Guillon Quentin, Hadjikhani Nouchine, Baduel Sophie, Kruck Jeanne, Arnaud Mado, Rogé Bernadette
aURI Octogone-CERPP, University of Toulouse, France bHarvard Medical School/MGH/MIT, Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA cGillberg Neuropsychiatry Center, Gothenburg University, Sweden.
Neuroreport. 2014 Oct 22;25(15):1237-41. doi: 10.1097/WNR.0000000000000257.
When looking at faces, typical individuals tend to have a right hemispheric bias manifested by a tendency to look first toward the left visual hemifield. Here, we tested for the presence of this bias in young children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) for both human and dog faces. We show that children with ASD do not show a left visual hemifield (right hemispheric) bias for human faces. In addition, we show that this effect extends to faces of dogs, suggesting that the absence of bias is not specific to human faces, but applies to all faces with the first-order configuration, pointing to an anomaly at an early stage of visual analysis of faces. The lack of right hemispheric dominance for face processing may reflect a more general disorder of cerebral specialization of social functions in ASD.
在观察人脸时,典型个体往往存在右半球偏向,表现为倾向于首先看向左半视野。在此,我们针对患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的幼儿,测试了他们在观察人脸和狗脸时这种偏向的存在情况。我们发现,患有ASD的儿童在观察人脸时并未表现出左半视野(右半球)偏向。此外,我们还表明这种效应扩展到了狗脸,这表明缺乏偏向并非人脸所特有,而是适用于所有具有一阶构型的面孔,这指向了面孔视觉分析早期阶段的一种异常情况。在面孔处理方面缺乏右半球优势可能反映出自闭症谱系障碍中社会功能大脑特化方面更普遍的紊乱。