Rutherford M D, Clements Kathleen A, Sekuler Allison B
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1.
Vision Res. 2007 Jul;47(15):2099-110. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2007.01.029. Epub 2007 Jun 7.
Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) have been found to have impairments in some face recognition tasks [e.g., Boucher, J., & Lewis, V. (1992). Unfamiliar face recognition in relatively able autistic children. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 33, 843-859.], and it has been suggested that this impairment occurs because these individuals do not spontaneously attend to the eyes [e.g., Pelphrey, K. A., Sasson, N. J., Reznick, J. S., Paul, G., Goldman, B. D., & Piven, J. (2002). Visual scanning of faces in autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 32, 249-261.], or attend selectively to the mouth [e.g., Langdell, T. (1978). Recognition of faces-approach to study of autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 19, 255-268; Joseph, R. M., & Tanaka J. (2003). Holistic and part-based face recognition in children with autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 44, 529-542.]. Here, we test whether the eyes or the mouth are attended to preferentially by 16 males with ASD and 19 matched controls. Participants discriminated small spatial displacements of the eyes and the mouth. If the mouth region were attended to preferentially by individuals with ASD, we would expect ASD observers to be better at detecting subtle changes in mouth than eye displacements, relative to controls. Further, following Barton [Barton, J. J. S., Keenan, J. P., & Bass, T. (2001). Discrimination of spatial relations and features in faces: Effects of inversion and viewing duration. British Journal of Psychology, 92, 527-549.], we would expect to see differences in inversion effects as a function of feature manipulation between ASD and control groups. We found that individuals with ASD performed significantly differently than controls for the eye, but not the mouth, trials. However, we found no difference in inversion effects between the two groups of observers. Furthermore, we found evidence of distinct subclasses of individuals with ASD: those who performed normally, and those who were impaired. These results suggests that typical individuals are better able to make use of information in the eyes than some individuals with ASD, but that there is no clear autism "advantage" in the use of information in the mouth region.
研究发现,患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的个体在一些面部识别任务中存在缺陷[例如,布彻,J.,& 刘易斯,V.(1992年)。相对有能力的自闭症儿童对陌生面孔的识别。《儿童心理学与精神病学杂志》,33,843 - 859。],有人认为这种缺陷的出现是因为这些个体不会自发地关注眼睛[例如,佩尔弗里,K. A.,萨松,N. J.,雷兹尼克,J. S.,保罗,G.,戈德曼,B. D.,& 皮文,J.(2002年)。自闭症患者对面部的视觉扫描。《自闭症与发育障碍杂志》,32,249 - 261。],或者选择性地关注嘴巴[例如,兰德尔,T.(1978年)。对面孔的识别——自闭症研究方法。《儿童心理学与精神病学及相关学科杂志》,19,255 - 268;约瑟夫,R. M.,& 田中,J.(2003年)。自闭症儿童对面部整体和局部的识别。《儿童心理学与精神病学杂志》,44,529 - 542。]。在此,我们测试了16名患有ASD的男性和19名匹配的对照组是否更倾向于关注眼睛或嘴巴。参与者辨别眼睛和嘴巴的小空间位移。如果患有ASD的个体更倾向于关注嘴巴区域,那么相对于对照组,我们预计患有ASD的观察者在检测嘴巴的细微变化方面会比检测眼睛位移更好。此外,根据巴顿[巴顿,J. J. S.,基南,J. P.,& 巴斯,T.(2001年)。面部空间关系和特征的辨别:倒置和观察时间的影响。《英国心理学杂志》,92,527 - 549。]的研究,我们预计会看到ASD组和对照组之间因特征操作而产生的倒置效应差异。我们发现,在眼睛相关的试验中,患有ASD的个体与对照组的表现存在显著差异,但在嘴巴相关的试验中没有。然而,我们发现两组观察者在倒置效应上没有差异。此外,我们发现了患有ASD的个体存在不同亚类的证据:表现正常的个体和存在缺陷的个体。这些结果表明,典型个体比一些患有ASD的个体更能利用眼睛中的信息,但在利用嘴巴区域的信息方面,并没有明显的自闭症“优势”。