TY - JOUR
T1 - Measuring dyspraxia in autism using a five-minute praxis exam
AU - de Marchena, Ashley
AU - Zampella, Casey J.
AU - Dravis, Zachary
AU - Pandey, Juhi
AU - Mostofsky, Stewart
AU - Schultz, Robert T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Background: Difficulties with praxis, the ability to perform learned skilled movements, have been robustly demonstrated in autism spectrum disorder (autism). However, praxis assessment is not routinely included in autism characterization batteries, in part because it is traditionally time consuming to administer and score. We test whether dyspraxia in autism can be captured with a brief measure. Method: Youth with autism (n = 41) and matched typically developing controls (n = 32), aged 8–16 years, completed a 5-min praxis battery. The 19-item battery included four subtests: gesture to command, tool use, familiar imitation, and meaningless imitation. Video recordings were coded for error types and compared to participant characterization variables. Results: Consistent with research using a lengthy battery, autistic youth made more errors overall, with a large effect size. Groups demonstrated similar distributions of error types, suggesting that dyspraxia in autism is not limited to a particular error form. In the autism group, praxis was associated with adaptive functioning, but not autism traits. Conclusions: A shortened battery is sufficiently sensitive to praxis differences between autistic and typically developing youth, increasing the feasibility of including praxis within clinical assessments or larger research batteries aimed at testing relationships with downstream skills.
AB - Background: Difficulties with praxis, the ability to perform learned skilled movements, have been robustly demonstrated in autism spectrum disorder (autism). However, praxis assessment is not routinely included in autism characterization batteries, in part because it is traditionally time consuming to administer and score. We test whether dyspraxia in autism can be captured with a brief measure. Method: Youth with autism (n = 41) and matched typically developing controls (n = 32), aged 8–16 years, completed a 5-min praxis battery. The 19-item battery included four subtests: gesture to command, tool use, familiar imitation, and meaningless imitation. Video recordings were coded for error types and compared to participant characterization variables. Results: Consistent with research using a lengthy battery, autistic youth made more errors overall, with a large effect size. Groups demonstrated similar distributions of error types, suggesting that dyspraxia in autism is not limited to a particular error form. In the autism group, praxis was associated with adaptive functioning, but not autism traits. Conclusions: A shortened battery is sufficiently sensitive to praxis differences between autistic and typically developing youth, increasing the feasibility of including praxis within clinical assessments or larger research batteries aimed at testing relationships with downstream skills.
KW - Adaptive behavior skills
KW - Autism spectrum disorder
KW - Imitation
KW - Motor skills
KW - Nonverbal communication
KW - Praxis
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U2 - 10.1016/j.rasd.2023.102200
DO - 10.1016/j.rasd.2023.102200
M3 - Article
C2 - 37484882
AN - SCOPUS:85162947045
SN - 1750-9467
VL - 106
JO - Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders
JF - Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders
M1 - 102200
ER -