| Literature DB >> 24077740 |
B L Gregory1, K C Plaisted-Grant2.
Abstract
A high Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ) score (Baron-Cohen et al. in J Autism Dev Disord 31(1):5-17, 2001) is increasingly used as a proxy in empirical studies of perceptual mechanisms in autism. Several investigations have assessed perception in non-autistic people measured for AQ, claiming the same relationship exists between performance on perceptual tasks in high-AQ individuals as observed in autism. We question whether the similarity in performance by high-AQ individuals and autistics reflects the same underlying perceptual cause in the context of two visual search tasks administered to a large sample of typical individuals assessed for AQ. Our results indicate otherwise and that deploying the AQ as a proxy for autism introduces unsubstantiated assumptions about high-AQ individuals, the endophenotypes they express, and their relationship to Autistic Spectrum Conditions (ASC) individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Autistic endophenotype; Discrimination; High-AQ; Visual search
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 24077740 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-013-1951-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257