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Caregiver broader autism phenotype does not moderate the effect of early caregiver-mediated support on infant language outcomes

Caregiver-mediated supports in general have shown mixed evidence for enhancing language outcomes in infants at higher likelihood of autism. While caregivers play a substantial role in caregiver-mediated supports, little is known about whether caregivers' own subclinical autistic features - known as broader autism phenotype - may moderate infant language outcomes. 

Citation:
O'Connor E, Treyvaud K, Green CC, ……… Varcin KJ, Wan MW, Whitehouse A, Hudry K. Caregiver broader autism phenotype does not moderate the effect of early caregiver-mediated support on infant language outcomes. Infant Behav Dev. 2025;80.

Keywords:
Broader autism phenotype; Caregiver-mediated support; Higher likelihood of autism; Language development

Abstract:
Caregiver-mediated supports in general have shown mixed evidence for enhancing language outcomes in infants at higher likelihood of autism. While caregivers play a substantial role in caregiver-mediated supports, little is known about whether caregivers' own subclinical autistic features - known as broader autism phenotype - may moderate infant language outcomes.