Research Article

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

Table 3

Data on participants’ reaction times: mean reaction times, proportions of trials with errors, and 𝑡 -tests for differences in mean reaction times between groups.

ConditionMean reaction timeErrors
Valid cuesInvalid cues% error trialsAutism group versus control group

With eye motion 3 4 3 . 3 ± 5 6 . 0  ms SD 3 7 6 . 5 ± 6 1 . 8  ms SD0.3% 𝑡 ( 1 5 ) = . 4 9 7 , 𝑃 = . 6 3
Without eye motion 3 7 2 . 9 ± 1 3 0 . 6  ms 4 0 1 . 3 ± 1 2 5 . 3 m s 0.2% 𝑡 ( 1 5 ) = 1 . 4 2 0 , 𝑃 = . 1 8
With eye and mouth motion 3 4 5 . 2 ± 8 2 . 3  ms SD 3 6 0 . 0 ± 7 5 . 0  ms SD0.3% 𝑡 ( 1 5 ) = . 7 1 6 , 𝑃 = . 4 9