Publications by authors named "Daniel Messinger"

Article Synopsis
  • Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are less socially engaged with peers compared to typically developing (TD) children in inclusive preschool settings.
  • A study tracking over 750 hours found that children with ASD approached teachers more quickly and spent less time socializing with peers than TD children did, but their time with teachers was similar to that of TD children.
  • The findings indicate that children with ASD prefer engaging with teachers over peers, highlighting the importance of interventions to enhance peer interactions for these children.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Recent studies on animal movements show different thermodynamic phases, but similar insights for human movement, especially at low speeds, are lacking.
  • - Using ultrawideband RFID technology, researchers gathered detailed movement data from children in various settings, identifying two unique phases: a gaslike phase of freedom and a liquid-vapor phase indicating small social group formations.
  • - The study introduces a statistical physics model that replicates these observed phases and suggests that UWB-RFID can also aid research in broader areas like animal behavior and human interactions in complex systems.
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Although vocabulary size is thought to index children's language abilities, an increasing body of work suggests that regularities in children's vocabulary composition, particularly the proportion of shape-based nouns (e.g., cup), support language development.

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Children's own language production has a role in structuring the language of their conversation partners and influences their own development. Children's active participation in their own language development is most apparent in the rich body of work investigating language in natural environments. The advent of automated measures of vocalizations and movement have made such in situ research increasingly feasible.

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Infants' use of pointing gestures to direct and share attention develops during the first 2 years of life. Shyness, defined as an approach-avoidance motivational conflict during social interactions, may influence infants' use of pointing. Recent research distinguished between positive (gaze and/or head aversions while smiling) and non-positive (gaze and/or head aversions without smiling) shyness, which are related to different social and cognitive skills.

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Objectives: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is estimated to be ∼10 times higher in children with versus without an autistic sibling in population-based studies. Prospective studies of infant siblings have revealed even higher familial recurrence rates. In the current prospective longitudinal study, we provide updated estimates of familial ASD recurrence using a multinational database of infants with older autistic siblings.

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Oxytocin is a neuropeptide positively associated with prosociality in adults. Here, we studied whether infants' salivary oxytocin can be reliably measured, is developmentally stable, and is linked to social behavior. We longitudinally collected saliva from 62 U.

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Facial expressions are among the earliest behaviors infants use to express emotional states, and are crucial to preverbal social interaction. Manual coding of infant facial expressions, however, is laborious and poses limitations to replicability. Recent developments in computer vision have advanced automated facial expression analyses in adults, providing reproducible results at lower time investment.

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Socioemotional and referential communication are primary expressions of interpersonal engagement in infancy and beyond. Early socioemotional communication in dyadic interactions may form a foundation for triadic referential communication and gesture production, yet the role of temperament in moderating their association has not been examined. We investigated whether early socioemotional communication behaviors, and infant temperamental reactivity, were associated with later pointing production.

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Communicating emotional intensity plays a vital ecological role because it provides valuable information about the nature and likelihood of the sender's behavior. For example, attack often follows signals of intense aggression if receivers fail to retreat. Humans regularly use facial expressions to communicate such information.

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New technologies that combine digital sensors with automated processing algorithms are now being deployed to study preschool classrooms. This article provides an overview of these new sensing technologies, focusing on automated speaker classification, the analysis of children's and teachers' speech, and the detection and analysis of their movements over the course of the school day. Findings from recent studies utilizing these technologies are presented to illustrate the contribution of these sensing technologies to our understanding of classroom processes that predict children's language and social development.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to evaluate whether the shortened 16-item version of the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) is effective for estimating autism spectrum disorder (ASD) risk factors, compared to the full 65-item version.
  • - Researchers analyzed data from 2,760 participants in the ECHO Program to compare the association between gestational age (a known ASD risk factor) and SRS scores using various statistical methods.
  • - Results showed that both the full and short SRS scores produced highly similar associations with preterm birth, indicating that the shortened version is valid for use in large-scale studies, potentially reducing participant burden.
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Although still-face effects are well-studied, little is known about the degree to which the Face-to-Face/Still-Face (FFSF) is associated with the production of intense affective displays. Duchenne smiling expresses more intense positive affect than non-Duchenne smiling, while Duchenne cry-faces express more intense negative affect than non-Duchenne cry-faces. Forty 4-month-old infants and their mothers completed the FFSF, and key affect-indexing facial Action Units (AUs) were coded by expert Facial Action Coding System coders for the first 30 s of each FFSF episode.

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Classroom engagement plays a crucial role in preschoolers' development, yet the correlates of engagement, especially among children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and developmental delays (DD), remains unknown. This study examines levels of engagement with classroom social partners and tasks among children in three groups ASD, DD, and typical development (TD). Here, we asked whether children's vocal interactions (vocalizations to and from peers and teachers) were associated with their classroom engagement with social partners (peers and teachers) and with tasks, and whether the association between classroom engagement and vocal interactions differed between children in the ASD group and their peers in the DD and TD groups.

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Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC), is a neurocutaneous disorder, associated with a high prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD; ∼50% of individuals). As TSC is a leading cause of syndromic ASD, understanding language development in this population would not only be important for individuals with TSC but may also have implications for those with other causes of syndromic and idiopathic ASD. In this mini review, we consider what is known about language development in this population and how speech and language in TSC are related to ASD.

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Infants vary in their ability to follow others' gazes, but it is unclear how these individual differences emerge. We tested whether social motivation levels in early infancy predict later gaze following skills. We longitudinally tracked infants' (N = 82) gazes and pupil dilation while they observed videos of a woman looking into the camera simulating eye contact (i.

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Best practice for the assessment of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptom severity relies on clinician ratings of the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, 2nd Edition (ADOS-2), but the association of these ratings with objective measures of children's social gaze and smiling is unknown. Sixty-six preschool-age children (49 boys, M = 39.97 months, SD = 10.

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Homophily, the tendency for individuals to preferentially interact with others similar to themselves is typically documented via self-report and, for children, adult report. Few studies have investigated homophily directly using objective measures of social movement. We quantified homophily in children with developmental disabilities (DD) and typical development (TD) using objective measures of position/orientation in preschool inclusion classrooms, designed to promote interaction between these groups of children.

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, mask-wearing in classrooms has become commonplace. However, there are little data on the effect of face-masks on children's language input and production in educational contexts, like preschool classrooms which over half of United States children attend. Leveraging repeated objective measurements, we longitudinally examined child and teacher speech-related vocalizations in two cohorts of 3.

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Article Synopsis
  • Full understanding of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) genetics requires whole-genome sequencing (WGS), highlighted by the latest Autism Speaks MSSNG resource that includes data from over 11,000 individuals.
  • The study found ASD-associated rare genetic variants in about 14% of individuals with ASD, examining data from MSSNG and the Simons Simplex Collection, which suggests similar prevalence in both datasets.
  • The identified variants were mostly nuclear (98%) with a small fraction being mitochondrial, and the research aims to help explore genetic links to ASD traits and identify causes for the 85% of ASD cases that currently lack identified genetic causes.
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In childhood, higher levels of temperamental fear-an early-emerging proclivity to distress in the face of novelty-are associated with lower social responsivity and greater social anxiety. While the early emergence of temperamental fear in infancy is poorly understood, it is theorized to be driven by individual differences in reactivity and self-regulation to novel stimuli. The current study used eye tracking to capture infants' (N = 124) reactions to a video of a smiling stranger-a common social encounter-including infant gaze aversions from the stranger's face (indexing arousal regulation) and pupil dilation (indexing physiological reactivity), longitudinally at 2, 4, 6, and 8 months of age.

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While previous work has identified the early predictors of language skills in infants at elevated familial risk (ER) and low familial risk (LR) for autism spectrum disorder (ASD), no studies to date have explored whether these predictors vary based on diagnostic outcome of ASD or no ASD. The present study used a large, multisite dataset to examine associations between a set of commonly studied predictor variables (infant gesture abilities, fine motor skills, nonverbal cognition, and maternal education level), measured at 12 months, and language skills, measured at 3 years, across three diagnostic outcome groups-infants with ASD ("ASD"), ER infants without ASD ("ER-no ASD"), and LR infants without ASD ("LR-no ASD"). Findings revealed that the predictors of language skills differed across groups, as gesture abilities were positively associated with language skills in the ER-no ASD group but negatively associated with language skills in the ASD group.

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Automated detection of facial action units in infants is challenging. Infant faces have different proportions, less texture, fewer wrinkles and furrows, and unique facial actions relative to adults. For these and related reasons, action unit (AU) detectors that are trained on adult faces may generalize poorly to infant faces.

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Article Synopsis
  • Assessment of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) relies on expert clinician evaluations, but objective tools can offer additional insights into symptom severity during the ADOS-2 assessment.
  • A study involving 66 children, mostly diagnosed with ASD, tracked voice patterns and sound characteristics while performing the ADOS-2, revealing associations between vocal metrics and ratings of autism severity.
  • Results indicated that certain features of child vocalizations, like fewer speech-like sounds and higher pitch, can help predict clinician-rated severity of restricted and repetitive behaviors in ASD.
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