Westerfield Marissa A, Zinni Marla, Vo Khang, Townsend Jeanne
Institute for Neural Computation, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr. MC-0959, La Jolla, CA, 92093-0959, USA,
J Autism Dev Disord. 2015 Feb;45(2):600-11. doi: 10.1007/s10803-014-2045-6.
We recorded visual event-related brain potentials from 32 adult male participants (16 high-functioning participants diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and 16 control participants, ranging in age from 18 to 53 years) during a three-stimulus oddball paradigm. Target and non-target stimulus probability was varied across three probability conditions, whereas the probability of a third non-target stimulus was held constant in all conditions. P3 amplitude to target stimuli was more sensitive to probability in ASD than in typically developing participants, whereas P3 amplitude to non-target stimuli was less responsive to probability in ASD participants. This suggests that neural responses to changes in event probability are attention-dependant in high-functioning ASD. The implications of these findings for higher-level behaviors such as prediction and planning are discussed.
我们在三刺激Oddball范式中记录了32名成年男性参与者(16名被诊断为自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的高功能参与者和16名对照参与者,年龄在18至53岁之间)的视觉事件相关脑电位。目标和非目标刺激的概率在三种概率条件下有所变化,而第三种非目标刺激的概率在所有条件下保持恒定。与典型发育的参与者相比,ASD患者对目标刺激的P3波幅对概率更敏感,而ASD参与者对非目标刺激的P3波幅对概率的反应较小。这表明,在高功能ASD中,对事件概率变化的神经反应是依赖于注意力的。讨论了这些发现对预测和计划等高级行为的影响。