| Literature DB >> 29869764 |
Hanna B Cygan1,2, Artur Marchewka3, Ilona Kotlewska4,5,6, Anna Nowicka4.
Abstract
Previous studies indicate that autobiographical memory is impaired in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Successful recollection of information referring to one's own person requires the intact ability to re-activate representation of the past self. In the current fMRI study we investigated process of conscious reflection on the present self, the past self, and a close-other in the ASD and typically developing groups. Significant inter-group differences were found in the Past-Self condition. In individuals with ASD, reflection on the past self was associated with additional engagement of the posterior cingulate and posterior temporal structures. We hypothesize that this enhanced activation of widely distributed neural network reflects substantial difficulties in processes of reflection on one's own person in the past.Entities:
Keywords: Autobiographical memory; Self-continuity; Self-referential processing; fMRI
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 29869764 PMCID: PMC6394790 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-018-3621-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Characteristics of the ASD and TD groups
| ASD | TD | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subject | Age | IQ | ADOS | Subject | Age | IQ | |||||
| Full | Verb | Non-verb | Communic | Social Int | Full | Verb | Non-verb | ||||
| A1 | 22:4 | 106 | 109 | 103 | 3 | 6 | C1 | 22:1 | 116 | 130 | 97 |
| A2 | 21:6 | 106 | 116 | 93 | 3 | 8 | C2 | 22:3 | 119 | 124 | 110 |
| A3 | 22:9 | 97 | 108 | 83 | 6 | 6 | C3 | 22:2 | 105 | 108 | 103 |
| A4 | 21:11 | 117 | 125 | 107 | 3 | 7 | C4 | 21:11 | 128 | 130 | 123 |
| A5 | 21:7 | 102 | 96 | 109 | 5 | 8 | C5 | 21:7 | 89 | 86 | 93 |
| A6 | 25:5 | 108 | 97 | 121 | 4 | 2 | C6 | 25:9 | 121 | 116 | 126 |
| A7 | 27:2 | 111 | 124 | 93 | 2 | 5 | C7 | 26:10 | 118 | 111 | 126 |
| A8 | 26:3 | 86 | 100 | 69 | 3 | 3 | C8 | 26 | 97 | 99 | 93 |
| A9 | 22:2 | 93 | 96 | 90 | 5 | 8 | C9 | 22:9 | 101 | 99 | 104 |
| A10 | 27:4 | 128 | 143 | 107 | 3 | 7 | C10 | 26:7 | 132 | 139 | 122 |
| A11 | 24:1 | 116 | 114 | 118 | 3 | 3 | C11 | 24:7 | 127 | 126 | 119 |
| A12 | 28:1 | 108 | 112 | 101 | 8 | 4 | C12 | 28:4 | 110 | 107 | 114 |
| A13 | 27:3 | 115 | 116 | 109 | 3 | 5 | C13 | 27:8 | 123 | 123 | 117 |
| A14 | 24:2 | 105 | 110 | 97 | 5 | 8 | C14 | 24:10 | 115 | 131 | 122 |
| A15 | 21:3 | 95 | 100 | 90 | 3 | 9 | C15 | 21:8 | 110 | 123 | 97 |
Age (years:months), IQ scores for both groups (full—full scale, verb—verbal scale, non-verb—non-verbal performance scale), and ADOS scores for individuals with ASD (communic—communication, social int—social interaction)
The independent-samples t-test indicated that age difference was non-significant (P = 0.897). In the case of IQ, between-group difference reached the level of statistical significance (P = 0.043). It turned out that this effect was driven by IQ differences in non-verbal IQ (P = 0.019) and not the verbal one (P = 0.268). The paired-sample t-test also indicated no significant group differences in age (P = 0.350). In the case of IQ levels, between-group difference was significant in reference to the full scale (P = 0.001) and the non-verbal scale (P = 0.003). The between-group difference in verbal IQ scale did not reach the level of statistical significance, however, a weak trend was found (P = 0.076). In the light of verbal demands of our behavioral task, a lack of differences between the ASD and control group in verbal IQ may support our opinion that between-group differences in fMRI findings were not related to differences in verbal IQ
Behavioral results: mean raw numbers, mean relative percentages and their standard deviations (in brackets) of positive and negative adjectives assigned by ASD and TD groups to each experimental condition: present-self, past-self, close-other
| Condition | Positive adjectives assignments | Negative adjectives assignments | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASD | TD | ASD | TD | |
| Present-self | 23.5 (7.1) | 23.6 (5.3) | 12.0 (5.8) | 10.1 (3.8) |
| Past-self | 18.6 (5.2) | 22.0 (4.5) | 14.6 (8.8) | 12.7 (6.6) |
| Close-other | 24.4 (5.7) | 23.3 (3.3) | 7.9 (6.3) | 9.6 (5.0) |
fMRI results: significant activations with peak Talairach coordinates and P-values
| Structure | Group/condition | Peak coordinates | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MCG/precuneus | ASD + TD/all conditions | 12, − 39, 42 | 0.0001 |
| Right MFG | 29, 28, 49 | 0.0001 | |
| ACG | 5, 42, 0 | 0.0001 | |
| Left insula | − 38, − 18, − 4 | 0.0001 | |
| Right insula | 36, − 4, − 14 | 0.002 | |
| Right IFG | 40, 39, 14 | 0.01 | |
| Right STG | ASD > TD/all conditions | 50, − 21, 14 | 0.029 |
| Right STG | ASD > TD/‘past-self’ | 54, − 21, 0 | 0.0001 |
| Right TPJ | 54, − 49, 7 | 0.047 | |
| PCG/left cuneus | − 13, − 70, 7 | 0.0001 | |
| Left MTG/STG | − 59, − 14, − 4 | 0.0001 | |
| Left posterior STG/TPJ | − 59, − 46, 11 | 0.007 | |
| Right insula | 33, − 21, 14 | 0.0001 |
ASD Autism Spectrum Disorder group, TD typically developing group, MCG middle cingulate gyrus, MFG middle frontal gyrus, ACG anterior cingulate gyrus, IFG inferior frontal gyrus, STG superior temporal gyrus, TPJ temporoparietal junction, PCG posterior cingulate gyrus, MTG middle temporal gyrus
Fig. 1Results of fMRI analysis. a Results of contrast analysis for all participants (ASD + TD) and all conditions (‘self’ + ‘past-self’ + ‘close-other’) together. The graph placed below brain images present mean values and standard deviations of group-level contrast estimates for each of the clusters of significant activity. b Results of between group comparison (ASD > TD) for ‘past-self’ condition. In both panels regions of significant contrasts (FWE-corrected at the cluster level, P < 0.001; cluster size > 30 voxels) are plotted (red color) on the template of grey matter tissue probability map (TMP.nii, SPM12). The upper graph placed below brain images presents mean values and standard deviations of group-level contrast estimates for each of the clusters of significant activity. Lower graph presents mean values of percent signal change for each of the clusters of significant difference in activity between ASD and TD group. r right, l left, p posterior, MCG middle cingulate gyrus, Precun. precuneus, MFG middle frontal gyrus, ACG anterior cingulate gyrus, IFG inferior frontal gyrus, STG superior temporal gyrus, TPJ temporoparietal junction, PCG posterior cingulate gyrus, MTG middle temporal gyrus. (Color figure online)