Department of Neuroscience, Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia.
Division of Occupational Therapy, Department of Human Performance, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia.
Autism Res. 2020 Apr;13(4):539-549. doi: 10.1002/aur.2250. Epub 2020 Jan 16.
Many individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have been shown to perceive everyday sensory information differently compared to peers without autism. Research examining these sensory differences has primarily utilized nonnatural stimuli or natural stimuli using static photos with few having utilized dynamic, real-world nonverbal stimuli. Therefore, in this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to characterize brain activation of individuals with high-functioning autism when viewing and listening to a video of a real-world scene (a person bouncing a ball) and anticipating the bounce. We investigated both multisensory and unisensory processing and hypothesized that individuals with ASD would show differential activation in (a) primary auditory and visual sensory cortical and association areas, and in (b) cortical and subcortical regions where auditory and visual information is integrated (e.g. temporal-parietal junction, pulvinar, superior colliculus). Contrary to our hypotheses, the whole-brain analysis revealed similar activation between the groups in these brain regions. However, compared to controls the ASD group showed significant hypoactivation in the left intraparietal sulcus and left putamen/globus pallidus. We theorize that this hypoactivation reflected underconnectivity for mediating spatiotemporal processing of the visual biological motion stimuli with the task demands of anticipating the timing of the bounce event. The paradigm thus may have tapped into a specific left-lateralized aberrant corticobasal circuit or loop involved in initiating or inhibiting motor responses. This was consistent with a dual "when versus where" psychophysical model of corticobasal function, which may reflect core differences in sensory processing of real-world, nonverbal natural stimuli in ASD. Autism Res 2020, 13: 539-549. © 2020 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc. LAY SUMMARY: To understand how individuals with autism perceive the real-world, using magnetic resonance imaging we examined brain activation in individuals with autism while watching a video of someone bouncing a basketball. Those with autism had similar activation to controls in auditory and visual sensory brain regions, but less activation in an area that processes information about body movements and in a region involved in modulating movements. These areas are important for understanding the actions of others and developing social skills.
许多自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)患者在感知日常感官信息方面与非自闭症患者存在明显差异。研究这些感官差异的研究主要使用非自然刺激或使用静态照片的自然刺激,很少使用动态的、真实世界的非言语刺激。因此,在这项研究中,我们使用功能磁共振成像来描述高功能自闭症个体在观看和聆听真实世界场景(一个人弹球)和预测弹球时的大脑激活。我们同时研究了多感觉和单感觉处理,并假设 ASD 患者在以下区域会表现出不同的激活:(a)初级听觉和视觉感觉皮质和联合区;以及(b)听觉和视觉信息整合的皮质和皮质下区域(例如颞顶联合区、丘脑枕、上丘)。与我们的假设相反,全脑分析显示两组在这些大脑区域的激活相似。然而,与对照组相比,ASD 组在左侧顶内沟和左侧内囊前肢/苍白球表现出显著的低激活。我们推断这种低激活反映了在处理视觉生物运动刺激的时空处理方面与预测弹球事件时间的任务需求之间的连接不足。因此,该范式可能涉及到参与发起或抑制运动反应的特定左侧异常皮质基底回路或环路。这与皮质基底功能的双重“何时与何地”心理物理模型一致,该模型可能反映了 ASD 中对真实世界、非言语自然刺激的感官处理的核心差异。自闭症研究 2020,13:539-549。© 2020 国际自闭症研究协会,威利在线图书馆,公司。 要了解自闭症患者如何感知真实世界,我们使用磁共振成像检查了自闭症个体在观看某人弹篮球视频时的大脑激活。与对照组相比,自闭症患者在听觉和视觉感觉大脑区域的激活相似,但在处理身体运动信息的区域和参与调节运动的区域的激活较少。这些区域对于理解他人的行为和发展社交技能很重要。