Knight Emily J, Oakes Leona, Hyman Susan L, Freedman Edward G, Foxe John J
The Cognitive Neurophysiology Laboratory, The Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience, Department of Neuroscience, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York, USA.
Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, USA.
Autism Res. 2020 Dec;13(12):2058-2072. doi: 10.1002/aur.2362. Epub 2020 Sep 3.
The brain's ability to encode temporal patterns and predict upcoming events is critical for speech perception and other aspects of social communication. Deficits in predictive coding may contribute to difficulties with social communication and overreliance on repetitive predictable environments in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Using a mismatch negativity (MMN) task involving rhythmic tone sequences of varying complexity, we tested the hypotheses that (1) individuals with ASD have reduced MMN response to auditory stimuli that deviate in presentation timing from expected patterns, particularly as pattern complexity increases and (2) amplitude of MMN signal is inversely correlated with level of impairment in social communication and repetitive behaviors. Electroencephalography was acquired as individuals (age 6-21 years) listened to repeated five-rhythm tones that varied in the Shannon entropy of the rhythm across three conditions (zero, medium-1 bit, and high-2 bit entropy). The majority of the tones conformed to the established rhythm (standard tones); occasionally the fourth tone was temporally shifted relative to its expected time of occurrence (deviant tones). Social communication and repetitive behaviors were measured using the Social Responsiveness Scale and Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised. Both neurotypical controls (n = 19) and individuals with ASD (n = 21) show stepwise decreases in MMN as a function of increasing entropy. Contrary to the result forecasted by a predictive coding hypothesis, individuals with ASD do not differ from controls in these neural mechanisms of prediction error to auditory rhythms of varied temporal complexity, and there is no relationship between these signals and social communication or repetitive behavior measures. LAY SUMMARY: We tested the idea that the brain's ability to use previous experience to influence processing of sounds is weaker in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) than in neurotypical individuals. We found no difference between individuals with ASD and neurotypical controls in brain wave responses to sounds that occurred earlier than expected in either simple or complex rhythms. There was also no relationship between these brain waves and social communication or repetitive behavior scores.
大脑编码时间模式和预测即将发生事件的能力对于言语感知和社会交流的其他方面至关重要。预测编码缺陷可能导致自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)个体在社会交流方面出现困难,并过度依赖重复性可预测的环境。我们使用了一个涉及不同复杂程度节奏音调序列的失配负波(MMN)任务,来检验以下假设:(1)ASD个体对呈现时间偏离预期模式的听觉刺激的MMN反应降低,尤其是随着模式复杂性增加时;(2)MMN信号的幅度与社会交流和重复行为的损伤程度呈负相关。当个体(年龄6 - 21岁)在三种条件下(零熵、中熵 - 1比特和高熵 - 2比特)聆听重复的五种节奏音调时,记录脑电图,这些音调在节奏的香农熵方面有所不同。大多数音调符合既定节奏(标准音调);偶尔第四个音调在时间上相对于其预期出现时间发生偏移(偏差音调)。使用社会反应量表和重复行为量表修订版来测量社会交流和重复行为。与预测编码假设所预测的结果相反,ASD个体在对不同时间复杂性听觉节奏的预测误差的这些神经机制方面与对照组没有差异,并且这些信号与社会交流或重复行为测量之间没有关系。通俗总结:我们测试了这样一种观点,即自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)个体大脑利用先前经验影响声音处理的能力比神经典型个体弱。我们发现,在简单或复杂节奏中,ASD个体和神经典型对照组对早于预期出现的声音的脑电波反应没有差异。这些脑电波与社会交流或重复行为得分之间也没有关系。