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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02573428
Other study ID # 14-620
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received October 7, 2015
Last updated March 10, 2017
Start date June 2015
Est. completion date December 2016

Study information

Verified date March 2017
Source The Cleveland Clinic
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary purpose of the present study is to evaluate the diagnostic validity of eye tracking measurements acquired during viewing of socially-relevant stimuli in predicting ASD diagnosis. The secondary purpose was to explore the potential prognostic value of eye tracking measures through cross-sectional associations with non-verbal cognitive ability.

Deficits in eye gaze are a hallmark sign of autism. A large and growing body of research supports the ability of eye-tracking based measurements to sensitively discriminate individuals with ASD and healthy participants. These investigations have identified that the core deficit in autism as disruption of social attention, reflecting an inability to appropriately engage and track socially- and emotionally-relevant aspects of the visual world. Thus, eye gaze tracking, acquired during viewing of socially-relevant stimuli, may be a useful approach to identifying objective markers of ASD. Eye tracking also carries the advantages of being less intrusive and expensive than MRI and genetic testing and specifically focuses on the core neurobehavioral characteristics of ASD - abnormalities in social attention.

After diagnosis of ASD, key clinical tasks in young children involve determining an accurate prognosis and tracking the progress of early interventions. Currently, the only prognostic indicators are clinical observations (subjective and expensive) and non-verbal cognitive ability testing (difficult to acquire, time-consuming, unavailable in many settings). Recently, eye gaze tracking was found to predict functional outcomes. Thus, in addition to being an objective marker for ASD, eye tracking measurements have potential to be useful for predicting cognitive and functional outcomes. Similarly, the only available methods for tracking treatment progress are parental reports (highly subjective), clinical observations (subjective and expensive), and cognitive measurements (expensive and unavailable in many settings. This study will evaluate, using cross-section data, the potential for eye tracking data to serve as a proxy for non-verbal cognitive ability scores in determining prognosis for ASD-affected children. Additionally, this study will evaluate the test re-test reliability of eye tracking parameters that can potentially be used to track treatment progress.


Description:

The current study will occur in four phases: pilot testing, development, validation, and re-test. In each phase, participants will view a visual attention stimulus with social elements (social attention paradigm) while eye tracking measurements are remotely acquired. The visual attention paradigm will be refined in the pilot testing but will remain the same for development, validation, and re-test phases. The entire process, including calibration and viewing of the visual paradigm, will take about 15 minutes. The text below describes each phase in detail and the reviews specific methodology for the social attention paradigm and eye tracking procedures.

1. Pilot Phase. Pilot testing of the social attention paradigm used to elicit eye gaze measurements to ensure they are sufficiently engaging across the ages of children participating. The visual attention paradigm during this phase is expected to be 10-12 minutes. This phase will also be used to determine optimal strategies for maintaining attention throughout the testing period. Initial data may also provide some insights into the most discriminating stimulus elements to include in future phases. Investigators anticipate recruiting approximately 10 ASD and 10 non-ASD participants in this phase. The pilot phase is expected to require 2.5 months of recruitment and 0.5 months of data reduction and analysis.

2. Development Phase. Once pilot testing is completed, 30 ASD-affected and 30 non-ASD children ages 1.5 to 18 will be recruited. Each child will complete the social attention paradigm while their eye gaze is remotely tracked. Eye gaze data is then scored for more than 100 parameters and these scores are entered into a database that includes diagnostic and cognitive information about each participant. The eye tracking data is then analyzed to create the diagnostic and prognostic algorithms that will refine the system's diagnostic sensitivity and specificity in the ASD population. The development period will require 6 months of data collection, followed by 3 months of scoring and algorithm computation.

3. Validation Phase. Collection of the validation sample will include 60 ASD-affected and 60 non-ASD affected children ages 1.5-18. The validation phase will use the same visual social attention paradigm and methods used in the development sample. The validation period will overlap algorithm development and require 8 months of data collection and 1 month of analysis.

4. Re-Test Phase. Participants in the re-test phase will include 30 ASD and 30 non-ASD children recruited in the first half of the validation phase. These participants will be explained in the validation phase that investigators will be re-recruiting them for the re-test phase approximately 3-6 months following their initial testing during the validation phase.

The target sample size varies depending on the phase of the study. Below are the target sample sizes for each phase:

Pilot Phase = 10 ASD and 10 Non-ASD Development Phase = 30 ASD and 30 Non-ASD Validation Phase = 60 ASD and 60 Non-ASD Re-Test Phase = 30 ASD and 30 Non-ASD (from the validation phase) The study population is individuals with autism spectrum disorder, or a clinical diagnosis of another developmental or psychiatric disorder (developmental/psychiatric controls), or have no specific developmental or psychiatric diagnosis (healthy controls), ages 1.5 (18 months) to 18 (120 months) at time of consent.

Eye gaze data will be collected using a remote eye tracker from Sensori-motoric instruments (SMI). Remote eye tracking offers minimal invasiveness to the viewer's field of view and collects time-stamped, 3D eye position, and binocular gaze and pupil data at a sampling rate of 120 Hz. Eye gaze capture is automatically calibrated to 2/5/9 points and provides position accuracy to 0.5° at a 60cm viewing distance. Gaze tracking data, screen recordings, user events, and gaze position will be recorded simultaneously. Data will be analyzed with emphasis on areas-of- interest and dwell time on specific targets on a second-by-second basis. Examples of the types of measures captured include: dwell time to any area of the stimulus, dwell time to the face and non-face regions of a human form on the video, fixation shifts between stimuli.

Additional tests and demographic data will be collected from standard of care autism diagnostic and behavioral health diagnostic appointments that can be found in the medical record.

Pilot Analyses. In the pilot phase, investigators will compute the effect size (Cohen's d) between ASD and non-ASD participants for each of the eye gaze parameters acquired for each of the individual stimuli in the social attention paradigm. Stimulus elements eliciting the largest discrimination between ASD and non-ASD patients will be retained in the development phase.

ASD Diagnostic Algorithm Analyses. In the development phase, all of the eye gaze measurements acquired from the social attention paradigm will be included as predictor variables in a random forest analysis. This analysis permits evaluation of the discriminative ability of a large number of variables in data sets with a modest number of cases. The variables with highest importance scores, indicating good diagnostic discrimination, will be entered into a logistic regression analysis with ASD diagnostic status (ASD vs. non-ASD) as the dichotomous dependent variable. Significant predictors will be retained and coefficients from the retained predictors will serve as the diagnostic algorithm.

The diagnostic algorithm scores will then be submitted to Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve analyses to provide detailed evaluation of sensitivity and specificity of the algorithm in the detection of ASD. Areas under the curve of >.90 are expected, indicating strong diagnostic validity.

Prognostic Algorithm Analyses. To identify a prognostic algorithm, a similar process will be conducted with all the available eye tracking measurements as predictors and non-verbal cognitive ability scores (dichotomized at <70 and 70 and above) as the dependent variable in random forest analyses. Non-verbal cognitive ability scores will be dichotomized based on previous data suggesting that individuals with ASD and intellectual disability show worse outcome. The predictor variables with highest importance, indicating good diagnostic discrimination, will then be entered into a logistic regression analysis with non-verbal cognitive ability (<70, >=70) as the dichotomous dependent variable. Significant predictors will be retained and coefficients from the retained predictors will serve as the prognostic algorithm. The prognostic algorithm scores will then be submitted to Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve analyses to provide detailed evaluation of sensitivity and specificity of the algorithm in the detection of non-verbal cognitive disability. Areas under the curve of >.80 are expected, indicating good validity in predicting cognitive disability. Non-verbal cognitive ability will be the primary focus of these analyses because of its documented relationship with outcome in individuals with autism. However, similar analyses will be computed for verbal cognitive ability and adaptive function scores. Investigators will also conduct the above analyses using continuous measurements as dichotomization may unnecessarily deflate validity.

Treatment Tracking Algorithm Analyses. To identify a treatment tracking algorithm, investigators will simply combine the eye tracking measurements identified in the diagnostic and prognostic algorithm into a single treatment tracking algorithm. To evaluate test re-test reliability of these measurements investigators will use intra-class correlation coefficients (model 2 - absolute agreement).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 389
Est. completion date December 2016
Est. primary completion date December 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Months to 18 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Clinical diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder (299.0) following evaluation in Cleveland Clinic Center for Autism Diagnostic Clinic, or a clinical diagnosis of another developmental or psychiatric disorder, or have no specific developmental or psychiatric diagnosis.

- Age 1.5 to 18 years at time of consent.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Individuals whom, with corrective lenses are still legally blind.

- Individuals whom, it is determined at the discretion of hte Primary Investigator, after consultation with the evaluating psychologist in the Center for Autism Diagnostic Clinic, are not able to sufficiently attend to the stimulus presentation or have substantial challenging behaviors that would prohibit participation.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Cleveland Clinic Center for Autism Cleveland Ohio

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
The Cleveland Clinic

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (21)

Bolton PF, Golding J, Emond A, Steer CD. Autism spectrum disorder and autistic traits in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children: precursors and early signs. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2012 Mar;51(3):249-260.e25. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2011.12.009. — View Citation

Campbell DJ, Shic F, Macari S, Chawarska K. Gaze response to dyadic bids at 2 years related to outcomes at 3 years in autism spectrum disorders: a subtyping analysis. J Autism Dev Disord. 2014 Feb;44(2):431-42. doi: 10.1007/s10803-013-1885-9. — View Citation

Chawarska K, Campbell D, Chen L, Shic F, Klin A, Chang J. Early generalized overgrowth in boys with autism. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2011 Oct;68(10):1021-31. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.106. — View Citation

Chawarska K, Macari S, Shic F. Decreased spontaneous attention to social scenes in 6-month-old infants later diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders. Biol Psychiatry. 2013 Aug 1;74(3):195-203. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.11.022. — View Citation

Dawson G, Rogers S, Munson J, Smith M, Winter J, Greenson J, Donaldson A, Varley J. Randomized, controlled trial of an intervention for toddlers with autism: the Early Start Denver Model. Pediatrics. 2010 Jan;125(1):e17-23. doi: 10.1542/peds.2009-0958. — View Citation

Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network Surveillance Year 2010 Principal Investigators.; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).. Prevalence of autism spectrum disorder among children aged 8 years - autism and developmental disabilities monitoring network, 11 sites, United States, 2010. MMWR Surveill Summ. 2014 Mar 28;63(2):1-21. — View Citation

Farroni T, Csibra G, Simion F, Johnson MH. Eye contact detection in humans from birth. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Jul 9;99(14):9602-5. — View Citation

Fombonne E. Epidemiology of autistic disorder and other pervasive developmental disorders. J Clin Psychiatry. 2005;66 Suppl 10:3-8. — View Citation

Ganz ML. The costs of autism. In: Moldin SO, Rubenstein JLR, eds. Understanding autism: From basic neuroscience to treatment: CRC Press; 2006.

Ganz ML. The lifetime distribution of the incremental societal costs of autism. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2007 Apr;161(4):343-9. — View Citation

Grice SJ, Halit H, Farroni T, Baron-Cohen S, Bolton P, Johnson MH. Neural correlates of eye-gaze detection in young children with autism. Cortex. 2005 Jun;41(3):342-53. — View Citation

Jones W, Klin A. Attention to eyes is present but in decline in 2-6-month-old infants later diagnosed with autism. Nature. 2013 Dec 19;504(7480):427-31. doi: 10.1038/nature12715. — View Citation

Kisilevsky BS, Hains SM, Brown CA, Lee CT, Cowperthwaite B, Stutzman SS, Swansburg ML, Lee K, Xie X, Huang H, Ye HH, Zhang K, Wang Z. Fetal sensitivity to properties of maternal speech and language. Infant Behav Dev. 2009 Jan;32(1):59-71. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2008.10.002. — View Citation

Kozlowski AM, Matson JL, Horovitz M, Worley JA, Neal D. Parents' first concerns of their child's development in toddlers with autism spectrum disorders. Dev Neurorehabil. 2011;14(2):72-8. doi: 10.3109/17518423.2010.539193. — View Citation

Lord, RM, DiLavore PC, et al. Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule: WPS (ADOS-WPS). Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Services. 1999.

Ozonoff S, Iosif AM, Baguio F, Cook IC, Hill MM, Hutman T, Rogers SJ, Rozga A, Sangha S, Sigman M, Steinfeld MB, Young GS. A prospective study of the emergence of early behavioral signs of autism. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2010 Mar;49(3):256-66.e1-2. — View Citation

Pierce K, Carter C, Weinfeld M, Desmond J, Hazin R, Bjork R, Gallagher N. Detecting, studying, and treating autism early: the one-year well-baby check-up approach. J Pediatr. 2011 Sep;159(3):458-465.e1-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2011.02.036. — View Citation

Ritvo ER, Freeman BJ, Pingree C, Mason-Brothers A, Jorde L, Jenson WR, McMahon WM, Petersen PB, Mo A, Ritvo A. The UCLA-University of Utah epidemiologic survey of autism: prevalence. Am J Psychiatry. 1989 Feb;146(2):194-9. — View Citation

Volkmar FR, Lord C, Bailey A, Schultz RT, Klin A. Autism and pervasive developmental disorders. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2004 Jan;45(1):135-70. Review. — View Citation

Vouloumanos A, Hauser MD, Werker JF, Martin A. The tuning of human neonates' preference for speech. Child Dev. 2010 Mar-Apr;81(2):517-27. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2009.01412.x. — View Citation

Wolff JJ, Gu H, Gerig G, Elison JT, Styner M, Gouttard S, Botteron KN, Dager SR, Dawson G, Estes AM, Evans AC, Hazlett HC, Kostopoulos P, McKinstry RC, Paterson SJ, Schultz RT, Zwaigenbaum L, Piven J; IBIS Network.. Differences in white matter fiber tract development present from 6 to 24 months in infants with autism. Am J Psychiatry. 2012 Jun;169(6):589-600. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.11091447. — View Citation

* Note: There are 21 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Natural Interaction, Monologue with Directed Attention Stimulus - Dwell time in Face Region of Interest (ROI) from 0.5-8.0 seconds. 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Monologue with Directed Attention Stimulus - Dwell time in Cup/Phone, Desk Picture, Wall Picture and Light Switch ROIs from 0.2-24.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time in Target Upper Face ROI from 0.3-0.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time in Distracter Face ROI from 0.7-1.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time in Target Upper Face ROI from 1.5-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time in Distrater Face, Target Body, and Distracter Body ROI from 1.5-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Scared Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 0.5-0.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Scared Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 1.9-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Scared Target Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Face, Target Body, and Distracter Body ROI from 1.9-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Surpised Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 1.8-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Surpised Target Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Face, Target Body, and Distracter Body ROI from 1.8-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 1.3-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Female Sad Target Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Face, Target Body,and Distracter Body ROI from 1.3-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Happy Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 2.0-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Happy Target Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Face, Target Body, and Distracter Face ROI from 2.0-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Angry Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Upper Face ROI from 1.7-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Angry Target Stimulus - Dwell time Target Lower Face ROI from 1.7-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Side by Side Faces, Male Angry Target Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Face, Target Body, and Distracter Body ROI from 1.7-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Face vs. Abstract Design 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.5-10.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Face vs. Abstract Design 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Abstract ROI from 0.5-10.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Biological vs. Non-Biological Motion, Scramble vs. Give Me Stimulus - Dwell time Predictive Action ROI from 1.1 to 1.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Biological vs. Non-Biological Motion, Scramble vs. Give Me Stimulus - Dwell time Predictive Action ROI from 3.4 to 4.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Middle 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 0.4 to 1.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Middle 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Target Toy ROI from 1.0 to 2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Middle 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Right, and Distracter Left ROI from 1.0 to 2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Middle 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 2.4 to 3.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 2.0 to 3.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Gesture ROI from 0.6 to 3.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Target Toy ROI from 0.8 to 2.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Middle, and Distracter Left ROI from 0.8 to 2.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 0.3 to 1.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Gesture ROI from 1.1 to 3.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Target Toy ROI from 1.4 to 3.4 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Right, and Distracter Middle ROI from 1.4 to 3.4 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Face vs. Abstract Design 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.7 to 10.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Face vs. Abstract Design 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Abstract ROI from 0.7 to 10.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Biological vs. Non-Biological Motion, Scramble vs. Which One Stimulus - Dwell time Predictive Action ROI from 1.3 to 5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Biological vs. Non-Biological Motion, Scramble vs. Help Self Stimulus - Dwell time Predictive Action ROI from 4.9 to 5.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Gesture Stop Stimulus - Dwell time Female Face ROI from 0.5 to 18.28 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Gesture Stop Stimulus - Dwell time Male Face ROI from 0.5 to 18.28 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Gesture Stop Stimulus - Dwell time Bubble Wrap ROI from 4.1 to 5.4 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Gesture Stop Stimulus - Dwell time Bubble Wrap ROI from 10.0 to 11.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Gesture Stop Stimulus - Dwell time Monitor, Laptop, Desk Picture, and Pencil Cup ROI from 0.2 to 18.28 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Reciprocal Conversation Stimulus - Dwell time Female Face ROI from 0.5 to 16.34 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Reciprocal Conversation Stimulus - Dwell time Male Face ROI from 0.5 to 16.34 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Reciprocal Conversation Stimulus - Dwell time Hats ROI from 1.5 to 3.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Reciprocal Conversation Stimulus - Dwell time Hats ROI from 9.5 to 16.34 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Drink Spill Stimulus - Dwell time Face 1 ROI from 2.4 to 2.9 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Drink Spill Stimulus - Dwell time Face 2 ROI from 3.2 to 3.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Drink Spill Stimulus - Dwell time Pitcher/Glass Spill ROI from 4.3 to 8.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Drink Spill Stimulus - Dwell time Face 1 Expression ROI from 9.0 to 11.88 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Drink Spill Stimulus - Dwell time Face 2 ROI from 10.0 to 11.88 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Joke 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.5 to 6.88 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Joke 1 Stimulus - Dwell time Body, and Toys ROI from 0.5 to 6.88 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Tap Shoulder Stimulus - Dwell time Male Face ROI from 0.3 to 12.29 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Tap Shoulder Stimulus - Dwell time Female Face ROI from 2.2 to 12.29 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Tap Shoulder Stimulus - Dwell time Tap ROI from 6.4 to 7.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Tap Shoulder Stimulus - Dwell time Paper ROI from 0.2 to 12.29 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Offer to Share Stimulus - Dwell time Face A ROI from 0.6 to 3.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Offer to Share Stimulus - Dwell time Face B and Gesture/Shrug ROI from 3.8 to 6.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Offer to Share Stimulus - Dwell time Face A ROI from 7.2 to 9.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Offer to Share Stimulus - Dwell time Orange/Hands ROI from 9.4 to 11.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Happy Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.2 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Angry Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.2 to 0.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Angry Stimulus - Dwell time Lower Face ROI from 0.9 to 1.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Angry Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 1.3 to 2.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Sad Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.6 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expression, Surprise Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.5 to 1.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Face B ROI from 0.7 to 1.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Target ROI from 1.2 to 2.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter Right ROI from 1.2 to 2.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Face A ROI from 1.4 to 3.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Right Stimulus - Dwell time Face B-male ROI from 0.7 to 2.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Right Stimulus - Dwell time Face B-male ROI from 3.1 to 3.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Face B ROI from 0.8 to 1.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Face B ROI from 2.6 to 3.2 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Target & Gesture ROI from 1.0 to 2.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter ROI from 1.0 to 2.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Surprise 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.4 to 1.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Surprise 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Lower Face ROI from 1.5 to 1.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Surprise 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 1.8 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Angry 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 0.3 to 1.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Angry 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 2.5 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Happy 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 2.5 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Dynamic Facial Expressions, Scared Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 3.5 to 3.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Joke 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Upper Face ROI from 2.0 to 8.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Natural Interaction, Joke 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Distracter 1, Distracter 2, Distracter 3, and Microphone ROI from 0.2 to 10.34 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 0.5 to 0.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Left Distracter, and Middle Distracter ROI from 0.9 to 1.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gaze Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time Right Target ROI from 0.9 to 1.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Middle Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 0.4 to 0.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Middle Stimulus - Dwell time Left Distracter, and Right Distracter ROI from 1.5 to 3.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Middle Stimulus - Dwell time Gesture and Middle Target ROI from 1.5 to 3.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Middle Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 3.4 to 4.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 3 Stimulus - Dwell time Face ROI from 0.3 to 0.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 3 Stimulus - Dwell time Left Target, Middle Distracter, and Right Distracter ROI from 0.7 to 2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Other Joint Attention, Gesture Left 3 Stimulus - Dwell time Gesture ROI from 0.8 to 1.8 seconds 6 months from study start
Primary Percentage of correctly discriminated ASD and non-ASD cases using the autism risk index. In the development phase, all of the eye gaze measurements acquired from the social attention paradigm will be included as predictor variables in a random forest analysis. This analysis permits evaluation of the discriminative ability of a large number of variables in data sets with a modest number of cases. The variables with highest importance scores, indicating good diagnostic discrimination, will be entered into a logistic regression analysis with ASD diagnostic status (ASD vs. non-ASD) as the dichotomous dependent variable. Significant predictors will be retained and coefficients from the retained predictors will serve as the diagnostic autism risk index. 1 year from study start
Secondary Area under the ROC curve of the prognostic algorithm in discriminating non-verbal cognitive disability. All the available eye tracking measurements as predictors and non-verbal cognitive ability scores (dichotomized at <70 and 70 and above) as the dependent variable in random forest analyses. 21 months from study start
Secondary Number of regions of interest with significant dwell time differences between ASD-affected and non-ASD participants. Effect size between ASD and non-ASD participants for dwell time relative to social targets presented in the social attention paradigm. 3 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Monologue with Directed Attention Stimulus - Dwell time in Upper Face Region of Interest (ROI) from 0.5-24 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Monologue with Directed Attention Stimulus - Dwell time in Desk picture and Cup/Phone Regions of Interest (ROI) from 0.5-24 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Joke 1 Stimulus - Dwell time in the Upper and Lower Face ROIs from 0.5-5.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Joke 1 Stimulus - Dwell time in Body and Toys ROIs from 0.5-6.88 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Joke 2 Stimulus - Dwell time in Upper Face ROI and Lower Face ROI from 0.5-8.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Joke 2 Stimulus - Dwell time in Upper Face ROI from 4.3-5.0 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Natural Interaction, Joke 2 Stimulus - Dwell time in Distractor 1, Distractor 2, Distractor 3 and Body ROIs from 0.2-10.34 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Middle Stimulus - Dwell time in Face ROI from 0.3-1.1 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Middle Stimulus - Dwell time in Target Toy, Distractor Right and Distractor Left ROIs from 1.0-2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Right Stimulus - Dwell time in Face A and Face B ROIs from 3.3-3.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Right Stimulus - Dwell time in Target Toy and Distractor Toy ROIs from 1.0-2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time in Face ROI from 2.0-3.0 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gaze Right 2 Stimulus - Dwell time in Left Distractor, Middle Distractor and Right Target from 0.9-1.6 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gesture Middle 1 Stimulus - Left Distractor, Right Distractor and Middle Target from 1.5-3.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gesture Right 1 Stimulus - Target Toy, Distractor Middle and Distractor Left ROIs from 0.8-3.5 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gesture Right 2 Stimulus - Target Toy and Distractor Toy ROIs from 1.3-2.4 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gesture Left 1 Stimulus - Target Toy, Distractor Middle and Distractor Right ROIs from 1.4-3.4 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention, Gesture Left 2 Stimulus - Target Toy and Distractor Right ROIs from 1.2-2.7 seconds 6 months from study start
Secondary Joint Attention - Gesture Left 3 Stimulus - Left Target, Middle Distractor and Right Distractor ROIs from 0.7-2.3 seconds 6 months from study start
See also
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