1 Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg.
2 Section of Speech and Language Pathology, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg.
Psychol Sci. 2019 Feb;30(2):309-315. doi: 10.1177/0956797618809382. Epub 2018 Nov 16.
Pupillary contagion is an involuntary change in the observer's pupil size in response to the pupil size of another person. This effect, presumed to be an important adaption for individuals living in groups, has been documented in both typical infants and adults. Here, for the first time, we report pupillary contagion in individuals with autism, a disorder of social communication. We found that, compared with a typical group ( n = 63), individuals with autism ( n = 54) exhibited comparable pupillary contagion when observing pictures of emotional faces, despite less spontaneous attention toward the eye region. Furthermore, the magnitude of the pupillary response in the autism group was negatively correlated with time spent fixating the eye region. The results suggest that even with less looking toward the eyes, individuals with autism respond to the affective and arousal levels transmitted from other individuals. These results are discussed in the context of an overarousal account of socioaffective-processing differences in autism.
瞳孔牵连是指观察者的瞳孔大小在另一个人的瞳孔大小变化时产生的无意识变化。这种被认为是对生活在群体中的个体非常重要的适应,已经在典型的婴儿和成人中得到了记录。在这里,我们首次在自闭症患者(一种社交沟通障碍)中报告了瞳孔牵连。我们发现,与典型组(n=63)相比,自闭症患者(n=54)在观察情绪面孔的图片时表现出相似的瞳孔牵连,尽管他们对眼部区域的自发注意力较少。此外,自闭症组的瞳孔反应幅度与注视眼部区域的时间呈负相关。这些结果表明,即使自闭症患者看向眼睛的次数较少,他们也会对来自其他人的情感和唤醒水平做出反应。这些结果在自闭症中社会情感处理差异的过度唤醒解释的背景下进行了讨论。