Picture this: your child walks into a birthday party, hears the music, feels the crowd, smells the cake, and completely falls apart. Or maybe they’re the child who seeks every sensation: spinning endlessly, crashing into furniture, mouthing everything in sight. You’re not imagining things.
You’re not doing anything wrong. And your child is not being dramatic.
What you may be seeing is a nervous system that is working incredibly hard to make sense of a world that feels too much, or not enough. That’s Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) in action, and it is far more common than most parents realize.
This blog breaks down what sensory integration actually means, how SPD shows up in children (especially those on the autism spectrum), and how sensory therapy, combined with the right support, can make everyday life dramatically more manageable.
And yes, we’ll tell you exactly how Early Autism Ventures fits into this picture. Buckle up.
What Is Sensory Integration, And Why Does it Matter?
Sensory integration is the brain’s ability to receive, organize, and respond to information coming in through the senses. Not just the five senses you learned in school, but eight. Yes, eight. In addition to sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch, the brain also processes:
- Proprioception: the sense of where your body is in space (how hard to push, how high to jump)
- Vestibular: the sense of balance and movement, seated in the inner ear
- Interoception: the sense of internal body signals (hunger, thirst, pain, temperature, or needing the toilet)
When the brain processes all of these inputs smoothly, a child can pay attention in class, navigate a playground, tolerate a noisy lunch hall, and transition between activities without a meltdown. When it doesn’t, that’s where things get complicated.
The framework of sensory integration was pioneered by Dr. A. Jean Ayres, an occupational therapist and neuroscientist, in the 1970s. Her groundbreaking work, published in Sensory Integration and Learning Disorders (1972), laid the foundation for how we understand and treat sensory processing difficulties today.
So, What Exactly Is Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD)?
Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) is a neurological condition in which the brain struggles to receive and respond to sensory information in a typical way. A child with SPD might be hypersensitive (over-responsive), hyposensitive (under-responsive), or a confusing combination of both, sometimes even within the same sensory system.
Think of it this way: for most people, background noise is just that, background. For a child with auditory hypersensitivity, a classroom fan might sound like a jet engine. For a child with tactile hyposensitivity, they may not feel pain the way others do and may seek intense physical input just to feel regulated.
SPD affects an estimated 1 in 6 children significantly enough to impact their daily lives – Psychology Today / UCSF Research
And for children on the autism spectrum? The numbers are staggering. Research consistently shows that between 90% and 95% of autistic children experience some form of sensory processing differences, making it one of the most universal yet underaddressed features of autism spectrum disorder.
The Three Faces of SPD
SPD doesn’t look the same in every child. It typically shows up in one of three ways:
- Sensory modulation disorder shows up when a child’s brain struggles to regulate the intensity of sensory input, so they might feel completely overwhelmed by sounds, textures, or lights that other children barely notice, or they might seem to crave more input than usual, constantly touching things, crashing into furniture, or seeking out loud noises. You will often see this child swing between covering their ears at a birthday party and spinning in circles until they get dizzy, because their nervous system is either over-responding or under-responding to the world around them.
- Sensory based postural disorder affects how a child controls their body and movements in response to sensory information, making everyday physical tasks like sitting upright, catching a ball, or climbing stairs feel unexpectedly difficult. Parents often describe their child as clumsy or low on energy, slouching at the dinner table or tiring quickly during play, when in reality their muscles and joints are not receiving and using sensory feedback the way they should.
- Sensory discrimination disorder is about accuracy rather than intensity, meaning the child can feel a sensation but has trouble figuring out exactly what it is or where it is coming from. A child with this type might struggle to tell the difference between a gentle tap and a firm one, have trouble locating which part of their body was touched, or find it hard to judge how much pressure to use when writing or buttoning a shirt, simply because their brain is not sorting sensory details with enough precision.
A 2024 study published in NeuroSci confirmed that children with neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism, ADHD, and developmental delays, showed significantly higher sensory processing difficulties compared to typically developing children across all sensory domains.
The Autism–SPD Connection: Why They So Often Go Hand in Hand
Sensory differences are now formally recognized in the DSM-5’s diagnostic criteria for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), listed under restricted and repetitive behaviors. This means that sensory hypersensitivity or hyposensitivity is not just a side note in autism; it’s a core diagnostic feature.
Research from Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience found that children with SPD show white matter pathway differences in sensory processing regions of the brain, meaning the neurological basis of SPD is real, measurable, and distinct from typical development. This is not a behavior problem. This is a brain wiring difference that deserves the same seriousness as any other diagnosis.
What does this look like at home?
It might be the child who has a full meltdown every morning over wearing socks. The child who can’t focus in class because the fluorescent lights are genuinely overwhelming. The child who refuses to eat anything beyond three specific foods, not out of stubbornness, but because the texture of everything else is unbearable.
When you understand sensory processing, the behavior stops looking like defiance and starts looking like what it actually is: communication. Your child is telling you something. The question is: how do we listen and respond effectively?
Over 90% of children with autism experience sensory processing differences across multiple sensory domains, including auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular systems.
What Is Sensory Therapy, And How Does It Actually Help?
Sensory therapy, also known as Sensory Integration Therapy (SIT) or Ayres Sensory Integration® (ASI), is a specialized intervention typically delivered by trained Occupational Therapists (OTs). It uses structured, play-based activities to challenge the nervous system in just the right way, enough to promote growth, not so much as to overwhelm.
In a sensory therapy session, you might see a child swinging on a platform swing, crawling through tunnels, jumping into a ball pit, or pressing their palms into textured surfaces. It doesn’t look like ‘therapy’ in the traditional sense, and that’s entirely the point. The nervous system learns best when it’s engaged, safe, and not dreading what comes next.
A systematic review published in MDPI Children (2024) found that sensory integration intervention in children with ASD meets the criteria to be considered an evidence-based practice, with improvements in motor, visual-motor, and occupational performance skills. The intervention group also showed significant improvements in all domains assessed by the Short Child Occupational Profile.
What Sensory Therapy Targets
- Tactile processing: Tolerance for touch, textures, clothing, and grooming routines
- Vestibular regulation: Balance, coordination, and ability to handle movement without distress
- Proprioceptive input: Body awareness, motor planning, and self-regulation
- Auditory processing: Filtering background noise, following verbal instructions, and tolerating loud environments
- Visual processing: Managing busy visual environments, tracking, and spatial awareness
- Emotional regulation: Reducing meltdowns, increasing frustration tolerance, and improving transitions
And crucially, sensory therapy doesn’t stop at the clinic. At Early Autism Ventures (EAV), our occupational therapists build what’s called a sensory diet, a personalized plan of sensory activities your child can use throughout the day at home, school, and in the community. Think of it as nutrition, but for the nervous system.
Curious what a sensory diet looks like for your child? Book a free consultation with EAV today.
Where ABA Therapy and Sensory Integration Meet
Here’s something many parents don’t realise: sensory therapy and ABA therapy are not competing approaches. They are profoundly complementary, and when delivered together, their impact multiplies.
ABA therapy (Applied Behavior Analysis), overseen by a BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst), uses the science of behavior to teach new skills and reduce challenging behaviors. A core principle is positive reinforcement, reinforcing desired behaviors so they occur more often.
When sensory needs are unmet, challenging behaviors increase. When sensory therapy helps a child become more regulated, ABA therapy becomes far more effective.
Consider a child who bites their hand during demanding tasks. This might look like a behavior problem, but a sensory lens reveals it as proprioceptive seeking: the child’s nervous system needs deep pressure input to self-regulate.
Address the sensory need through OT, and the biting decreases. Then, ABA therapy uses positive reinforcement to build replacement behaviors, teaching the child to ask for a chew toy, a squeeze break, or a sensory activity instead.
The combined approach also supports ABA therapy progress more broadly. When a child is dysregulated due to sensory overload, learning is simply not happening. A settled nervous system is a learning nervous system. That’s why at EAV, our BCBAs, QBAs, and OTs work as a coordinated team, sharing data, aligning goals, and ensuring ABA progress monitoring reflects the whole child, not just isolated behaviors.
Research from the NIH confirms that intensive, early ABA therapy benefits include meaningful improvements in adaptive behavior, communication, and daily living skills, all areas that are directly supported by sensory regulation.
Want to learn how EAV integrates ABA and OT for your child? Speak to our team, it’s free!
Signs of Sensory Processing Difficulties Parents Often Miss
Not all sensory processing challenges announce themselves loudly. Some are subtle and easy to chalk up to personality, stubbornness, or ‘just a phase.’ Here are signs worth paying attention to:
- Extreme distress at haircuts, nail trimming, or face washing
- Gagging at food textures that other children eat without issue
- Difficulty in tolerating seams, labels, or tight clothing
- Covering ears at sounds most people don’t even notice
- Appearing unaware of pain, cold, or heat
- Constantly seeking intense movement: spinning, crashing, jumping off furniture
- Difficulty settling down after activity, wired but exhausted
- Seeming ‘clumsy’ or poorly coordinated, bumping into walls, dropping things
- Meltdowns specifically around transitions, crowds, or unpredictable sensory environments
If several of these feel familiar, it may be worth discussing a sensory assessment with a trained occupational therapist. Early identification means earlier support, and research shows that children who receive sensory integration-based OT in childhood show better sensory regulation as adults.
How Early Autism Ventures Supports Sensory Integration
At Early Autism Ventures (EAV), our multidisciplinary team includes occupational therapists trained in Ayres Sensory Integration®, speech-language pathologists, QBAs, and BCBAs who collaborate closely to ensure each child’s sensory profile informs their entire therapy plan. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
- Comprehensive sensory assessments: We start by understanding your child’s unique sensory profile: what overwhelms them, what regulates them, and what they seek. No guesswork.
- Individualized sensory diets: We design a daily sensory plan your child can follow at home, in school, and in the community, practical, parent-friendly, and based on your child’s real life.
- Integrated ABA and OT sessions: Our BCBAs and OTs coordinate goals. ABA therapy progress monitoring includes sensory milestones, so nothing gets missed.
- Parent training: We teach you how to identify your child’s sensory triggers, how to set up a sensory-supportive home environment, and how to respond to meltdowns with the right input, not just distraction.
We’ve watched children who refused to enter a classroom walk into school confidently. We’ve seen children who screamed at haircuts sit through one calmly. None of this happens by accident. It happens through careful, evidence-based, joyful therapy, and through parents who showed up every day.
The Bottom Line: Your Child’s Sensory World Deserves to Be Understood
Sensory Processing Disorder is not a parenting failure. It is not a character flaw. It is a neurological difference, and like all neurological differences, it responds to the right support.
Understanding sensory integration means understanding your child more deeply. It means knowing why they melt down at the mall, why certain foods are genuinely intolerable, why spinning isn’t misbehavior, it’s self-regulation. That understanding changes everything: how you respond, how you support, and how your child grows.
With the right team, occupational therapists, BCBAs, and speech-language pathologists working together, sensory challenges become manageable. Play becomes therapeutic. Daily routines become smoother. And your child becomes more confident navigating a world that once felt overwhelming.
That’s not a dream. That’s what good, integrated early intervention does. And it’s available right here.
Every child’s nervous system tells a story. Let our team at EAV help you read it and write a better chapter together. Book your free consultation today, because the earlier you understand, the more you can do.