| Literature DB >> 31489542 |
Ruth Van der Hallen1,2,3, Catherine Manning4, Kris Evers5,6,7, Johan Wagemans5,6.
Abstract
Visual perception in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is often debated in terms of enhanced local and impaired global perception. Deficits in global motion perception seem to support this characterization, although the evidence is inconsistent. We conducted a large meta-analysis on global motion, combining 48 articles on biological and coherent motion. Results provide evidence for a small global motion processing deficit in individuals with ASD compared to controls in both biological and coherent motion. This deficit appears to be present independent of the paradigm, task, dependent variable, age or IQ of the groups. Results indicate that individuals with ASD are less sensitive to these types of global motion, although the difference in neural mechanisms underlying this behavioral difference remains unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD); Biological motion; Coherent motion; Meta-analysis; Motion perception
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31489542 PMCID: PMC6841654 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-019-04194-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Fig. 1Selection process. This flowchart displays the entire in- and exclusion process of gathering articles to be included in the meta-analysis
A summary of studies on coherent motion in ASD included in the meta-analysis
| Study | ASD | TD | Task type | Stimulus duration | Number of dots | Speed (deg/s) | Diameter (deg) | Lifetime (ms) | Dot density (dots/deg2) | Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | N | Age | N | ||||||||||
| 1 | Annaz et al. ( | 5–12 years | 23 | 4–12 years | 34 | CM detection | NS | NS | 3.21 | NS | NS | NS | ASD < TD |
| 2 | Atkinson ( | 18–58 years | 13 | 17–54 years | 16 | CM discrimination | 200 | 750 | 2.0a | ~1 mm | NS | 5.9a | ASD < TD |
| 3 | Brieber et al. ( | CM discrimination | 1000 | 300 | 2.5 | ||||||||
| 4 | Chen et al. ( | 13–18 years | 19 | 13–18 years | 17 | CM discrimination | 300 | 200 | 5.25 | 0.03 | Unlimited | 5.19a | ASD = TD |
| 5 | David et al. ( | 24–45 years | 15 | 24–45 years | 14 | CM discrimination | 750 | N/A | 2.4–3.0 | 0.36 | N/A | N/A | ASD = TD |
| 6 | Davis et al. ( | 10–18 years | 9 | 7–15 years | 9 | CM discrimination | 220, 1000 | 100 | 6.36 | 0.1 | NS | 2.52a | ASD = TD (200 ms) ASD < TD (1000 ms) |
| 7 | de Jonge et al. ( | 7–33 years | 29 | 7–33 years | 32 | CM detection | NS | NS | NS | 1 pixel | NS | NS | ASD = TD |
| 8 | Del Viva et al. ( | 6–14 years | 10 | 6–7 years 8–12 years | 12 14 | CM discrimination | 160 | 100 | 10 | 0.1 | 66 | 0.44a | ASD = TD |
| 9 | Foss–Feig et al. ( | 8–17 years | 15 | 8–17 years | 17 | CM discrimination | NS | N/A | 4 | 1, 2.5, 6 | NS | NS | ASD = TD (HC) ASD > TD (LC) |
| 10 | Greimel et al. ( | 9–16 years | 17 | 8–15 years | 17 | CM discrimination | 420 | 300 | 5 | 0.038 | NS | 3.12 | ASD = TD |
| 11 | Jones et al. ( | 14–16 years | 89 | 14–16 years | 52 | CM detection | <6000 | NS | 2.5 | 0.23 | 40 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 12 | Koldewyn et al. ( | 5–12 years | 28 | 5–12 years | 26 | CM discrimination | 1000 | 100 | 11 | 0.2 | 50 | 0.64a | ASD = TD |
| 13 | Koldewyn et al. ( | 11–19 years | 30 | 11–19 years | 32 | CM discrimination | 2000 | NS | 4.5–9 | NS | NS | NS | ASD < TD |
| 14 | Manning et al. ( | 7–13 years | 28 | 7–14 years | 32 | CM detection | 1000 | 200 | 1.5, 6 | 0.34 | 83 | 0.83 | ASD < TD (slow) ASD = TD (fast) |
| 15 | Manning et al. ( | 7–13 years | 31 | 7–13 years | 31 | CM detection | 1000 | 200 | 1.5 | 0.34 | 83, Unlimited | 0.83 | ASD = TD |
| 16 | Manning et al. ( | 6–13 years | 33 | 6–13 years | 33 | CM discrimination | 400 | 100 | 1.5, 6 | 0.44 | Unlimited | NS | ASD > TD (noise) ASD = TD (no noise) |
| 17 | Milne et al. ( | 9–15 years | 25 | 9–15 years | 22 | CM discrimination | 1010 | 150 | 8.8 | 1 pixel | 224 | 0.3 | ASD < TD |
| 18 | Milne et al. ( | 8–12 years | 23 | 8–12 years | 23 | CM detection | 2300 | 600 | 7 | 0.1 | 85 | 2.14 | ASD = TD except for a particular subgroup |
| 19 | Peiker et al. ( | 24–45 years | 13 | 23–46 years | 14 | CM discrimination | 750 | NS | 2.4–3.0 | 0.36 | NS | NS | ASD = TD |
| 20 | Pellicano and Gibson ( | 8–12 years | 20 | 8–12 years | 20 | CM discrimination | 600 | 100 | 6.3 | 0.1 | 30 | 0.4 | ASD < TD |
| 21 | Price et al. ( | 7–23 years | 14 | 7–23 years | 16 | CM detection | 2300 | 1200 | 7a | 0.1 | 200 | 2.1a | AD = TD |
| 22 | Robertson et al. ( | 24 (3.5) years | 20 | 30 (11.7) years | 20 | CM discrimination | 200, 400, 1500 | 150 | 5 | 0.04 | ~ 50a | 1.85 | ASD < TD (200 ms) ASD = TD (400, 1500 ms) |
| 23 | Robertson et al. ( | 16–27 years | 18 | 15–23 years | 18 | CM discrimination | 200, 600 | 150 | 5 | 0.04 | ~ 50a | 1.85 | ASD < TD (200 ms) ASD = TD (600 ms) |
| 24 | Ronconi et al. ( | 9–18 years | 11 | 11–18 years | 11 | CM discrimination | 300 | NS | 12 | 0.05, 0.15 | ~ 50 | 17 | ASD < TD (central) ASD = TD (peripheral) |
| 25 | Spencer and O’Brien ( | 14 (3.3) years 12 (3.6) years | 15 10 | 12 (2.4) years | 15 | CM detection | 250 | N/A | 5.8 | NS | 50 | 4 | ASD < TD AS = TD |
| 26 | Spencer et al. ( | 7–11 years | 23 | 7–11 years | 50 | CM detection | Self–timed | 2000 | 5.8 | NS | 17a | 4 | ASD < TD |
| 27 | Tsermentseli et al. ( | 17–40 years | 21 | 17–40 years 17–40 years | 20 20 | CM detection | 250 | N/A | 5.8 | NS | 50 | 4 | ASD < TD AS = TD |
| 28 | Yamasaki et al. ( | 20–39 years | 12 | 20–39 years | 12 | CM discrimination | 750 | 400 | 5 | 0.20 | NS | 0.16 | ASD = TD |
CM coherent motion, ASD individuals with ASD, AS individuals with Asperger Syndrome, TD typically developing individuals, NS not specified, HC high contract, LC low contrast, N/A not applicable
aInformation not explicitly stated, but calculated from the information that was provided
A summary of studies on biological motion in ASD included in the meta-analysis
| Study | ASD | TD | Task type | Type of motion | Stimulus duration (ms) | Number of dots | Speed (deg/s) | Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | N | Age | N | ||||||||
| 1 | Blake et al. ( | 8–10 years | 16 | 5–10 years | 9 | BM detection | Human body actions | 1000 | 9 | 4 | ASD < TD |
| 2 | Van Boxtel et al. ( | 8–18 years | 16 | 8–18 years | 17 | BM discrimination | Human body actions | 1000 | 13 | 2 steps/s | ASD < TD |
| 3 | Cleary et al. ( | 11–17 years | 13 | 12–15 years | 13 | BM detection | Human gait | NS | 13 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 4 | Cook et al. ( | 34 (12.4) years | 16 | 33 (12.2) years | 16 | BM detection | Human versus object motion | NS | 1 | NS | ASD < TD |
| 5 | Cusack et al. ( | 16 (2.2) years | 18 | 16 (2.2) years | 18 | BM detection BM discrimination | Human body gait, actions | 1500, 2500 | 12 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 6 | Freitag et al. ( | 18 (3.6) years | 13 | 19 (1.2) years | 15 | BM detection | Human gait | 1500 | 15 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 7 | Herrington et al. ( | 28 (7.1) years | 10 | 26 (4.9) years | 10 | BM detection | Human gait | 1000 | 13 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 8 | Hubert et al. ( | 15–34 years | 19 | 15–34 years | 19 | BM discrimination | Human body actions, objects | 5000 | 5–10 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 9 | Jones et al. ( | 14–17 years | 89 | 14–17 years | 52 | BM detection | Human gait | 6000 | 11 | NS | ASD = TD, except for low IQ |
| 10 | Koldewyn et al. ( | 11–20 years | 25 | 12–20 years | 25 | BM detection | Human gait | 2000 | 13 | 4.5–9 | ASD < TD |
| 11 | Kröger et al. ( | 6–15 years | 17 | 6–15 years | 21 | BM detection | Human gait | 1000 | 15 | 2 steps/s | ASD = TD |
| 12 | McKay et al. ( | 18–38 years | 10 | 19–37 years | 10 | BM detection | Human gait | 1000 | 15 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 13 | Murphy et al. ( | 26 (7.8) years | 16 | 26 (2.9) years | 16 | BM detection | Human gait | 6500 | 11 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 14 | Nackaerts et al. ( | 35 (8.5) years | 12 | 32 (6.3) years | 12 | BM detection | Human gait and actions | 3000 | 12 | NS | ASD < TD |
| 15 | Parron et al. ( | 7–18 years | 23 | 12 (2.4) years | 23 | BM discrimination | Human body and objects | 5000 | 5–10 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 16 | Price et al. ( | 7–23 years | 14 | 7–24 years | 16 | BM discrimination | Human gait, legs and feet | 5000 | 6 | NS | ASD < TD |
| 17 | Rutherford et al. ( | 29 (6.0) years | 13 | 31 (9.0) years | 14 | BM detection BM discrimination | Human gait | 1000 | 11 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 18 | Saygin et al. ( | 34 (12) years | 16 | 34 (11) years | 20 | BM detection | Human gait and objects | 580 | 12 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 19 | Swettenham et al. ( | 10 (1.5) years | 14 | 9 (1.8) years | 14 | BM discrimination | Human gait | 2000 | 13 | NS | ASD = TD |
| 20 | Weisberg et al. ( | 12–21 years | 19 | 13–19 years | 19 | BM detection | Human gait and object | 2500 | 9 | NS | ASD = TD |
BM biological motion, ASD individuals with ASD, TD typically developing individuals, NS not specified
Fig. 2Funnel plot of the 227 effect sizes (Hedges’ g) as a function of the sample size. Negative effect sizes indicate worse performance for individuals with ASD compared with the TD group. The dotted line represents the mean estimated effect size, − .30, while the full line represents a mean estimated effect size of zero. BM biological motion, CM coherent motion