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Featured researches published by Annika Hellendoorn.


European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2014

Screening for autism spectrum disorders: state of the art in Europe

Patricia García-Primo; Annika Hellendoorn; Tony Charman; Herbert Roeyers; Mieke Dereu; Bernadette Rogé; Sophie Baduel; Filippo Muratori; Antonio Narzisi; Emma van Daalen; Irma Moilanen; Manuel Posada de la Paz; Ricardo Canal-Bedia

A large number of studies have reported on the validity of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) screening procedures. An overall understanding of these studies’ findings cannot be based solely on the level of internal validity of each, since screening instruments might perform differently according to certain factors in different settings. Europe has led the field with the development of the first screening tool and first prospective screening study of autism. This paper seeks to provide an overview of ASD screening studies and ongoing programmes across Europe, and identify variables that have influenced the outcomes of such studies. Results show that, to date, over 70,000 children have been screened in Europe using 18 different screening procedures. Differences among findings across studies have enabled us to identify ten factors that may influence screening results. Although it is impossible to draw firm conclusions as to which screening procedure is most effective, this analysis might facilitate the choice of a screening method that best fits a specific scenario, and this, in turn, may eventually improve early ASD detection procedures.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2015

Motor functioning, exploration, visuospatial cognition and language development in preschool children with autism.

Annika Hellendoorn; Lex Wijnroks; Emma van Daalen; Claudine Dietz; Jan K. Buitelaar; Paul P.M. Leseman

In order to understand typical and atypical developmental trajectories it is important to assess how strengths or weaknesses in one domain may be affecting performance in other domains. This study examined longitudinal relations between early fine motor functioning, visuospatial cognition, exploration, and language development in preschool children with ASD and children with other developmental delays/disorders. The ASD group included 63 children at T1 (Mage = 27.10 months, SD = 8.71) and 46 children at T2 (Mage = 45.85 months, SD = 7.16). The DD group consisted of 269 children at T1 (Mage = 17.99 months, SD = 5.59), and 121 children at T2 (Mag e= 43.51 months, SD = 3.81). A subgroup nested within the total sample was randomly selected and studied in-depth on exploratory behavior. This group consisted of 50 children, 21 children with ASD (Mage = 27.57, SD = 7.09) and 29 children with DD (Mage = 24.03 months, SD = 6.42). Fine motor functioning predicted language in both groups. Fine motor functioning was related to visuospatial cognition in both groups and related to object exploration, spatial exploration, and social orientation during exploration only in the ASD group. Visuospatial cognition and all exploration measures were related to both receptive and expressive language in both groups. The findings are in line with the embodied cognition theory, which suggests that cognition emerges from and is grounded in the bodily interactions of an agent with the environment. This study emphasizes the need for researchers and clinicians to consider cognition as emergent from multiple interacting systems.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2014

The relationship between atypical visual processing and social skills in young children with autism.

Annika Hellendoorn; Irene Langstraat; Lex Wijnroks; Jan K. Buitelaar; Emma van Daalen; Paul P.M. Leseman

The present study examined whether atypical visual processing is related to the level of social skills in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Thirty-eight young children with ASD (29 boys, 9 girls) were included. Atypical visual processing was assessed by coding the number of lateral glances and the amount of object grouping behavior on videotaped observations of the ADOS (aged 35 ± 9 months). The level of social skills was measured using the subscale interpersonal relationships of the Vineland SEEC (32 ± 7 months). A negative relationship with a medium effect size was found between lateral glances and interpersonal relationships. Object grouping behavior and interpersonal relationships were not related. This study suggests that visual perception may be a mechanism in the development of interpersonal relationships in ASD, which is in accordance with an embodied approach to social cognition.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Unraveling the nature of autism: finding order amid change

Annika Hellendoorn; Lex Wijnroks; Paul P.M. Leseman

In this article, we hypothesize that individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are born with a deficit in invariance detection, which is a learning process whereby people and animals come to attend the relatively stable patterns or structural regularities in the changing stimulus array. This paper synthesizes a substantial body of research which suggests that a deficit in the domain-general perceptual learning process of invariant detection in ASD can lead to a cascade of consequences in different developmental domains. We will outline how this deficit in invariant detection can cause uncertainty, unpredictability, and a lack of control for individuals with ASD and how varying degrees of impairments in this learning process can account for the heterogeneity of the ASD phenotype. We also describe how differences in neural plasticity in ASD underlie the impairments in perceptual learning. The present account offers an alternative to prior theories and contributes to the challenge of understanding the developmental trajectories that result in the variety of autistic behaviors.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

Understanding social engagement in autism: being different in perceiving and sharing affordances

Annika Hellendoorn

In the current paper I will argue that the notion of affordances offers an alternative to theory of mind (ToM) approaches in studying social engagement in general and in explaining social engagement in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) specifically. Affordances are the possibilities for action offered by the environment. In contrast to ToM approaches, the concept of affordances implies the complementarity of person and environment and rejects the dualism of mind and behavior. In line with the Gibsonian idea that a child must eventually perceive the affordances of the environment for others as well for herself in order to become socialized, I will hypothesize that individuals with ASD often do not perceive the same affordances in the environment as other people do and have difficulties perceiving others’ affordances. This can lead to a disruption of interpersonal behaviors. I will further argue that the methods for studying social engagement should be adapted if we want to take interaction into account.


Neuropsychology of Space#R##N#Spatial Functions of the Human Brain | 2017

Chapter 9 – How Children Learn to Discover Their Environment: An Embodied Dynamic Systems Perspective on the Development of Spatial Cognition

Albert Postma; Ineke J. M. van der Ham; Hanna Mulder; Ora Oudgenoeg-Paz; Annika Hellendoorn; Marian J. Jongmans

This chapter provides a review of studies on the development of selected aspects of spatial cognition from an embodied dynamic systems perspective. Dynamic systems and embodied cognition theory are discussed first, followed by a summary of studies investigating mental rotation and spatial memory (including memory for object locations, orientation, and navigation), two central aspects of spatial cognition that emerge in the first years of life. The chapter argues against the notion that children learn specific skills at specific “set” ages—rather, children are able to do particular things, such as remembering an object’s location, under specific circumstances and after having had specific experiences. Here we describe the dynamics of both typical and atypical development of mental rotation and spatial memory in relation to both these factors, addressing how these aspects of spatial cognition are often assessed at various ages, and how advances in motor development allow children to learn increasingly more about the world around them through exploration.


Child and Adolescent Mental Health | 2018

Measurement Issues: Building a theoretical framework for autism spectrum disorders screening instruments in Europe

María Magán-Maganto; Sigrídur Lóa Jónsdóttir; Ana B. Sánchez-García; Patricia García-Primo; Annika Hellendoorn; Tony Charman; Herbert Roeyers; Mieke Dereu; Irma Moilanen; Filippo Muratori; Manuel Posada de la Paz; Bernadette Rogé; Iris J. Oosterling; Anneli Yliherva; Ricardo Canal-Bedia

BACKGROUND This study addresses the need for a theoretical base to develop more effective early autism spectrum disorders (ASD) detection tools. The structure that underlies early ASD detection is explored by evaluating the opinions of experts on ASD screening tools currently used in Europe. METHOD A process of face and content validity was performed. First, the best constructs were selected from the relevant tests: Checklist for Early Signs of Developmental Disorders (CESDD), Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (CHAT), Early Screening of Autistic Traits Questionnaire (ESAT), Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (M-CHAT), Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ) and Communication and Symbolic Behaviour Scales Developmental Profile (CSBS-DP). The diagnostic content validity model by Fehring (1986, 1994) was adapted to make the selection. Afterwards, the items, taken from these tests, were selected to fit into each construct, using the same methodology. RESULTS Twelve of the 18 constructs were selected by the experts and 11 items were chosen from a total of 130, reduced to eight after eliminating tautologies. CONCLUSIONS Mapping these constructs and items on to the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for ASD indicated good face and content validity. Results of this research will contribute to efforts to improve early ASD screening instruments and identify the key behaviours that experts in ASD see as the most relevant for early detection.


European Journal of Public Health | 2016

European studies on prevalence and risk of autism spectrum disorders according to immigrant status-a review.

Rafał Kawa; Evald Saemundsen; Sigrídur Lóa Jónsdóttir; Annika Hellendoorn; Sanne Lemcke; Ricardo Canal-Bedia; Patricia García-Primo; Irma Moilanen

Background: Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), once considered to be rare, are now reaching prevalence estimates of 1% and higher. Studies conducted in North America indicate large racial/ethnic disparities in the diagnosis of ASDs. Others show, that immigrant children have similar prevalence rates of ASDs as native children, although they are diagnosed later compared with native children. In relation to a EU funded network action, Enhancing the Scientific Study of Early Autism, it was considered important to review the literature on this subject. Method: A comprehensive literature search was undertaken for original articles reporting on prevalence and risk for ASD in Europe among immigrants and ethnic minorities and data across studies were compared. Results: Seventeen studies conducted in Europe concerning immigrants and ethnic minorities were found. Fifteen studies suggest a higher prevalence rate of ASDs among children of immigrants in comparison to native children (RR = 1.02–1.74; OR = 0.6–10.5). One study revealed higher prevalence of autism (OR = 2.2; 95% CI 1.6–3.1) and lower prevalence of Asperger syndrome in immigrants (OR = 0.6; 95% CI 0.3–0.97). One study showed a lower prevalence of Asperger syndrome in immigrants (aOR = 0.1, 95% CI 0.01–0.5). The majority of those analyses involved immigrants from outside Europe, e.g. from Africa and South America. Conclusion: After analysing the results of studies conducted in Europe, it is unclear if higher prevalence estimates of ASDs among immigrants in this region reflect true differences, especially considering many potential confounding factors, e.g. genetic, biological, environmental and cultural. Considering the number of people migrating within Europe there is a substantial need to study further the prevalence of ASDs in immigrant groups.


Archive | 2017

How Children Learn to Discover Their Environment

Hanna Mulder; Ora Oudgenoeg-Paz; Annika Hellendoorn; Marian J. Jongmans


Child and Adolescent Mental Health | 2017

Building a theoretical framework for ASD screening instruments in Europe

María Magán-Maganto; Sigrídur Lóa Jónsdóttir; Ana B. Sánchez-García; Patricia García-Primo; Annika Hellendoorn; Tony Charman; Herbert Roeyers; Mieke Dereu; Irma Moilanen; Filippo Muratori; Manuel Posada de la Paz; Bernadette Rogé; Iris J. Oosterling; Anneli Yliherva; Ricardo Canal-Bedia

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Irma Moilanen

Oulu University Hospital

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