| Literature DB >> 29020056 |
Chris Ashwin1,2, Sally Wheelwright1,3, Simon Baron-Cohen1,4.
Abstract
People often fail to detect large changes to visual scenes following a brief interruption, an effect known as 'change blindness'. People with autism spectrum conditions (ASC) have superior attention to detail and better discrimination of targets, and often notice small details that are missed by others. Together these predict people with autism should show enhanced perception of changes in simple change detection paradigms, including reduced change blindness. However, change blindness studies to date have reported mixed results in ASC, which have sometimes included no differences to controls or even enhanced change blindness. Attenuated change blindness has only been reported to date in ASC in children and adolescents, with no study reporting reduced change blindness in adults with ASC. The present study used a change blindness flicker task to investigate the detection of changes in images of everyday life in adults with ASC (n = 22) and controls (n = 22) using a simple change detection task design and full range of original scenes as stimuli. Results showed the adults with ASC had reduced change blindness compared to adult controls for changes to items of marginal interest in scenes, with no group difference for changes to items of central interest. There were no group differences in overall response latencies to correctly detect changes nor in the overall number of missed detections in the experiment. However, the ASC group showed greater missed changes for marginal interest changes of location, showing some evidence of greater change blindness as well. These findings show both reduced change blindness to marginal interest changes in ASC, based on response latencies, as well as greater change blindness to changes of location of marginal interest items, based on detection rates. The findings of reduced change blindness are consistent with clinical reports that people with ASC often notice small changes to less salient items within their environment, and are in-line with theories of enhanced local processing and greater attention to detail in ASC. The findings of lower detection rates for one of the marginal interest conditions may be related to problems in shifting attention or an overly focused attention spotlight.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29020056 PMCID: PMC5636097 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Response latencies for central and marginal interest changes.
Mean response latencies and standard errors for both groups to detect changes in central and marginal interest conditions. The ASC group was significantly faster than the control group to detect changes to marginal interest items, with no group differences for changes to central interest items.
Fig 2Response latencies for central and marginal interest changes.
Mean response latencies and standard errors by both groups for each of the three categories of changes. The ASC group was significantly faster than the control group to detect changes of location, with no group differences to detect changes of colour or absence/presence.