Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.

Mental health issues are markedly increased in individuals with autism, making it the number one research priority by stakeholders. There is a crucial need to use personalized approaches to understand the underpinnings of mental illness in autism and consequently, to address individual needs. Based...

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Main Authors: Clara C Gernert, Christine M Falter-Wagner, Valdas Noreika, Barbara Jachs, Nazia Jassim, Kathryn Gibbs, Joaquim Streicher, Hannah Betts, Tristan A Bekinschtein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0303209&type=printable
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author Clara C Gernert
Christine M Falter-Wagner
Valdas Noreika
Barbara Jachs
Nazia Jassim
Kathryn Gibbs
Joaquim Streicher
Hannah Betts
Tristan A Bekinschtein
author_facet Clara C Gernert
Christine M Falter-Wagner
Valdas Noreika
Barbara Jachs
Nazia Jassim
Kathryn Gibbs
Joaquim Streicher
Hannah Betts
Tristan A Bekinschtein
author_sort Clara C Gernert
collection DOAJ
description Mental health issues are markedly increased in individuals with autism, making it the number one research priority by stakeholders. There is a crucial need to use personalized approaches to understand the underpinnings of mental illness in autism and consequently, to address individual needs. Based on the risk factors identified in typical mental research, we propose the following themes central to mental health issues in autism: sleep difficulties and stress. Indeed, the prevalence of manifold circadian disruptions and sleep difficulties in autism, alongside stress related to sensory overload, forms an integral part of autistic symptomatology. This proof-of-concept study protocol outlines an innovative, individualised approach towards investigating the interrelationships between stress indices, sleep and circadian activation patterns, and sensory sensitivity in autism. Embracing an individualized methodology, we aim to collect 14 days of data per participant from 20 individuals with autism diagnoses and 20 without. Participants' sleep will be monitored using wearable EEG headbands and a sleep diary. Diurnal tracking of heart rate and electrodermal activity through wearables will serve as proxies of stress. Those objective data will be synchronized with subjective experience traces collected throughout the day using the Temporal Experience Tracing (TET) method. TET facilitates the quantification of relevant aspects of individual experience states, such as stress or sensory sensitivities, by providing a continuous multidimensional description of subjective experiences. Capturing the dynamics of subjective experiences phase-locked to neural and physiological proxies both between and within individuals, this approach has the potential to contribute to our understanding of critical issues in autism, including sleep problems, sensory reactivity and stress. The planned strives to provide a pathway towards developing a more nuanced and individualized approach to addressing mental health in autism.
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spelling doaj-art-5b48ae0d92704c078729119a53a976572025-01-08T05:33:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-01195e030320910.1371/journal.pone.0303209Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.Clara C GernertChristine M Falter-WagnerValdas NoreikaBarbara JachsNazia JassimKathryn GibbsJoaquim StreicherHannah BettsTristan A BekinschteinMental health issues are markedly increased in individuals with autism, making it the number one research priority by stakeholders. There is a crucial need to use personalized approaches to understand the underpinnings of mental illness in autism and consequently, to address individual needs. Based on the risk factors identified in typical mental research, we propose the following themes central to mental health issues in autism: sleep difficulties and stress. Indeed, the prevalence of manifold circadian disruptions and sleep difficulties in autism, alongside stress related to sensory overload, forms an integral part of autistic symptomatology. This proof-of-concept study protocol outlines an innovative, individualised approach towards investigating the interrelationships between stress indices, sleep and circadian activation patterns, and sensory sensitivity in autism. Embracing an individualized methodology, we aim to collect 14 days of data per participant from 20 individuals with autism diagnoses and 20 without. Participants' sleep will be monitored using wearable EEG headbands and a sleep diary. Diurnal tracking of heart rate and electrodermal activity through wearables will serve as proxies of stress. Those objective data will be synchronized with subjective experience traces collected throughout the day using the Temporal Experience Tracing (TET) method. TET facilitates the quantification of relevant aspects of individual experience states, such as stress or sensory sensitivities, by providing a continuous multidimensional description of subjective experiences. Capturing the dynamics of subjective experiences phase-locked to neural and physiological proxies both between and within individuals, this approach has the potential to contribute to our understanding of critical issues in autism, including sleep problems, sensory reactivity and stress. The planned strives to provide a pathway towards developing a more nuanced and individualized approach to addressing mental health in autism.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0303209&type=printable
spellingShingle Clara C Gernert
Christine M Falter-Wagner
Valdas Noreika
Barbara Jachs
Nazia Jassim
Kathryn Gibbs
Joaquim Streicher
Hannah Betts
Tristan A Bekinschtein
Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
PLoS ONE
title Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
title_full Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
title_fullStr Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
title_full_unstemmed Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
title_short Stress in autism (STREAM): A study protocol on the role of circadian activity, sleep quality and sensory reactivity.
title_sort stress in autism stream a study protocol on the role of circadian activity sleep quality and sensory reactivity
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0303209&type=printable
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