New Research Reveals the Social Communication Challenges of Aging With AutismWhat makes us who we are and how does that change as we get older? It’s a question Arizona State University College of Health Solutions Assistant Professor B. Blair Braden, PhD, has been asking since childhood, when she spent much of her time at the nursing home owned and operated by her family. Later, her focus narrowed to how aging affects individuals with autism after spending time with students in her sister’s special education class. And just recently, Braden published a series of related studies in the scholarly journal Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders—two of which are featured in the journal’s special issue on aging with autism—that probe the specific question of how social and verbal fluency change as individuals with autism age. Braden and her team found that older adults with autism report more social communication difficulties than younger adults with autism; however, verbal fluency does not appear to become more difficult with age. Using brain scans, they were also able to deduce that areas of the brain related to social communication, cognition, and executive functions thinned more quickly with age in adults with autism than those without. “People with autism have a lot of these cognitive struggles and brain communication patterns that look more like what we know happens with aging,” Braden says. “So that really informed our hypothesis and, in this case, on a brain level, it panned out … and it correlated with their social communication difficulties. So we really feel like we have preliminary evidence for what the brain change is that is explaining the difficulties.” In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate the number of children who have been diagnosed with autism at 1 in 59. That means, within a decade or two, there will be a population of about 1 million adults on the spectrum. Over their lifetime, treatment expenses, lost wages for themselves, and lost wages for their caretakers can exceed $2 million. “So there’s also a tax dollar reason to want to find effective ways of helping adults with autism integrate into society,” Braden says. Robert Behr, a participant in Braden’s studies who was diagnosed with high-functioning autism in his mid-50s, has a master’s degree in computer science and a career as a software engineer. Despite his successes, he still sometimes struggles with the social aspect of communication, which he says has led to many a misunderstanding with girlfriends. Fellow study participant Susan Golubock, also diagnosed with high-functioning autism later in life, has had somewhat less trouble in that area, thanks in part, she believes, to none other than Shirley Temple. As a child, Golubock learned to model her tone of voice and facial expressions after the saccharine child actor, which helped her master those nonverbal communication cues crucial to positive social interactions. “I felt these were things that people expected of me and I didn't know how to do them, so I taught myself,” she says. Even so, Golubock still finds social situations overwhelming. When one researcher asked her what she learned about her friends on a recent lunch date, she had an epiphany. “It was like, I had no clue that's why people did it (spent time interacting socially),” she says. “I was supposed to be learning something about them? With all that noise going on, and focusing on not aspirating, and all the other things I had to focus on?” That Golubock is successful at appearing outwardly adept in social situations while inwardly she feels stressed is evidence of a phenomenon known as camouflaging. “Camouflaging is still a working definition,” Braden says. “It’s only something that's been talked about a lot in the last couple of years, but it’s the discrepancy between someone’s internal experience and their external output. … And that discrepancy is greater for women.” Such nuances are good examples of why Braden is working diligently to ensure more women are involved in this kind of research. Considering that Behr and Golubock, two adults with autism who are on the high-functioning end of the spectrum, still experience communication challenges underscores the importance of interventions for people on the lower-functioning end of the spectrum. However, both caution that such interventions must be carefully thought out. Behr believes having grown up “in the wild,” as he phrases it—meaning they weren’t diagnosed until later in life, and as such, didn’t receive therapy or behavioral intervention as children—puts them at an advantage over children today because, while he and Golubock had to think hard about social interaction and figure it out on their own, children today are simply following instructions on how to act without thinking or understanding why. Braden is taking their concerns into consideration as she works to design new types of interventions that adapt tools used to teach social communication skills to teens and young adults with autism to make them feasible for people who are experiencing age-related decline in that area. “I just think it’s important for everyone to know what to expect when they get older, especially if there’s reason to believe aging may affect you differently,” she says. For more on Braden’s autism and aging research, view a video at https://vimeo.com/331903165. Source: Arizona State University |