Literature DB >> 35338609

Speed and accuracy of emotion recognition in autistic adults: The role of stimulus type, response format, and emotion.

Marie Antonia Georgopoulos1, Neil Brewer1, Carmen A Lucas1, Robyn L Young1.   

Abstract

Emotion recognition difficulties are considered to contribute to social-communicative problems for autistic individuals. Prior research has been dominated by a focus on forced-choice recognition response accuracy for static face presentations of basic emotions, often involving small samples. Using free-report and multiple-choice response formats, we compared emotion recognition in IQ-matched autistic (N = 63) and nonautistic (N = 67) adult samples using 12 face emotion stimuli presented in three different stimulus formats (static, dynamic, social) that varied the degree of accompanying contextual information. Percent agreement with normative recognition responses (usually labeled "recognition accuracy") was slightly lower for autistic adults. Both groups displayed marked inter-individual variability and, although there was considerable overlap between groups, a very small subset of autistic individuals recorded lower percent agreement than any of the nonautistic sample. Overall, autistic individuals were significantly slower to respond and less confident. Although stimulus type, response format, and emotion affected percent agreement, latency and confidence, their interactions with group were nonsignificant and the associated effect sizes extremely small. The findings challenge notions that autistic adults have core deficits in emotion recognition and are more likely than nonautistic adults to be overwhelmed by increasingly dynamic or complex emotion stimuli and to experience difficulties recognizing specific emotions. Suggested research priorities include clarifying whether longer recognition latencies reflect fundamental processing limitations or adjustable strategic influences, probing age-related changes in emotion recognition across adulthood, and identifying the links between difficulties highlighted by traditional emotion recognition paradigms and real-world social functioning. LAY
SUMMARY: It is generally considered that autistic individuals are less accurate than nonautistic individuals at recognizing other people's facial emotions. Using a wide array of emotions presented in various contexts, this study suggests that autistic individuals are, on average, only slightly less accurate but at the same time somewhat slower when classifying others' emotions. However, there was considerable overlap between the two groups, and great variability between individuals. The differences between groups prevailed regardless of how stimuli were presented, the response required or the particular emotion.
© 2022 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  accuracy; autistic adults; confidence; emotion recognition; latency

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35338609     DOI: 10.1002/aur.2713

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Autism Res        ISSN: 1939-3806            Impact factor:   4.633


  1 in total

1.  Facing up to others' emotions: No evidence of autism-related deficits in metacognitive awareness of emotion recognition.

Authors:  Neil Brewer; Carmen A Lucas; Marie Antonia Georgopoulos; Robyn L Young
Journal:  Autism Res       Date:  2022-07-07       Impact factor: 4.633

  1 in total

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