| Literature DB >> 30778820 |
David López Pérez1, Daniel P Kennedy2, Przemysław Tomalski3, Sven Bölte4,5, Brian D'Onofrio2, Terje Falck-Ytter6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is commonly conceived as the extreme end of a continuum. Research suggests that autistic individuals outperform typically developing controls in visual search. Thus, enhanced visual search may represent an adaptive trait associated with ASD. Here, using a large general population sample (N = 608, aged 9-14 years), we tested if higher levels of autistic traits are associated with enhanced visual search. Visual search was evaluated using both manual responses and eye movements, and autistic traits were measured using the Social Responsiveness Scale. Contrary to our hypothesis, no significant relation between autistic traits and visual search were observed. The theoretical implications of these results are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Eye movements; Eye tracking; Reaction times; Visual search task
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30778820 PMCID: PMC6546657 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-019-03907-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Fig. 1Linear regressions between the average RTs (across all conditions) and age (a), the average IQ scale (four subscales from the WISC-IV) (b), the SRS scale (c). d Shows the relation between visual search efficiency (slope of the set size by reaction time function) for all conditions and the SRS scale
Correlations between the reaction times visual search efficiency (intercept and slope of the set size by reaction time function) and SRS scales, and between reaction times and SRS scales
| All conditions | Present | Absent | Conjunction | Feature | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT slope | r(579) = 0.02 | r(577) = − 0.02 | r(573) = − 0.02 | r(576) = − 0.02 | r(575) = − 0.02 |
| RT intercept | r(579) = 0.01 | r(577) = 0.01 | r(573) = 0.03 | r(576) = 0.02 | r(575) = 0.01 |
| RTs | r(587) = 0.03 | r(584) = 0.01 | r(584) = 0.03 | r(583) = 0.01 | r(584) = 0.04 |
| p = .43 | p = .72 | p = .40 | p = .68 | p = .27 |
The n varies slightly between analyses due to the availability of the different measures and the removal of outliers
Fig. 2Linear regressions between SRS scores (in red SRS scores ≥ 55 and in black SRS scores < 55) and RTs for the grand average (a), the conjunction 28 absent (b) and conjunction 28 present (c) conditions, and the between the visual search slope for the all conditions average (d)
Correlations between RTs and SRS scales and between SRS and visual search efficiency (intercept and slope of the set size by reaction time function) for participants with SRS ≥ 55 and for participants with SRS < 55
| Conditions average | Conjunction 28 absent | Conjunction 28 present | All conditions intercept | All conditions slope | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRS ≥ 55 | r(30) = − 0.12 | r(29) = − 0.22 | r(30) = − 0.08 | r(30) = 0.00 | r(30) = − 0.20 |
| SRS < 55 | r(557) = 0.03 | r(554) = 0.04 | r(555) = − 0.01 | r(552) = − 0.01 | r(552) = 0.02 |
The n varies slightly between analyses due to the availability of the different measures