Evaluation of Social ABCs With Attention Training Intervention for Toddlers With Suspected Autism

NACompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

150

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

April 1, 2017

Primary Completion Date

August 30, 2020

Study Completion Date

August 30, 2020

Conditions
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Attention Training Program

The attention training involves 8 visits over 4 weeks with pre/post data collection before and after the training, and a follow-up 6 months later. Pre/post data collection involves the ESCS and a Laboratory Temperament Assessment Battery (LabTAB), and a series of on-screen assessment tasks that measure cognitive control, distraction tolerance, sustained attention, habituation, gap-overlap, disengagement, and attention to static images. Training runs from Wk 2-5 with 2 visits per week and is completed in home with the child sitting on the parents lap in front of a monitor. The parent and child are inside a tent to reduce environmental stimuli. The research trainer is outside the tent running the program from a laptop. The program consists of a battery of 9 gaze-contingent training tasks using custom MATLAB scripts. The animated tasks are designed to engage the child and present as developmentally appropriate games. At each visit 6 of the 9 tasks will run for a total of 4min each(24min).

BEHAVIORAL

Social ABCs

The 6-month Social ABCs parent-mediated intervention consists of 12 weeks of parent training and a 12 week implementation phase. 15 training (parent coaching) sessions are provided by a Research Trainer. Each session with the trainer includes a review of the program manual, practice of the techniques in the child's home, and a 15 min video of the parent-child dyad practicing the intervention. Week 9 and 11 are phone consultations. After the active training is complete, the parent enters the 12-week implementation phase, which includes practicing the techniques on their own, with no trainer instruction or contact. The trainer re-visits the parent and child at Week 24 to collect three 15 min videos; 2 generalization videos are also taken with an untrained examiner.

OTHER

Treatment As Usual

The Treatment as Usual group acts as a pre-existing convenience sample, consisting of families currently enrolled in a different approved research study run by the same group of investigators. Children in this group have comparable clinical concerns for ASD, and complete the same standardized measures (ADOS, MSEL, ESCS, AOSI) as the Baseline assessment in this RCT, but will not receive Social ABCs or the Attention Training Program. They are able to access any programs or interventions available to them in the general community. This is tracked on a Services Log form, included as part of that study's protocol. Families in this group will have consented to their child's data being shared across studies in this research group.

BEHAVIORAL

Sham Attention Training

The sham attention condition will use identical hardware, administered by the same research staff for the same frequency and duration as the attention training program (8 visits over 4 weeks including pre/post data collection). In this condition, infants will be exposed to non-gaze contingent visual stimuli that offer no adaptive difficulty levels (ie. clips of age appropriate television shows). Placebo stimuli will be presented until toddlers become fidgety or distressed.

Trial Locations (4)

T5G 0B7

University of Alberta - Autism Research Centre, Edmonton

B3K 6R8

IWK Health Centre / Dalhousie University, Halifax

M4G1R8

Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Toronto

E16 2RD

University of East London, London

Sponsors

Collaborators (1)

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

IWK Health Centre

OTHER

collaborator

Dalhousie University

OTHER

collaborator

University of Alberta

OTHER

collaborator

University of East London

OTHER

collaborator

University of London

OTHER

lead

Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital

OTHER

NCT03215394 - Evaluation of Social ABCs With Attention Training Intervention for Toddlers With Suspected Autism | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter