruett, John R.
Marrus, Natasha
Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title_full Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title_fullStr Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title_short Quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
title_sort quantifying latent social motivation and its associations with joint attention and language in infants at high and low likelihood for autism spectrum disorder
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36222317
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/desc.13336
work_keys_str_mv AT stallworthyisabellac quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT berrydaniel quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT davissavannah quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT wolffjasonj quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT burrowscatherinea quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT swansonmeghanr quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT grzadzinskirebeccal quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT botteronkelly quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT dagerstephenr quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT estesannettem quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT schultzrobertt quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT pivenjoseph quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT elisonjedt quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT pruettjohnr quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT marrusnatasha quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder
AT quantifyinglatentsocialmotivationanditsassociationswithjointattentionandlanguageininfantsathighandlowlikelihoodforautismspectrumdisorder