Authors
Felicity Sedgewick, Vivian Hill, Rhiannon Yates, Leanne Pickering, Elizabeth Pellicano
Publication date
2016/4
Journal
Journal of autism and developmental disorders
Volume
46
Pages
1297-1306
Publisher
Springer US
Description
This mixed-methods study examined gender differences in the social motivation and friendship experiences of adolescent boys and girls with autism relative to those without autism, all educated within special education settings. Autistic girls showed similar social motivation and friendship quality to non-autistic girls, while autistic boys reported having both qualitatively different friendships and less motivation for social contact relative to boys without autism and to girls with and without autism. Semi-structured interviews with the adolescents corroborated these findings, with one exception: autistic girls reported high levels of relational aggression within their friendships, suggesting that girls on the autism spectrum in particular may struggle with identifying and dealing with conflict in their social lives.
Total citations
20162017201820192020202120222023202452117404557546830
Scholar articles
F Sedgewick, V Hill, R Yates, L Pickering, E Pellicano - Journal of autism and developmental disorders, 2016