Social Brain in Action Laboratory, Wales Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Wales, United Kingdom.
Social Brain in Action Laboratory, Wales Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Wales, United Kingdom; Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom; School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom.
Cognition. 2018 Feb;171:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.10.017. Epub 2017 Nov 1.
The Social Motivation Theory posits that a reduced sensitivity to the value of social stimuli, specifically faces, can account for social impairments in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Research has demonstrated that typically developing (TD) individuals preferentially orient towards another type of salient social stimulus, namely biological motion. Individuals with ASD, however, do not show this preference. While the reward value of faces to both TD and ASD individuals has been well-established, the extent to which individuals from these populations also find human motion to be rewarding remains poorly understood. The present study investigated the value assigned to biological motion by TD participants in an effort task, and further examined whether these values differed among individuals with more autistic traits. The results suggest that TD participants value natural human motion more than rigid, machine-like motion or non-human control motion, but this preference is attenuated among individuals reporting more autistic traits. This study provides the first evidence to suggest that individuals with more autistic traits find a broader conceptualisation of social stimuli less rewarding compared to individuals with fewer autistic traits. By quantifying the social reward value of human motion, the present findings contribute an important piece to our understanding of social motivation in individuals with and without social impairments.
社会动机理论认为,对社会刺激(特别是面孔)价值的敏感性降低,可以解释自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)中的社交障碍。研究表明,典型发育(TD)个体优先关注另一种显著的社交刺激,即生物运动。然而,ASD 个体并没有表现出这种偏好。虽然 TD 和 ASD 个体对面孔的奖励价值已经得到充分证实,但这些人群中个体对人类运动的奖励程度仍知之甚少。本研究调查了 TD 参与者在努力任务中赋予生物运动的价值,并进一步研究了这些价值在具有更多自闭症特征的个体中是否存在差异。结果表明,TD 参与者更重视自然的人类运动,而不是僵硬的、机器般的运动或非人类控制的运动,但这种偏好在报告有更多自闭症特征的个体中减弱了。这项研究首次表明,与自闭症特征较少的个体相比,具有更多自闭症特征的个体发现更广泛的社交刺激概念化的奖励价值较低。通过量化人类运动的社交奖励价值,本研究为我们理解社交动机在有社交障碍和无社交障碍的个体中的作用提供了重要的依据。