Social Communication Difficulties
Early indicators of Social Communication Difficulties for paediatricians
Watch for a gap between structural language and its social use — weak joint attention, limited gesture/pointing, poor conversational turn-taking and repair, over-literal interpretation and failure to adjust language to listener. Refer when these persist across settings and aren't explained by hearing loss, global delay or autism's restricted behaviours.
A child with social communication difficulties rarely declares it — they present as the toddler who doesn't share a glance, or the preschooler whose words are present but whose conversation isn't. The paediatrician is often the first to notice the pattern.
In short
Watch for a consistent gap between a child's structural language (words, grammar) and their use of communication for social purposes — sharing attention, reading cues, taking turns, adapting to a listener. Refer when these social-pragmatic differences persist across settings and are not better explained by hearing loss, global developmental delay, or autism's restricted/repetitive features. Persistent parental concern is itself a sensitive early indicator.Early indicators to watch for
Joint attention and social engagement (infancy–toddler)- Reduced back-and-forth gaze, shared smiling or affective reciprocity
- Limited pointing, showing or following a point to share interest by 12–18 months
- Inconsistent response to name; little use of gesture to communicate
Pragmatic language use (toddler–preschool)
- Words and vocabulary may emerge, but are used to request rather than to share or comment
- Difficulty initiating, maintaining or repairing conversation; poor topic management
- Trouble with turn-taking, greetings, and the unwritten rules of dialogue
Social cognition (preschool–early school)
- Over-literal interpretation; difficulty with inference, humour, idiom or implied meaning
- Limited adjustment of language to listener or context (e.g. same register with peer and adult)
- Reduced narrative cohesion when recounting events
Always act on
- Any regression — loss of words, babble or social engagement, at any age
- A marked pragmatic–structural language split persisting across home, clinic and nursery
When to refer
"Wait and see" is inappropriate once these signs persist across settings. A key clinical step is differentiation: arrange a hearing check, and consider whether restricted, repetitive behaviours co-occur — their presence points toward an autism-spectrum evaluation rather than social communication difficulties in isolation. Where pragmatic difficulty exists without restricted/repetitive features and is not explained by global delay, onward referral for multidisciplinary speech-language assessment is warranted. Parent concern alone, even with reassuring milestones, justifies a developmental check.The Pinnacle way
Pinnacle Blooms Network supports your referral pathway with structured developmental profiling and targeted speech therapy. The clinician-administered AbilityScore® offers an objective, multi-domain baseline that complements your clinical impression and tracks change once intervention begins. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — it supports, and never replaces, multidisciplinary clinical judgment, and is not itself a diagnostic test.Trusted sources
Aligned with WHO ICD-11, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on social (pragmatic) communication, the American Academy of Pediatrics, NICE developmental guidance, and NIMHANS clinical resources.Next step — to refer a child or establish a clinical referral partnership with your practice, reach the Pinnacle clinical team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Escalate to same-week referral on any regression (loss of words, babble or social engagement). Where pragmatic difficulty co-occurs with restricted, repetitive behaviours, route toward autism-spectrum evaluation rather than isolated social communication assessment.
Try this at home
High-yield consult check: does the child point to share interest, take conversational turns, and adjust to the listener? Two weak with parental concern is enough to refer.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
How do I distinguish social communication difficulties from autism spectrum disorder?
Both share social-pragmatic communication differences. The key differentiator is restricted, repetitive behaviours, narrow interests and insistence on sameness — their presence points toward an autism-spectrum evaluation, while pragmatic difficulty without these features and not explained by global delay points to a social communication profile. Differentiation is a multidisciplinary clinical decision.
At what age can social communication difficulties be reliably identified?
Early social-engagement markers (joint attention, gesture, response to name) can be observed from the second year, but pragmatic-language profiles become clearer in the preschool and early-school years as conversation and narrative develop. A hearing check and observation across settings should precede formal assessment.
Should I refer if structural language seems normal?
Yes. A child can have age-appropriate vocabulary and grammar yet struggle with the social use of language — turn-taking, topic management, inference and adapting to a listener. This structural–pragmatic split, when persistent across settings, warrants speech-language assessment.