Publications by authors named "Maggie Gross"

Article Synopsis
  • Recent research indicates that autistic social impairment (ASI) is not only present in children with pervasive developmental disorders (PDD) but also subtly manifests in their family members.
  • The study followed boys aged 3 to 18, comparing twin pairs and clinical samples over time while using the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) to measure ASI.
  • Results showed that while ASI scores generally improved, individual outcomes varied significantly based on factors like initial severity and family history, suggesting that ASI has both heritable traits and potential for tracking treatment responses.
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Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are characterized by correlated deficiencies in social and language development. This study explored a fundamental aspect of auditory information processing (AIP) that is dependent on social experience and critical to early language development: the ability to compartmentalize close-sounding speech sounds into singular phonemes. We examined this ability by assessing whether close-sounding non-native language phonemes were more likely to be perceived as disparate sounds by school-aged children with high-functioning ASD (n = 27), than by unaffected control subjects (n = 35).

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Insecure mental representations of attachment, a nearly invariant feature of cluster B personality disorders, have never previously been studied in twins. We conducted the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) on 33 pairs of monozygotic (MZ) female twins reared together as an initial exploration of causal influences on mental representations of attachment. As predicted by attachment theory, we observed substantial twin-twin concordance for attachment security (odds ratio 13.

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Studies of the broader autism phenotype, and of subtle changes in autism symptoms over time, have been compromised by a lack of established quantitative assessment tools. The Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS-formerly known as the Social Reciprocity Scale) is a new instrument that can be completed by parents and/or teachers in 15-20 minutes. We compared the SRS with the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) in 61 child psychiatric patients.

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