EarliPoint Health receives expanded FDA clearance for autism assessment in children up to age 8.

Read Release →

They Talk So Well With Adults, So Why Not With Other Kids?

On This Page

Parents ask me about this all the time.

Their child can have a long, detailed conversation with an adult about weather systems, trains, sea creatures, or Minecraft strategies. They may sound thoughtful, funny, even incredibly articulate. But then the same child walks into a birthday party, a classroom group activity, or the playground and suddenly seems quiet, awkward, or disconnected.

And parents wonder: “If my child can talk so well with adults, why is it so hard with other kids?” The answer is usually not a lack of interest in people. And it is not that your child “doesn’t want friends.” In many cases, adult conversation simply works better for the way your child’s brain processes the world. Adults are easier to read.

Adults slow conversations down naturally. We stay on one topic longer. We take turns more predictably. We give context without realizing it. We are usually calmer, quieter, and less chaotic than a group of children running around trying to invent the rules of a game in real time. For many autistic children, that predictability matters more than people realize.

A playground can feel socially overwhelming even for children who genuinely want to connect. Imagine trying to follow five conversations at once while also figuring out shifting rules, loud noise, body language, sarcasm, facial expressions, and whose turn it is. That is what peer interaction can feel like for some autistic kids.

So when parents tell me, “My child does so much better with adults,” I do not hear a social failure. I hear important information. I hear a child who communicates best when the environment gives them enough cognitive breathing room to actually participate. And that distinction changes everything because once we understand this, we stop assuming the child lacks social motivation and start asking a different question: “What conditions help this child communicate most successfully?” Often, the answer is structure, predictability, and shared interests.

Many autistic children thrive in conversations built around topics they love. When the subject is familiar and the interaction is predictable, you suddenly see the child’s real personality emerge. The child who seemed withdrawn at recess becomes animated, engaged, funny, and deeply knowledgeable at the dinner table with a trusted adult.

Research increasingly supports what many parents already know intuitively: autistic children often communicate more successfully in environments with fewer unpredictable social demands. Adult interactions tend to provide more built-in structure and less sensory and social chaos than peer group settings do.

Peer play, meanwhile, requires children to constantly shift attention between multiple people, rapidly changing social cues, and unwritten rules that often change minute to minute. Even autistic children who understand social rules may struggle to keep up with the speed of those interactions. That does not mean they are incapable of connection. It means the environment is asking too much all at once.

One of the biggest mistakes we make is assuming that throwing children into more peer interaction automatically improves social comfort. In reality, many autistic children need support building peer relationships in ways that feel manageable and safe for their nervous system. This is where parents can help tremendously. Instead of focusing only on “getting them to socialize,” focus on creating the conditions where socializing becomes easier.

Shared interests are one of the best bridges to peer connection. So are quieter one-on-one interactions. Side-by-side activities often work better than direct face-to-face conversation. Familiar peers are usually easier than large groups. Predictability helps. Knowing what to expect helps. Even small reductions in social uncertainty can make a huge difference. And importantly, adult connection should not be dismissed as somehow “less meaningful.” It is often the foundation that helps children build confidence for future peer relationships.

I also think parents deserve reassurance about something else. A child who gravitates toward adults is not necessarily socially disconnected. In many cases, they are showing you exactly how capable they are of meaningful interaction when the environment fits the way their brain works. When we stop measuring social success only by how children perform in loud, fast-moving peer environments, we start seeing strengths that were there all along.

Cheryl Tierney, MD, MPH

Chief Medical Officer

Developmental pediatrician, public health advocate, and Chief Medical Officer at EarliPoint Health. Cheryl blends scientific curiosity with real-world passion — as a physician, professor, and mom, she’s committed to turning early autism research into better care and support for families.

Cheryl Tierney, MD, MPH

Chief Medical Officer

Cheryl serves as EarliPoint’s Chief Medical Officer, helping advance early autism research into more accessible care and support for families.

See how EarliPoint fits seamlessly into your clinical workflow.

Jamie Pagliaro brings over two decades of leadership in autism and behavioral health to his role as President and CEO of EarliPoint. Most recently, he served as Chief Operating Officer at Rethink, a leading SaaS provider supporting individuals with autism and developmental disabilities. Under his leadership, Rethink’s behavioral health division became the company’s largest business unit, serving thousands of clinicians and driving scalable, tech-enabled care delivery.

Earlier in his career, Jamie was Executive Director of the New York Center for Autism Charter School, the first public charter school in New York State dedicated to children with autism. At EarliPoint, he leads the company’s mission to bring breakthrough science to the front lines of care—empowering providers, families, and health systems with earlier answers and better outcomes.

Jamie Pagliaro

President & Chief Executive Officer

Dr. Ami Klin is a globally recognized leader in autism research and early detection. As Director of the Marcus Autism Center and Division Chief of Autism and Developmental Disabilities at Emory University School of Medicine, he has dedicated his career to understanding how young children engage with the social world—and how subtle disruptions in attention can signal developmental differences. His pioneering work in eye-tracking science led to the development of EarliPoint™ Evaluation, the first FDA-authorized tool to objectively assess autism in children as young as 16 months.
At EarliPoint, Dr. Klin drives clinical strategy and innovation, ensuring that families and clinicians worldwide have access to timely, science-based insights that enable earlier, more personalized intervention. His career reflects a deep commitment to transforming how society supports children with autism—starting with the earliest signs.

Ami Klin, PhD

Chief Clinical Officer & Co‑Founder
https://youtu.be/zKEcAimzEN8