Research Article

Normal Gaze Cueing in Children with Autism Is Disrupted by Simultaneous Speech Utterances in “Live” Face-to-Face Interactions

Table 4

Mean reaction times for the autism and control groups for each condition. Values are in milliseconds (±SD).

ConditionAutismControl
Valid cuesInvalid cuesAll trialsValid cuesInvalid cuesAll trials

With eye motion 3 5 2 . 1 ± 6 8 . 7  ms 3 7 3 . 1 ± 8 3 . 7  ms 3 6 3 . 3 ± 7 5 . 5  ms 3 2 8 . 4 ± 4 2 . 1  ms 3 7 1 . 0 ± 3 0 . 8  ms 3 5 0 . 0 ± 3 3 . 7  ms
Without eye motion 3 4 1 . 9 ± 6 7 . 6  ms 3 6 3 . 9 ± 6 9 . 4  ms 3 5 3 . 1 ± 6 7 . 0  ms3 5 1 . 3 ± 8 6 . 3  ms 3 9 2 . 0 ± 9 6 . 5  ms 3 7 2 . 0 ± 9 0 . 4  ms
With eye and mouth motion 3 6 3 . 0 ± 1 0 3 . 6  ms 3 5 6 . 0 ± 9 4 . 6  ms 3 5 9 . 8 ± 9 8 . 0  ms 3 1 8 . 9 ± 5 4 . 3  ms 3 5 1 . 5 ± 4 8 . 8  ms 3 3 5 . 5 ± 5 0 . 7  ms