Neil Louise, Cappagli Giulia, Karaminis Themelis, Jenkins Rob, Pellicano Elizabeth
Centre for Research in Autism and Education (CRAE), UCL Institute of Education, University College London, London WC1H 0NU, UK.
Centre for Research in Autism and Education (CRAE), UCL Institute of Education, University College London, London WC1H 0NU, UK; Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, 16163 Genova, Italy.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2016 Mar;143:139-53. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2015.09.029. Epub 2015 Nov 23.
Unfamiliar face recognition follows a particularly protracted developmental trajectory and is more likely to be atypical in children with autism than those without autism. There is a paucity of research, however, examining the ability to recognize the same face across multiple naturally varying images. Here, we investigated within-person face recognition in children with and without autism. In Experiment 1, typically developing 6- and 7-year-olds, 8- and 9-year-olds, 10- and 11-year-olds, 12- to 14-year-olds, and adults were given 40 grayscale photographs of two distinct male identities (20 of each face taken at different ages, from different angles, and in different lighting conditions) and were asked to sort them by identity. Children mistook images of the same person as images of different people, subdividing each individual into many perceived identities. Younger children divided images into more perceived identities than adults and also made more misidentification errors (placing two different identities together in the same group) than older children and adults. In Experiment 2, we used the same procedure with 32 cognitively able children with autism. Autistic children reported a similar number of identities and made similar numbers of misidentification errors to a group of typical children of similar age and ability. Fine-grained analysis using matrices revealed marginal group differences in overall performance. We suggest that the immature performance in typical and autistic children could arise from problems extracting the perceptual commonalities from different images of the same person and building stable representations of facial identity.
识别陌生面孔遵循着一条特别漫长的发展轨迹,并且与非自闭症儿童相比,自闭症儿童识别陌生面孔的能力更有可能出现异常。然而,目前缺乏针对在多个自然变化图像中识别同一张面孔能力的研究。在此,我们调查了自闭症儿童和非自闭症儿童的个体内面孔识别能力。在实验1中,向6至7岁、8至9岁、10至11岁、12至14岁的发育正常儿童以及成年人展示了40张灰度照片,照片中有两个不同男性的面孔(每个面孔各20张,拍摄于不同年龄、不同角度且处于不同光照条件下),并要求他们按照面孔身份进行分类。儿童会将同一个人的不同图像误认为是不同人的图像,把每个人细分为许多不同的身份认知。年龄较小的儿童比成年人划分出更多的身份认知,并且与年龄较大的儿童和成年人相比,他们也会出现更多的错误识别(将两个不同身份的图像归为同一组)。在实验2中,我们对32名有认知能力的自闭症儿童采用了相同的程序。自闭症儿童报告的身份数量以及出现的错误识别数量与一组年龄和能力相近的典型儿童相似。使用矩阵进行的细粒度分析显示,两组在总体表现上存在细微差异。我们认为,典型儿童和自闭症儿童表现不成熟可能是由于难以从同一个人的不同图像中提取感知共性并建立稳定的面部身份表征。