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. 2012 May 30;3:168. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00168

Table 2.

Social questionnaires.

HR (age = 11;9) JB (age = 14;2) Comments
CCC-2
GCC 36 (2nd percentile) 50 (8th percentile) Only HR shows ASD profile for communication
SIDC −2 6
SRS
Total score 75 68 Both moderate deficits
Social Awareness 80 52 HR = severe deficit (≥ 76T)
Social Cognition 79 63 HR = severe (≥ 76T), JB = moderate (≥ 59T)
Social Communication 75 61 Both moderate deficits
Social Motivation 58 73 JB = moderate deficit (≥ 59T)
Autistic Mannerism 67 78 JB = severe deficit (≥ 76T)
Sociability Scores 6–7 Scores 1–3 JB < HR ability to assess others’ emotional states
CBQ
Smiling/Laughter 6.17 2.67 Contrasting profiles
Anger/Frustration 5.83 3-5 Contrasting profiles
Impulsivity 6.00 3-5
Shyness 2.00 6.67
VINELAND-II
ABC 70 (2nd percentile) 73 (4th percentile) Both have similar impairments throughout
Communication 74 71 Both elevated level, but from different composite scores
Daily Living 66 74
Socialization 75 80
Maladaptive Behavior 20 19
SCAS
T-score 58 16 Mean for clinically anxious group = 42.48, mean for non-clinical controls = 25.04
Sub-scales:
Panic/agoraphobia 15 1
Separation anxiety 8 4
Physical injury fear 7 0
Social phobia 11 1
Obsessive/compulsive 9 5
General anxiety 8 5
STAIC
State anxiety 27, T-score = 43 23, T-score = 35 Normative mean T-score = 50. Both are below the mean for state anxiety. HR is above mean on trait (98th percentile)
Trait anxiety 51, T-score = 71 32, T-score = 42

Standard scores are presented for CCC-2, Vineland-II, and STAIC questionnaires, T-scores are presented for SRS and SCAS questionnaires for “Sociability” and “CBQ” questionnaires, ranges of raw scores and mean raw scores are presented, respectively.