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Social Behavior Forecasts Moment-to-Moment Changes in RSA in Infants With Autism.

Developmental science2026

Yurkovic-Harding Julia, Narayanan Vignesh, Bradshaw Jessica

What this study means for families

Researchers studied how babies' heart rhythms and social behaviors (like looking and smiling) affect each other during play with parents. They found that babies' social behaviors more often caused changes in their heart rhythms than the other way around. Babies who were later diagnosed with autism or had family members with autism showed stronger connections between their social behaviors and heart rhythm changes, suggesting early differences in how their bodies and behaviors work together.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Research summary

This longitudinal study examined the dynamic relationship between respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) - a measure of physiological regulation - and social behaviors in 74 infants at varying familial likelihood for autism. Using Granger causality analyses during caregiver interactions at 3, 4, and 6 months, researchers found that social behaviors (particularly looking and smiling) more often predicted moment-to-moment changes in RSA than vice versa. Infants later diagnosed with ASD showed greater likelihood for social attention to forecast RSA changes compared to typically developing infants. Similarly, infants at elevated familial likelihood for ASD demonstrated increased likelihood for smiling to predict RSA, regardless of eventual diagnosis, suggesting early differences in behavior-physiology dynamics.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Key findings

  • 1

    Social behaviors, especially looking at caregivers, more frequently predicted moment-to-moment RSA changes than RSA predicted social behaviors

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Suggests social engagement actively influences physiological regulation in early infancy
  • 2

    Infants later diagnosed with ASD showed greater likelihood for social attention to forecast RSA compared to typically developing infants

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Indicates early differences in behavior-physiology dynamics that may serve as early markers
  • 3

    Infants at elevated familial likelihood for ASD showed greater likelihood for smiling to forecast RSA regardless of eventual diagnosis

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Suggests familial autism likelihood influences early physiological-social dynamics beyond diagnosis

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Clinical implications

Findings suggest early behavior-physiology dynamics may serve as potential biomarkers for autism risk. Understanding these relationships could inform early intervention approaches targeting the integration of social and physiological regulation systems in at-risk infants.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Limitations

Study methodology and statistical power unclear from abstract. Granger causality analyses may not capture true causal relationships. Limited generalizability due to specific population studied. Unclear if findings replicate across different interaction contexts or ages.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Original abstract

Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), an index of physiological regulation, increases during infancy, and is associated with concurrent and later social abilities. However, little is known about the moment-by-moment, bidirectional dynamics of RSA and social behaviors. This is particularly relevant to autism spectrum disorder (ASD), in which altered RSA may underly social deficits. The current study investigated the dynamic relationship between RSA and social behaviors in very young infants with and without ASD.

Infants (N = 74) at elevated (EL) or low (LL) familial likelihood for ASD who were later classified as typically developing (TD) or having ASD were included in analyses. These infants completed a dyadic, face-to-face interaction with their caregivers at 3, 4, and 6-months. Infant social behaviors (looking and smiling) and RSA during the interaction were quantified. Granger causality analyses determined if RSA significantly "forecasted" social behaviors and vice versa.

Social behavior, especially looking to the caregiver, significantly forecasted moment-to-moment changes RSA in more infants than the converse. Smiles forecasted RSA in more EL infants than LL infants. Looks forecasted RSA in more infants with ASD than TD infants. We found a bidirectional relationship between RSA and social behavior, with social behavior more often forecasting RSA.

Infants later diagnosed with ASD showed a greater likelihood for social attention to forecast RSA than TD infants, suggesting early differences in dynamic behavior-physiology processes. Additionally, EL infants showed a greater likelihood for smiling to forecast RSA than LL infants, suggesting that ASD likelihood may influence early physiological and social dynamics, regardless of outcome. SUMMARY: We explored the dynamic and bidirectional relationship between social behavior and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) in infants with and without autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Infant social behavior, especially looking to the parent, significantly forecasted moment-to-moment changes in RSA in more infants than the converse.

Smiles forecasted RSA in more infants at elevated than low likelihood for ASD, suggesting that ASD likelihood may influence early physiological and social dynamics. Looks forecasted RSA in more infants with ASD than TD infants, suggesting early differences in dynamic behavior-physiology processes.

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Evidence Grade

Emerging

moderate

Grade assigned by AutismInsights based on study type and published abstract.

Study Details

Journal
Developmental science
Year
2026
PMID
42033325
DOI
10.1111/desc.70196

MeSH Terms

HumansInfantSocial BehaviorMaleFemaleRespiratory Sinus ArrhythmiaAutism Spectrum DisorderInfant Behavior