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Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a pervasive neurodevelopmental disorder with prominent reciprocal social and communication impairment and restricted repetitive behavior or interest. ASD is a highly heritable disease with tremendous impact on individuals, families, and society. In addition to the interview instruments, self-administered rating scales are commonly used in screening, assessment of symptoms' change, and evaluation of intervention effects. The Social Responsiveness Scale, the Childhood Asperger's Syndrome Test, and the Autism Spectrum Quotient are internationally widely used rating scales measuring autistic traits in both clinical and community samples in western counties. Establishment of internationally-recognized reliable and valid instruments is not only useful for clinical screening, but also helpful in future functional outcomes, neurocognitive, genetic and brain imaging studies.
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This is a cross-sectional questionnaire survey in school-based and clinic-based samples. The participants include (1) ASD group: 200 cases with DSM-IV ASD; (2) ADHD group: 200 cases with DSM-IV ADHD; (3) Normally developing control group: a school-based sample of around 1200 grade 1 to grade 8 students. 100 students randomly selected from school-based sample will be reassessed at a 2-week interval for the test-retest reliability study. The teachers will complete the SRS and SNAP-IV (for ADHD symptoms); parents will report on their children on the SCQ, SRS, CAST, SNAP-IV, and CBCL, and report themselves on the SRS, AQ, and ASRI; children will report on themselves using the SRS, AQ, SNAP-IV, and YSR. Parents of clinical participants will be interviewed by the ADI-R or K-SADS-E to confirm their diagnosis of ASD and ADHD, respectively.
We expect that this study will reach the following objectives:
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2,460 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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