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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Autism Res. 2018 Aug 14;11(9):1300–1310. doi: 10.1002/aur.1980

Table 3.

Association between ASD symptom severity and intelligence across groups

Social Affect with Verbal Intelligence

B R2 Wald Test

ADNP −.176, SE=.046, p<.001 .568, SE=.196, p=.004 -
CHD8 −.036, SE=.013, p=.006 .403, SE=.228, p=.077 Χ(1)=8.499, p=.004
Other Mutation .001, SE=.011, p=.899 .000, SE=.005, p=.950 Χ(1)=13.901, p=.002
Idiopathic ASD −.024, SE=.009, p=.005 .164, SE=.106, p=.121 Χ(1)=10.382, p=.001

Social Affect with Nonverbal Intelligence

B R2 Wald Test

ADNP −.147, SE=.056, p=.009 .381, SE=.230, p=.098 -
CHD8 −.049, SE=.013, p<.001 .574, SE=.195, p=.003 Χ(1)=2.878, p=.089
Other Mutation .003, SE=.011, p=.809 .001, SE=.009, p=.904 Χ(1)=6.768, p=.009
Idiopathic ASD −.018, SE=.011, p=.095 .064, SE=.074, p=.389 Χ(1)=5.038, p=.025

Note: Coefficients are unstandardized. Significant Wald test values (bolded) indicate a difference between the regression coefficient for the comparison group versus that of ADNP.