Literature DB >> 22968036

Reduced face identity aftereffects in relatives of children with autism.

Chiara Fiorentini1, Laura Gray2, Gillian Rhodes3, Linda Jeffery3, Elizabeth Pellicano4.   

Abstract

Autism is a pervasive developmental condition with complex aetiology. To aid the discovery of genetic mechanisms, researchers have turned towards identifying potential endophenotypes - subtle neurobiological or neurocognitive traits present in individuals with autism and their "unaffected" relatives. Previous research has shown that relatives of individuals with autism exhibit face processing atypicalities, which are similar in nature albeit of lesser degree, to those found in children and adults with autism. Yet very few studies have examined the underlying mechanisms responsible for such atypicalities. Here, we investigated whether atypicalities in adaptive norm-based coding of faces are present in relatives of children with autism, similar to those previously reported in children with autism. To test this possibility, we administered a face identity aftereffect task in which adaptation to a particular face biases perception towards the opposite identity, so that a previously neutral face (i.e., the average face) takes on the computationally opposite identity. Parents and siblings of individuals with autism showed smaller aftereffects compared to parents and siblings of typically developing children, especially so when the adapting stimuli were located further away from the average face. In addition, both groups showed stronger aftereffects for adaptors far from the average than for adaptors closer to the average. These results suggest that, in relatives of children with autism, face-coding mechanism are similar (i.e., norm-based) but less efficient than in relatives of typical children. This finding points towards the possibility that diminished adaptive mechanisms might represent a neurocognitive endophenotype for autism.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22968036     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.08.019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  18 in total

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5.  Atypicalities in perceptual adaptation in autism do not extend to perceptual causality.

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7.  Reduced face aftereffects in autism are not due to poor attention.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-29       Impact factor: 3.240

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9.  Repetition Suppression in Ventral Visual Cortex Is Diminished as a Function of Increasing Autistic Traits.

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10.  Recognizing the same face in different contexts: Testing within-person face recognition in typical development and in autism.

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