San Diego State University, San Diego, California.
Alliant International University, San Diego, California.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2014 Jul 1;71(7):751-60. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.83.
Converging evidence indicates that brain abnormalities in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) involve atypical network connectivity, but it is unclear whether altered connectivity is especially prominent in brain networks that participate in social cognition.
To investigate whether adolescents with ASD show altered functional connectivity in 2 brain networks putatively impaired in ASD and involved in social processing, theory of mind (ToM) and mirror neuron system (MNS).
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional study using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging involving 25 adolescents with ASD between the ages of 11 and 18 years and 25 typically developing adolescents matched for age, handedness, and nonverbal IQ.
Statistical parametric maps testing the degree of whole-brain functional connectivity and social functioning measures.
Relative to typically developing controls, participants with ASD showed a mixed pattern of both over- and underconnectivity in the ToM network, which was associated with greater social impairment. Increased connectivity in the ASD group was detected primarily between the regions of the MNS and ToM, and was correlated with sociocommunicative measures, suggesting that excessive ToM-MNS cross talk might be associated with social impairment. In a secondary analysis comparing a subset of the 15 participants with ASD with the most severe symptomology and a tightly matched subset of 15 typically developing controls, participants with ASD showed exclusive overconnectivity effects in both ToM and MNS networks, which were also associated with greater social dysfunction.
Adolescents with ASD showed atypically increased functional connectivity involving the mentalizing and mirror neuron systems, largely reflecting greater cross talk between the 2. This finding is consistent with emerging evidence of reduced network segregation in ASD and challenges the prevailing theory of general long-distance underconnectivity in ASD. This excess ToM-MNS connectivity may reflect immature or aberrant developmental processes in 2 brain networks involved in understanding of others, a domain of impairment in ASD. Further, robust links with sociocommunicative symptoms of ASD implicate atypically increased ToM-MNS connectivity in social deficits observed in ASD.
越来越多的证据表明,自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)中的大脑异常与非典型网络连通性有关,但尚不清楚连通性的改变是否特别突出于参与社会认知的大脑网络。
研究青少年 ASD 是否表现出 ASD 中假定受损的两个大脑网络(参与社会处理、心理理论(ToM)和镜像神经元系统(MNS))的功能连接改变。
设计、地点和参与者:使用静息态功能磁共振成像的横断面研究,涉及 25 名年龄在 11 至 18 岁之间的 ASD 青少年和 25 名年龄、惯用手和非言语智商相匹配的典型发育青少年。
统计参数图测试全脑功能连接程度和社会功能测量。
与典型发育对照组相比,ASD 组在 ToM 网络中表现出过度连接和连接不足的混合模式,与社交障碍程度有关。在 ASD 组中,MNS 和 ToM 区域之间检测到主要的连接增加,与社会交际测量相关,这表明过度的 ToM-MNS 交叉对话可能与社交障碍有关。在一项比较 15 名 ASD 患者中症状最严重的亚组和 15 名典型发育对照组中匹配程度最高的亚组的二次分析中,ASD 组在 ToM 和 MNS 网络中均表现出独特的过度连接效应,这也与更大的社会功能障碍有关。
青少年 ASD 表现出异常增加的功能连接,涉及心理化和镜像神经元系统,主要反映出两者之间的交流增加。这一发现与 ASD 中网络分离减少的新兴证据一致,并挑战了 ASD 中普遍存在的长距离连接不足的理论。这种额外的 ToM-MNS 连接可能反映了参与理解他人的两个大脑网络中不成熟或异常的发育过程,这是 ASD 受损的一个领域。此外,与 ASD 的社会交流症状的稳健联系暗示了 ASD 中观察到的社交缺陷中异常增加的 ToM-MNS 连接。