Visual Psychophysics and Perception Laboratory, School of Optometry, University of Montreal, 3744 Jean-Brillant street, Montreal, QC H3T 1P1, Canada.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2012 Jun;42(6):961-70. doi: 10.1007/s10803-011-1326-6.
Although atypical motor behaviors have been associated with autism, investigations regarding their possible origins are scarce. This study assessed the visual and vestibular components involved in atypical postural reactivity in autism. Postural reactivity and stability were measured for younger (12-15 years) and older (16-33 years) autistic participants in response to a virtual tunnel oscillating at different frequencies. At the highest oscillation frequency, younger autistic participants showed significantly less instability compared to younger typically-developing participants; no such group differences were evidenced for older participants. Additionally, no significant differences in postural behavior were found between all 4 groups when presented with static or without visual information. Results confirm that postural hypo-reactivity to visual information is present in autism, but is contingent on both visual environment and development.
虽然不典型的运动行为与自闭症有关,但关于其可能起源的研究很少。本研究评估了自闭症中不典型姿势反应所涉及的视觉和前庭成分。在不同频率下,对年轻(12-15 岁)和年长(16-33 岁)自闭症参与者进行了姿势反应和稳定性的测量,以响应虚拟隧道的摆动。在最高摆动频率下,与年轻的正常发育参与者相比,年轻的自闭症参与者表现出明显较小的不稳定性;但在年长的参与者中没有发现这种组间差异。当呈现静态或没有视觉信息时,所有 4 组之间的姿势行为也没有发现显著差异。结果证实,对视觉信息的姿势低反应性存在于自闭症中,但取决于视觉环境和发育。