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Social Communication Difficulties vs Sensory Processing Differences

Social Communication Difficulties vs Sensory Processing Differences

Social communication difficulties are about relating to people — eye contact, turn-taking, sharing attention and reading cues. Sensory processing differences are about how a child takes in and responds to the world — sounds, textures, lights, movement and touch. One concerns the social glue between people; the other concerns the brain's volume dial on incoming sensation. They look alike and often overlap, which is why an in-person clinical look matters to find the real driver.

Social Communication Difficulties vs Sensory Processing Differences
Social Communication vs Sensory Processing Differences — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Two children can look similar on the outside — one struggles to share words, the other to handle the world's loudness — and knowing the difference changes everything.

In short

Social communication difficulties are about the back-and-forth of connecting with people — making eye contact, taking turns in conversation, reading expressions, sharing attention. Sensory processing differences are about how a child's brain takes in and responds to the world — sounds, textures, lights, movement, touch. One is about relating to people; the other is about managing input from the environment. They can look alike, they often travel together, but they need different kinds of support.

How they differ in everyday life

Social communication difficulties show up in moments of connection. A young child may not point to share something exciting, may not respond to their name, may struggle to start or hold a simple to-and-fro 'chat' (even in gestures or single words), or may find it hard to read when a friend is sad or wants to join in. The challenge is the social glue — the unwritten rhythm of relating to others.

Sensory processing differences show up in how a child reacts to the world around them. A child may cover their ears at the blender, refuse certain food textures or clothing tags, melt down in a busy mall, crave spinning and crashing, or seem not to notice pain or cold. Some children are over-responsive (everything feels too much), some under-responsive (they seek more input), and many are a mix. The challenge is the volume dial on incoming sensation.

Why they get confused: a child overwhelmed by noise might turn away from a calling parent — which can look like a social difficulty but is really a sensory one. And the two genuinely overlap; many children who have social communication differences also process sensation differently. That is exactly why a careful, in-person look matters — so support targets the real driver, not just the surface behaviour.

When to seek a check

At any age, trust your instincts if connecting feels hard, or if everyday sounds, textures or busy places regularly tip your child into distress. A general developmental check can gently tease apart what's social, what's sensory, and what's simply your child's lovely individual temperament — no labels rushed, no fright.

The Pinnacle way

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, never from an app or form. Our team watches how your child connects and how they handle the sensory world, then blends the right support — drawing on speech therapy where back-and-forth communication is the focus, and occupational therapy where sensory processing needs gentle shaping. Learn more about social communication difficulties.

Trusted sources

The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on social communication and pragmatic skills; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on sensory and social-emotional development in young children.

Next step — Unsure whether it's social, sensory or both? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician gently sort it out and match the right support to your child.

What to watch

Watch whether the struggle is about people (not pointing to share, not responding to name, hard to take turns in 'chat', missing a friend's feelings) or about the environment (covering ears at noise, refusing textures or tags, melting down in busy places, craving spinning or crashing). Many children show both — note which moments trigger the difficulty.

Try this at home

Next time your child gets upset, pause and ask: was it a person-moment or a sensation-moment? If the room was loud, bright or crowded, it may be sensory; if a game needed turn-taking or sharing, it may be social. Jotting this down for a week gives a clinician a wonderfully clear picture.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

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

Can a child have both social communication difficulties and sensory processing differences?

Yes, and many do. The two often travel together, which is one reason a careful in-person assessment matters — so support can target each need rather than the surface behaviour alone.

My child covers their ears and won't answer me — is that social or sensory?

It can be either, or both. A child overwhelmed by noise may turn away in a way that looks social but is really sensory. A clinician can observe the moment closely and tell which driver is at play.

At what age should I seek a check?

Trust your instincts at any age. If connecting with your child feels hard, or if everyday sounds, textures or busy places regularly tip them into distress, a general developmental check can gently sort it out without rushing to any label.

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