| Literature DB >> 33192716 |
Jean-Paul Noel1, Michelle D Failla2, Jennifer M Quinde-Zlibut3, Zachary J Williams3,4,5, Madison Gerdes6, John M Tracy7, Alisa R Zoltowski3, Jennifer H Foss-Feig8, Heathman Nichols9, Kristan Armstrong2, Stephan H Heckers2,3, Randolph R Blake3,9, Mark T Wallace2,3,4,9,10, Sohee Park3,9, Carissa J Cascio2,3,10.
Abstract
Background: Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizophrenia (SZ) exhibit multisensory processing difficulties and social impairments, with growing evidence that the former contributes to the latter. However, this work has largely reported on separate cohorts, introducing method variance as a barrier to drawing broad conclusions across studies. Further, very few studies have addressed touch, resulting in sparse knowledge about how these two clinical groups may integrate somatic information with other senses.Entities:
Keywords: cross-modal congruency effect; depth; developmental disorders; logistic regression; peripersonal space; psychopathology; somatic; tactile perception
Year: 2020 PMID: 33192716 PMCID: PMC7644602 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.578401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Sample and psychophysics paradigm subsample descriptive statistics.
| Gender (M/F) | 14/12 | 13/8 (1 unknown) | 23/13 |
| Mean Age (SD) | 25.65 (6.05) | 45.09 (9.94) | 33.56 (11.19) |
| Handedness (%R, L, Other) | 83%, 14%, 3% | 87%, 13%, 0% | 89%, 11%, 0% |
| Mean FSIQ (SD) | 105.09 (17.54) | 93.15 (17.07) | 112.97 (13.31) |
| Mean SRS Total T-score (SD) | 67.91 (12.63) | 61.00 (11.74) | 47.31 (7.67) |
| Mean ADOS calibrated severity score (SD) | 7.59 | N/A | N/A |
| Mean PANSS | N/A | 15.21 | N/A |
| Mean PANSS | N/A | 15.54 | N/A |
| Antipsychotic | – | – | |
| SSRI or SNRI | – | ||
| Mood stabilizer | – | – | |
| Benzodiazepine | – | ||
| Other | – | ||
| Completed CCE task (% total sample) | 23 (88.46%) | 18 (81.81%) | 33 (91.67%) |
| CCE excluded for < 10 trials/condition (% of those completing task) | 3 (13%) | 4 (22%) | 3 (9%) |
| Completed PPS task (% total sample) | 20 (76.92%) | 22 (68.18%) | 20 (50%) |
| PPS excluded for poor sigmoid fit (% of those completing task) | 6 (30%) | 7 (31%) | 2 (10%) |
From PANSS (n = 14) or converted from SAPS/SANS to PANSS (n = 8) using method of van Erp et al. (.
Figure 1Experimental Methods. (A) Cross-Modal Congruency. Participants responded as fast as possible to touch being applied either to the thumb (depicted) or the index finger. On a fraction of trials, a visual stimulus was also presented, either incongruently with the location of touch (middle panel) or congruently with the location of touch (rightmost panel). (B) Peri-personal Space. On catch trials visual stimuli were presented alone, and on baseline trials, tactile stimuli were presented alone. On the experimental trials (depicted), touch was given when the train of visual stimuli terminated at different distances from the body, and either looming or receding from the participants. In this case looming stimuli is shown, with increasing intensity conveying the direction of movement of the light source.
Figure 2Cross-Modal Congruency Effect (CCE) for RTs (left) and accuracy (right) in typically developing (TD) individuals, as well as Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), and Schizophrenic (SZ) patients. (A) CCE is the difference between tactile RTs when preceded by an incongruent or congruent visual cue (measured in seconds). Controls (black) individuals show numerically a larger cross-modal congruency effect than ASD (red) and SZ (blue) individuals, but this difference is not statistically significant. (B) Similar format but subtracting accuracy in incongruent trials from accuracy in congruent trials. Groups did not statistically differ. Dots are individual participants, error bars show the mean and ±1 S.E.M.
Figure 3PPS is smaller and sharper in ASD than TD and SZ. Y-axis is the difference between tactile RTs during approaching and receding visual stimuli when matched for time. X-axis is distance, in the frame of reference of the approaching stimuli. Namely, D1 corresponds to D1 for approaching, and D11 for receding (which are matched in time). Negative values along the y-axis indicate a further facilitation as a function of distance for approaching than for receding visual stimuli, as would be expected of a PPS effect. Error bars are ±1 S.E.M., the vertical line in each panel (TD = black, ASD = red, SZ = blue) is the average central point of the sigmoidal fit (the fit shown is for the average subject). Shaded area is ±1 S.E.M.
Figure 4Smaller PPS is associated with more social-communication deficit, but only in the subclinical range. (A) Across the whole sample, greater social-communication deficits as measured by the total T score of the SRS-2 was associated with smaller peripersonal space (PPS). (B) The same plot with groups separated by color (ASD: red, SZ: green, TD: blue), showing a trendline similar to that for the whole sample only within the TD group.