Title of article
Autism Spectrum Symptomatology in Children: The Impact of Family and Peer Relationships
Author/Authors
Adrian B. Kelly، نويسنده , , Michelle S. Garnett، نويسنده , , Tony Attwood & Candida Peterson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
13
From page
1069
To page
1081
Abstract
This study examines the potential impact of
family conflict and cohesion, and peer support/bullying on
children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). While such
impacts have been established for a range of non-ASD
childhood disorders, these findings may not generalize to
children with ASD because of unique problems in
perspective-taking, understanding others’ emotion, cognitive
rigidity, and social reasoning. A structural modelbuilding
approach was used to test the extent to which
family and peer variables directly or indirectly affected
ASD via child anxiety/depression. The sample (N=322)
consisted of parents of children with ASD referred to two
specialist clinics. The sample contained parents of children
with Autistic Disorder (n=76), Asperger Disorder (n=188),
Pervasive Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (n=21), and
children with a non-ASD or no diagnosis (n=37). Parents
completed questionnaires on-line via a secure website. The
key findings were that anxiety/depression and ASD
symptomatology were significantly related, and family
conflict was more predictive of ASD symptomatology than
positive family/peer influences. The results point to the
utility of expanding interventions to include conflict
management for couples, even when conflict and family
distress is low. Further research is needed on the potentially
different meanings of family cohesion and conflict for
children with ASD relative to children without ASD.
Keywords
Autism spectrum disorder . Asperger’ssyndrome . Autism . Family . Peers . Conflict . Support
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828986
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