University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA.
Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2024 Mar 4;16(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s11689-024-09524-1.
Over the past years, researchers have been using head-mounted eye-tracking systems to study young children's gaze behaviors in everyday activities through which children learn about the world. This method has great potential to further our understanding of how millisecond-level gaze behaviors create multisensory experiences and fluctuate around social environments. While this line of work can yield insight into early perceptual experiences and potential learning mechanisms, the majority of the work is exclusively conducted with typically-developing children. Sensory sensitivities, social-communication difficulties, and challenging behaviors (e.g., disruption, elopement) are common among children with developmental disorders, and they may represent potential methodological challenges for collecting high-quality data.
In this paper, we describe our research practices of using head-mounted eye trackers with 41 autistic children and 17 children with increased likelihood of later autism diagnosis without auditory or visual impairments, including those who are minimally or nonspeaking and/or have intellectual disabilities. The success rate in gathering data among children with autism was 92.68%. 3 of 41 children failed to complete the play-session, resulting in an 86.36% success rate among 1-4-year-olds and a 100.00% success rate among 5-8-year-olds. 1 of 17 children with increased likelihood of later autism diagnosis failed to complete the play-session, resulting in a success rate of 94.11%. There were numerous "challenging" behaviors relevant to the method. The most common challenging behaviors included taking the eye-tracking device off, elopement, and becoming distressed. Overall, among children with autism, 88.8% of 1-4-year-olds and 29.4% of 5-8-year-olds exhibited at least one challenging behavior.
Research capitalizing on this methodology has the potential to reveal early, socially-mediated gaze behaviors that are relevant for autism screening, diagnosis, and intervention purposes. We hope that our efforts in documenting our study methodology will help researchers and clinicians effectively study early naturally-occuring gaze behaviors of children during non-experimental contexts across the spectrum and other developmental disabilities using head-mounted eye-tracking. Ultimately, such applications may increase the generalizability of results, better reflect the diversity of individual characteristics, and offer new ways in which this method can contribute to the field.
在过去的几年中,研究人员一直使用头戴式眼动追踪系统来研究儿童在日常活动中的注视行为,通过这些活动,儿童可以了解世界。这种方法有很大的潜力可以进一步了解毫秒级的注视行为如何创造多感官体验,并在社会环境周围波动。虽然这项工作可以深入了解早期的感知体验和潜在的学习机制,但大多数工作都是专门针对正常发育的儿童进行的。感官敏感性、社交沟通困难和挑战性行为(例如,破坏、逃跑)在发育障碍儿童中很常见,并且它们可能代表了收集高质量数据的潜在方法学挑战。
在本文中,我们描述了使用头戴式眼动追踪器对 41 名自闭症儿童和 17 名有较高自闭症诊断风险的儿童进行研究的实践经验,这些儿童没有听觉或视觉障碍,包括那些很少或不说话和/或有智力残疾的儿童。在自闭症儿童中,数据收集的成功率为 92.68%。有 3 名 41 名儿童未能完成游戏环节,导致 1-4 岁儿童的成功率为 86.36%,5-8 岁儿童的成功率为 100.00%。有 1 名有较高自闭症诊断风险的儿童未能完成游戏环节,成功率为 94.11%。该方法涉及到许多“具有挑战性”的行为。最常见的具有挑战性的行为包括摘下眼动追踪器、逃跑和感到不安。总体而言,在自闭症儿童中,88.8%的 1-4 岁儿童和 29.4%的 5-8 岁儿童表现出至少一种具有挑战性的行为。
利用这种方法的研究有可能揭示与自闭症筛查、诊断和干预目的相关的早期、社交介导的注视行为。我们希望我们在记录研究方法方面的努力将帮助研究人员和临床医生在非实验环境中有效地研究自闭症谱系及其他发育障碍儿童的早期自然发生的注视行为,并使用头戴式眼动追踪。最终,这些应用可能会增加结果的普遍性,更好地反映个体特征的多样性,并为该方法为该领域做出贡献提供新的途径。