| Literature DB >> 31275179 |
Renee Dijkhuis1,2, Emine Gurbuz1, Tim Ziermans1, Wouter Staal1,3,4, Hanna Swaab1,2.
Abstract
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are generally characterized by marked impairments in processing of social emotional information, but less is known about emotion processing in adults with the disorder. This study aimed to address this by collecting data on social attention (eye tracking), emotional arousal (skin conductance level, SCL), and emotional awareness (self-report) in a paradigm with social emotional video clips. Fifty-two young, intelligent adults with ASD (IQrange = 88-130, Agerange = 18-24) and 31 typically developing (TD) ASD (IQrange = 94-139, Agerange = 19-28) gender matched controls participated and reported on severity of autism symptoms [Social Responsiveness Scale for Adults (SRS-A)]. Results showed no group difference in social attention, while autism symptom severity was related to decreased attention to faces across participants (r = -.32). Average SCL was lower in the ASD group, but no group difference in arousal reactivity (change from baseline to emotional phases) was detected. Lower SCL during video clips was related to autism symptom severity across participants (r = -.29). ASD individuals reported lower emotional awareness. We conclude that, even though no deviations in social attention or emotional reactivity were found in ASD, an overall lower level of social attention and arousal may help explain difficulties in social functioning in ASD.Entities:
Keywords: adulthood; autism spectrum disorder; emotional arousal; skin conductance level; social attention; symptom severity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31275179 PMCID: PMC6593106 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Description of social emotional video clips.
| Description | Emotion | |
|---|---|---|
| Video clip 1 | A young woman surrounded by family is in suspense at the airport to reunite with her boyfriend. When they see each other, they are overcome with joy and hug intensely. | Happy/surprise |
| Video clip 2 | A man and a woman surrounded by an angry crowd are in a heated discussion at a public demonstration. | Anger/irritation |
| Video clip 3 | A close-up of a heartbroken former athlete on a podium who publicly announces the death of an American football legend in a stadium | Sad/sorrow |
| Video clip 4 | A close-up of the face of a woman on a dental chair who is undergoing a nipple-piercing procedure in a body art shop | Pain/fear |
Figure 1The social emotional paradigm; followed up by video clips #2, #3, and #4 with accompanying questionnaire and rest.
Group characteristics.
| ASD (n = 51) | TD (n = 27) | |
|---|---|---|
| Male (% in group) | 72.5 | 74.1 |
| Age, in years, | 22.46 (2.51) | 20.65 (1.57) |
| WAIS-IV Total IQ, | 118.24 (10.75) | 107.78 (11.69) |
| SRS Total Score*, | 62.78 (10.11) | 50.04 (11.24) |
WAIS-IV, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale–Fourth Edition; IQ, intelligence quotient.
*SRS-A t-score; missing data in the ASD group (n = 2) and the control group (n = 1).
Figure 2Mean fixation duration in the ASD (n = 49) and TD (n = 26) group at the four areas of interest (AOIs) in percentages. Error bars represent standard deviation of the mean.
Figure 3Scatterplot for correlation between autism severity (SRS-A Total) and percentage fixation at faces for all participants (N = 72).
Figure 5Scatterplot for correlation between autism severity (SRS-A Total) and skin conductance level (SCL; mean) during stimuli for all participants (N = 61).
Figure 4Arousal during baseline and task in the ASD (n = 38) and the TD (n = 25) group—indicated by skin conductance level (SCL; mean). Error bars represent standard deviation of the mean; *p < .05.
Figure 6Emotional awareness reported for each video clip in the ASD (n = 51) and TD (n = 27) group. Error bars represent standard deviation of the mean.