Sex-typical toy, activity, and playmate preferences in autistic and non-autistic children.

IF 5.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Autism Pub Date : 2025-03-12 DOI:10.1177/13623613251321207
Jacqueline C S To, Karson T F Kung
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Play, in particular sex-typical play, is important for affective, cognitive, and social development. There is limited research on sex-typical play in autistic children. The few prior studies on this topic relied heavily on reports or involvement of caregivers/parents, did not assess cognitive abilities, and examined a limited number of sex-typical play outcomes. The present study examined sex-typical play in 120 children without intellectual disability (30 autistic boys, 35 non-autistic boys, 20 autistic girls, 35 non-autistic girls) aged 4-11 years. Vocabulary and abstract reasoning were also assessed. Consistently across all five play measures (parent-reported composite play, self-reported activity preferences, self-reported toy preferences, self-reported playmate preferences, and observed toy play), there were medium or large, and mostly significant, differences between autistic and non-autistic boys, suggesting less male-typical/more female-typical play in autistic boys. Autistic and non-autistic boys did not differ in vocabulary, abstract reasoning, or age. No consistent, clear, or significant patterns emerged in comparisons of autistic and non-autistic girls. The more non-conforming play in autistic boys concurs with certain prior findings suggesting that the autistic community is not confined to social norms and shows increased gender diversity. The potential link between the unaltered play in autistic girls and camouflaging is considered.Lay abstractIn the non-autistic community, boys and girls tend to play differently, although these average differences do not apply to all the boys and girls. Little is known about similarities and differences in sex-typical play (e.g. playing with cars, playing with dolls, rough-and-tumble play, playing house) between autistic and non-autistic children. We looked at different aspects of sex-typical play such as toy, activity, and playmate preferences in autistic and non-autistic children without intellectual disability. Different methods including parent reports, self-reports, and play observation were used. We found some average differences between autistic and non-autistic boys. On average, compared with non-autistic boys, autistic boys played in a more non-conforming manner (less male-typical/more female-typical toy, activity, and playmate preferences). These findings are consistent with observations from other research studies suggesting that autistic individuals may defy social norms and express themselves in diverse ways. There were no differences between autistic and non-autistic girls. One possibility is that autistic girls may camouflage, or mask, their non-conforming play preferences, but further research is needed to test this possibility. The findings from this study can help families, professionals, and schools better understand how autistic boys and girls develop.

自闭症和非自闭症儿童的性别特征玩具、活动和玩伴偏好。
游戏,特别是典型的性别游戏,对情感、认知和社会发展都很重要。关于自闭症儿童的性别典型游戏的研究有限。之前关于这一主题的少数研究严重依赖于看护人/父母的报告或参与,没有评估认知能力,并且检查了有限数量的性别典型游戏结果。本研究调查了120名4-11岁的无智力障碍儿童(30名自闭症男孩,35名非自闭症男孩,20名自闭症女孩,35名非自闭症女孩)的性别典型游戏。词汇和抽象推理也被评估。在所有五种游戏测量(父母报告的复合游戏、自我报告的活动偏好、自我报告的玩具偏好、自我报告的玩伴偏好和观察到的玩具游戏)中,自闭症男孩和非自闭症男孩之间存在中等或较大的差异,而且大多数是显著的,这表明自闭症男孩的男性典型游戏较少/女性典型游戏较多。自闭症男孩和非自闭症男孩在词汇量、抽象推理或年龄上没有差异。在自闭症女孩和非自闭症女孩的比较中没有出现一致的、清晰的或显著的模式。自闭症男孩中更多的不符合常规的行为与先前的某些研究结果相一致,表明自闭症群体并不局限于社会规范,而且显示出越来越多的性别多样性。自闭症女孩的游戏和伪装之间的潜在联系被认为。在非自闭症群体中,男孩和女孩倾向于以不同的方式玩耍,尽管这些平均差异并不适用于所有男孩和女孩。自闭症儿童和非自闭症儿童在典型的性别游戏(如玩汽车、玩娃娃、打闹游戏、玩过家家)方面的异同我们知之甚少。我们研究了自闭症和非自闭症无智力障碍儿童的性别典型游戏的不同方面,如玩具、活动和玩伴偏好。采用不同的方法,包括家长报告、自我报告和游戏观察。我们发现自闭症男孩和非自闭症男孩之间存在一些平均差异。平均而言,与非自闭症男孩相比,自闭症男孩的游戏方式更不符合常规(更少男性典型/更多女性典型的玩具、活动和玩伴偏好)。这些发现与其他研究的观察结果一致,这些研究表明,自闭症患者可能会无视社会规范,以各种方式表达自己。自闭症女孩和非自闭症女孩之间没有差异。一种可能性是,自闭症女孩可能会伪装或掩饰自己不符合标准的游戏偏好,但需要进一步的研究来验证这种可能性。这项研究的发现可以帮助家庭、专业人士和学校更好地了解自闭症男孩和女孩是如何发展的。
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来源期刊
Autism
Autism PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
11.50%
发文量
160
期刊介绍: Autism is a major, peer-reviewed, international journal, published 8 times a year, publishing research of direct and practical relevance to help improve the quality of life for individuals with autism or autism-related disorders. It is interdisciplinary in nature, focusing on research in many areas, including: intervention; diagnosis; training; education; translational issues related to neuroscience, medical and genetic issues of practical import; psychological processes; evaluation of particular therapies; quality of life; family needs; and epidemiological research. Autism provides a major international forum for peer-reviewed research of direct and practical relevance to improving the quality of life for individuals with autism or autism-related disorders. The journal''s success and popularity reflect the recent worldwide growth in the research and understanding of autistic spectrum disorders, and the consequent impact on the provision of treatment and care. Autism is interdisciplinary in nature, focusing on evaluative research in all areas, including: intervention, diagnosis, training, education, neuroscience, psychological processes, evaluation of particular therapies, quality of life issues, family issues and family services, medical and genetic issues, epidemiological research.
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