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Translate Childhood Autism Spectrum Test (CAST)


Original Title

Childhood Autism Spectrum Test (CAST)

Translated Title
Background

The Childhood Autism Spectrum Test (CAST) is a screening questionnaire designed to identify early behavioral traits associated with autism spectrum conditions in children. It assesses social interaction, communication patterns, imaginative play, restricted interests, repetitive behaviors, and developmental features commonly associated with autism spectrum traits.

The CAST is widely used in research and screening contexts to identify children who may benefit from further diagnostic evaluation. It is not a diagnostic instrument and should not be used alone to determine clinical autism diagnosis.

The scale focuses on observable behaviors in everyday social, communication, and play situations, typically reported by parents or caregivers.

Procedure

You will be presented with a series of statements describing a child’s behavior. Please answer each item based on typical behavior using Yes or No options. Respond honestly based on your observations.

Participation

This assessment is intended for caregivers, parents, or individuals familiar with the child’s behavior. Participation is voluntary and responses should reflect the child’s usual developmental patterns.

Higher scores may indicate stronger presence of autism spectrum-related traits, including differences in social communication, interaction patterns, imaginative play, and behavioral rigidity.

The results provide a percentage-based overview of autism-related trait presence and should be interpreted as a screening indicator only, not a diagnosis.

Scoring

Changelogs

v1.0 – Initial release of Childhood Autism Spectrum Test module.
v1.1 – Improved social communication dimension mapping.
v1.2 – Enhanced scoring structure and behavioral categorization.
v1.3 – Added clearer caregiver instructions and usability improvements.
v1.4 – Optimized for responsive plugin integration.

Questions

Question 1

Does s/he join in playing games with other children easily?

Question 2

Does s/he come up to you spontaneously for a chat?

Question 3

Was s/he speaking by 2 years old?

Question 4

Does s/he enjoy sports?

Question 5

Is it important to him/her to fit in with the peer group?

Question 6

Does s/he appear to notice unusual details that others miss?

Question 7

Does s/he tend to take things literally?

Question 8

When s/he was 3 years old, did s/he spend a lot of time pretending (e.g., role play)?

Question 9

Does s/he like to do things over and over again, in the same way all the time?

Question 10

Does s/he find it easy to interact with other children?

Question 11

Can s/he keep a two-way conversation going?

Question 12

Can s/he read appropriately for his/her age?

Question 13

Does s/he mostly have the same interests as his/her peers?

Question 14

Does s/he have an interest which takes up so much time that s/he does little else?

Question 15

Does s/he have friends, rather than just acquaintances?

Question 16

Does s/he often bring you things s/he is interested in to show you?

Question 17

Does s/he enjoy joking around?

Question 18

Does s/he have difficulty understanding the rules for polite behavior?

Question 19

Does s/he appear to have an unusual memory for details?

Question 20

Is his/her voice unusual (e.g., flat or monotonous)?

Question 21

Are people important to him/her?

Question 22

Can s/he dress him/herself?

Question 23

Is s/he good at turn-taking in conversation?

Question 24

Does s/he play imaginatively with other children and engage in role-play?

Question 25

Does s/he often do or say things that are tactless or socially inappropriate?

Question 26

Can s/he count to 50 without leaving out numbers?

Question 27

Does s/he make normal eye-contact?

Question 28

Does s/he have any unusual and repetitive movements?

Question 29

Is his/her social behavior very one-sided and always on his/her own terms?

Question 30

Does s/he sometimes say “you” or “s/he” when s/he means “I”?

Question 31

Does s/he prefer imaginative activities rather than numbers or facts?

Question 32

Does s/he sometimes lose the listener because of not explaining what s/he is talking about?

Question 33

Can s/he ride a bicycle (even if with stabilizers)?

Question 34

Does s/he try to impose routines on him/herself or others?

Question 35

Does s/he care how s/he is perceived by the rest of the group?

Question 36

Does s/he often turn conversations to his/her favorite subject?

Question 37

Does s/he have odd or unusual phrases?

Question 38

Have teachers/health visitors ever expressed concerns about development?

Question 39

Has s/he ever been diagnosed with developmental or sensory conditions?

Translator Information

Translator credits may be displayed publicly on the assessment page if the translation is approved.