The Role of Oculomotor Control and the Cerebellum in Social Communication Across the Paediatric Autism-ADHD Spectra
thesis
posted on 2025-10-25, 08:43authored byElana Jayne Forbes
Autism and ADHD are highly prevalent neurodevelopmental conditions without validated biological markers, creating significant challenges for timely diagnosis and intervention. This thesis examines whether eye movement patterns and cerebellar structure could serve as biological markers for understanding these conditions and their relationship to social communication skills. For the first time, findings reveal that children with co-occurring autism and ADHD have distinct eye movement patterns, with specific measures predicting social communication abilities across clinical groups. Brain imaging shows cerebellar structural differences across conditions. These findings challenge conventional diagnostic approaches, suggesting biological markers may provide more informative insights than categorical classifications alone.
History
Principal supervisor
Mark Andrew Bellgrove
Additional supervisor 1
Beth Johnson
Additional supervisor 2
Rebecca Kerestes
Year of Award
2025
Department, School or Centre
Psychological Sciences
Campus location
Australia
Course
Doctor of Philosophy (Clinical Neuropsychology)
Degree Type
DOCTORATE
Faculty
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences
Rights Statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It must only be used for personal non-commercial research, education and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission. For further terms use the In Copyright link under the License field.