The functional significance of autistic behaviors for the psychotic child |
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Authors: | L. Alan Sroufe H. Uwe Stuecher Wayne Stutzer |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, 55455 Minneapolis, Minnesota |
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Abstract: | Physiological, cognitive, and emotional factors were examined throughout the treatment of a psychotic child. Heart rate, latency and accuracy in task performance, behavioral indices of stress (e.g., muscular tension, facial expression), and frequency of autistic mannerisms were measured concurrently. Both contemporaneous relationships and patterns of change suggested that autistic behaviors were organized and psychologically meaningful. Self-stimulation, conflict, and negativism (deliberate erroneous performance) occurred predictably, were intimately related, and were associated with specific patterns of heart-rate change. The changing function of self-stimulation across treatment and the centrality of negativism in this child's disturbance were discussed.This research was supported in part by a Program Project Grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to the Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota (1 PO1 IID05027). |
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