Sensory receptor sensitivity in autistic children: response times to proximal and distal stimulation
J. P. Kootz, B. Marinelli and D. J. Cohen
On the basis of behavioral observation, it has been postulated that
autistic children prefer proximal (touch, taste) to distal (sight, hearing)
sensory modalities. To assess this systematically, autistic children's
simple response times were measured with auditory, visual, and tactile
stimulation. Children were studied for up to 25 sessions of 40 trials with
each modality. Response times were significantly related to mental age.
Autistic children's responses were significantly slower than normal
children's. However, autistic children and normal children had the same
pattern, fastest responding to auditory stimuli and slowest responding to
tactile stimulation. Autistic children's preference for proximal stimuli
probably reflects a continuation of immature behavior rather than a basic
disturbance in sensory receptor sensitivity.