| Literature DB >> 32038202 |
Robin Laycock1,2, Kylie Wood2, Andrea Wright2, Sheila G Crewther2, Melvyn A Goodale3.
Abstract
Individuals on the autism spectrum are reported to show impairments in the processing of social information, including aspects of eye-movements towards faces. Abnormalities in basic-level visual processing are also reported. In the current study, we sought to determine if the latency of saccades made towards social targets (faces) in a natural scene as opposed to inanimate targets (cars) would be related to sub-clinical autism traits (ATs) in individuals drawn from a neurotypical population. The effect of stimulus inversion was also examined given that difficulties with processing inverted faces are thought to be a function of face expertise. No group differences in saccadic latency were established for face or car targets, regardless of image orientation. However, as expected, we found that individuals with higher autism-like traits did not demonstrate a saccadic face inversion effect, but those with lower autism-like traits did. Neither group showed a car inversion effect. Thus, these results suggest that neurotypical individuals with high autism-like traits also show anomalies in detecting and orienting to faces. In particular, the reduced saccadic face inversion effect established in these participants with high ATs suggests that speed of visual processing and orienting towards faces may be associated with the social difficulties found across the broader autism spectrum.Entities:
Keywords: autism; eye-movements; face inversion; face processing; saccade
Year: 2020 PMID: 32038202 PMCID: PMC6992588 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2019.00470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Demographic information.
| Mean age ( | Mean Raven’s raw score ( | Gender ratio (M:F) | Mean SATQ score ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low autism trait group | 15 | 24.7 (5.2) | 48.4 (4.6) | 4:11 | 10.6 (4.5) |
| High autism trait group | 15 | 27.4 (9.4) | 46.4 (5.8) | 7:8 | 32.4 (5.5) |
Figure 1Illustration of the task procedure. A fixation was followed by a 200 ms blank screen, and subsequently two images were presented. In different tasks, one photograph contained a face or a car and was presented alongside a distractor photograph consisting of a natural scene with no car or face. In separate tasks both the target and distractor photographs were presented in an upright orientation, or inverted 180°. Participants were required to make a saccade towards the location of the target, presented randomly to the left or the right, as quickly and accurately as possible.
Figure 2(A) Average saccade onset times (SOTs) to detect the photograph containing a face or a car in the upright and inverted tasks for high and low Autism Trait (AT) Groups. (B) Face and car inversion effects, calculated as the difference in mean SOTs between upright and inverted tasks for high and low AT Groups. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. The low AT group demonstrated a significant face inversion effect (p < 0.001), whereas the high AT group did not (p = 0.170). The face inversion effect of the low AT group was significantly larger than that of the high AT group (p = 0.008). Neither group demonstrate a car inversion effect.
Figure A1Reanalysis using individual median scores, rather than means as in Figure 2. (A) Median saccade onset times (SOTs) to detect the photograph containing a face or a car in the upright and inverted tasks for high and low Autism Trait (AT) Groups. (B) Face and car inversion effects, calculated as the difference in median SOTs between upright and inverted tasks for high and low Autism Trait (AT) Groups. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. Error bars indicate SEM.