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Featured researches published by Julie Osterling.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 1994

Early recognition of children with autism: A study of first birthday home videotapes

Julie Osterling; Geraldine Dawson

Coded home videotapes of 11 autistic and 11 normally developing childrens first year birthday parties for social, affective, joint attention, and communicative behaviors and for specific autistic symptoms. Autistic children displayed significantly fewer social and joint attention behaviors and significantly more autistic symptoms. In combination, four behaviors correctly classified 10 of 11 autistic children and 10 of 11 normal children. These behaviors consisted of pointing, showing objects, looking at others, and orienting to name.


Developmental Psychology | 2004

Early social attention impairments in autism: social orienting, joint attention, and attention to distress.

Geraldine Dawson; Karen Toth; Robert D. Abbott; Julie Osterling; Jeff Munson; Annette Estes; Jane Liaw

This study investigated social attention impairments in autism (social orienting, joint attention, and attention to anothers distress) and their relations to language ability. Three- to four-year-old children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD; n = 72), 3- to 4-year-old developmentally delayed children (n = 34), and 12- to 46-month-old typically developing children (n = 39), matched on mental age, were compared on measures of social orienting, joint attention, and attention to anothers distress. Children with autism performed significantly worse than the comparison groups in all of these domains. Combined impairments in joint attention and social orienting were found to best distinguish young children with ASD from those without ASD. Structural equation modeling indicated that joint attention was the best predictor of concurrent language ability. Social orienting and attention to distress were indirectly related to language through their relations with joint attention. These results help to clarify the nature of social attention impairments in autism, offer clues to developmental mechanisms, and suggest targets for early intervention.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 1998

Children with autism fail to orient to naturally occurring social stimuli

Geraldine Dawson; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Julie Osterling; Julie Rinaldi; Emily Brown

Children with autism were compared to developmentally matched children with Down syndrome or typical development in terms of their ability to visually orient to two social stimuli (name called, hands clapping) and two nonsocial stimuli (rattle, musical jack-in-the-box), and in terms of their ability to share attention (following anothers gaze or point). It was found that, compared to children with Down syndrome or typical development, children with autism more frequently failed to orient to all stimuli, and that this failure was much more extreme for social stimuli. Children with autism who oriented to social stimuli took longer to do so compared to the other two groups of children. Children with autism also exhibited impairments in shared attention. Moreover, for both children with autism and Down syndrome, correlational analyses revealed a relation between shared attention performance and the ability to orient to social stimuli, but no relation between shared attention performance and the ability to orient to nonsocial stimuli. Results suggest that social orienting impairments may contribute to difficulties in shared attention found in autism.


Development and Psychopathology | 2002

Early recognition of 1-year-old infants with autism spectrum disorder versus mental retardation

Julie Osterling; Geraldine Dawson; Jeffrey Munson

Previous work based on observations of home videotapes indicates that differences can be detected between infants with autism spectrum disorder and infants with typical development at 1 year of age. The present study addresses the question of whether autism can be distinguished from mental retardation by 1 year of age. Home videotapes of first birthday parties from 20 infants later diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, 14 infants later diagnosed with mental retardation (without autism), and 20 typically developing infants were coded by blind raters with respect to the frequencies of specific social and communicative behaviors and repetitive motor actions. Results indicated that 1-year-olds with autism spectrum disorder can be distinguished from 1-year-olds with typical development and those with mental retardation. The infants with autism spectrum disorder looked at others and oriented to their names less frequently than infants with mental retardation. The infants with autism spectrum disorder and those with mental retardation used gestures and looked to objects held by others less frequently and engaged in repetitive motor actions more frequently than typically developing infants. These results indicate that autism can be distinguished from mental retardation and typical development by 1 year of age.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2000

Brief Report: Recognition of Autism Spectrum Disorder Before One Year of Age: A Retrospective Study Based on Home Videotapes

Emily Werner; Geraldine Dawson; Julie Osterling; Nuhad Dinno

year of age and allowed for some regularity in the taping situation. Differences between 11 typically developing infants and 11 infants with autism spectrum disorder were found in three general areas: social, joint attention, and autistic-like symptoms. The specific behaviors of looking at the face of another person, showing , pointing, and failing to orient to name correctly classified 91% of the participants according to diagnostic group (10/11 with autism spectrum disorder and 10/11 with typical development). More recently, Baranek (1999) viewed 9–12 month home videotapes of children with autism, mental retardation, and typical development. Infants with autism were found to have poor visual attention, require more prompts to respond to their name, excessively mouth objects, and more frequently show aversion to social touch. The current study aimed to characterize infants with autism spectrum disorder less than 1 year of age. To this end, the current study extended downward the study conducted by Osterling and Dawson (1994) by examing earlier videotapes taken from the same samples studied in the Osterling and Dawson study as well as the videotapes of 8 infants (4 with autistic spectrum disorder, 4 with typical development) who did not participate in the Osterling and Dawson study who were added in order to enlarge the samples. Although little is known about the symptoms of autism in early infancy, research has been able to reliably identify a cluster of behavioral impairments that characterize preschool children with autism. This cluster includes impairments in paying attention to others (eye contact, orienting), imitating the actions of others, affective responsivity, and joint attention behaviors (e.


Child Development | 2002

Neurocognitive Function and Joint Attention Ability in Young Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder Versus Developmental Delay

Geraldine Dawson; Jeffrey Munson; Annette Estes; Julie Osterling; James C. McPartland; Karen Toth; Leslie J. Carver; Robert D. Abbott

Studies have shown that young children with autism are not impaired on prefrontal tasks relative to what would be expected for their mental age, raising questions about the executive dysfunction hypothesis of autism. These studies did not include ventromedial prefrontal tasks, however. The present study examined whether young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are impaired on ventromedial prefrontal tasks, and whether performance on such tasks is correlated with a core autism symptom, joint attention ability. Seventy-two 3- to 4-year-old children with ASD, 34 3- to 4-year-old developmentally delayed children, and 39 12- to 46-month-old typically developing children, matched on mental age, were administered ventromedial and dorsolateral prefrontal tasks and joint attention tasks. Children with ASD performed similarly to comparison groups on all executive function tasks, indicating that at this early age, there is no autism-specific pattern of executive dysfunction. Ventromedial, but not dorsolateral, prefrontal task performance was strongly correlated with joint attention ability, however. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex is hypothesized to play a role in the development of joint attention and possibly some aspects of the autistic syndrome.


Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology | 2000

Case Study of the Development of an Infant with Autism from Birth to Two Years of Age.

Geraldine Dawson; Julie Osterling; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Patricia K. Kuhl

This report describes a case study of the development of an infant with autism who was observed closely by professionals from birth and to whom a comprehensive psychological evaluation was administered at approximately 1 and 2 years of age. During the first 6 months of life, this infant displayed difficulties in oral motor coordination and muscle tone that fluctuated between hypotonia and hypertonia. He startled easily, had poor state regulation, and was hypersensitive to touch. Notably, however, during the first 6 months, this infant vocalized and responded socially to others by smiling and cooing. During the second half of the first year, he continued to demonstrate diffuse sensorimotor difficulties and diminished oral motor control. Hypersensitivity now extended to a wider range of stimuli. He had problems in sleep regulation. Motor stereotypies, including rocking, head banging, and toe walking, were observed. Difficulties in the domain of social interaction began to emerge during the second 6 months, including poor eye contact, failure to engage in imitative games, and lack of imitative vocal responses. By a little over 1 year of age, this infant met diagnostic criteria for autism based on the Autism Diagnostic Interview. There were several domains in which this toddler with autism did not show impairments. In the areas of immediate memory for actions, working memory, response inhibition, and speech perception, this 1-year old with autism displayed no evidence of significant impairment on the tests administered. This case study offers clues regarding the nature of autism at its earliest stages. Understanding early development in autism will be important for developing early screening and diagnostic tools.


Child Development | 1999

Infants of depressed mothers exhibit atypical frontal electrical brain activity during interactions with mother and with a familiar, nondepressed adult

Geraldine Dawson; Karin S. Frey; Heracles Panagiotides; Emily Yamada; David Hessl; Julie Osterling

Previous studies have shown that infants of depressed mothers exhibit atypical frontal brain electrical activity when they are interacting with their mothers. Whereas typically developing infants exhibit greater left versus right frontal brain activity, infants of depressed mothers have been found to exhibit reduced relative left frontal activity. The left frontal brain region has been associated with the expression of positive emotions. In the present study, the question of whether the atypical pattern of brain activity found in infants of depressed mothers generalizes to situations not involving mother was addressed. Brain electrical activity was recorded from 13- to 15-month-old infants of depressed (N = 59) versus nondepressed (N = 40) mothers during a baseline condition, and during several social conditions that included a playful social interaction with a familiar experiments. Infants of depressed mothers exhibited reduced left relative to right frontal activity during the baseline condition, and during interactions with their mothers and with the familiar experimenter. The present results suggest that the atypical pattern of electrical brain activity found in infants of depressed mothers generalizes to a variety of situations, including positive interactions with nondepressed adults.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2002

A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Porcine Versus Synthetic Secretin for Reducing Symptoms of Autism

Alan S. Unis; Jeffrey Munson; Sally J. Rogers; Ed Goldson; Julie Osterling; Robin L. Gabriels; Robert D. Abbott; Geraldine Dawson

OBJECTIVE To compare the effects of a single dose of biologic and synthetic porcine secretin to placebo on a variety of autism symptoms. METHOD Eighty-five children with autism without other medical conditions and not taking other psychotropic medications participated (ages between 3 and 12 years, mean IQ = 55). Children were grouped into trios matched by age and communication level and then randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: biologic secretin (2 CU/kg), synthetic secretin (0.4 microg/kg), and placebo. Measures collected 1 week before and 4 weeks after infusion included autism symptoms, language skills, and problem behaviors, gathered from parents, teachers, and investigators, who were all blind to treatment. Two-factor, repeated-measures analyses of variance (3 treatment levels by 2 repeated measures, pre- and postinfusion) were used to examine efficacy. RESULTS Direct observation measures did not show change over time related to secretin. Parent reports showed an overall reduction of symptom severity for all treatment groups, including the placebo group. One teacher-report measure showed decreases in autism symptoms in the placebo and synthetic secretin groups. CONCLUSIONS No evidence that either biologic or synthetic secretin provided amelioration of symptoms beyond placebo was observed. This held true when children with and without gastrointestinal problems were examined separately.


Child Development | 1998

Neuropsychological Correlates of Early Symptoms of Autism

Geraldine Dawson; Andrew N. Meltzoff; Julie Osterling; Julie Rinaldi

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Jeffrey Munson

University of Washington

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Julie Rinaldi

University of Washington

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Annette Estes

University of Washington

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David Hessl

University of Washington

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Emily Brown

University of Washington

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Emily Werner

University of Washington

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