Freschl Julie, Melcher David, Carter Alice, Kaldy Zsuzsa, Blaser Erik
University of Massachusetts Boston, Department of Psychology, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
University of Trento, Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC), Rovereto, Italy.
Autism Res. 2021 May;14(5):946-958. doi: 10.1002/aur.2430. Epub 2020 Nov 10.
Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience differences in visual temporal processing, the part of vision responsible for parsing continuous input into discrete objects and events. Here we investigated temporal processing in 2-year-old toddlers diagnosed with ASD and age-matched typically developing (TD) toddlers. We used a visual search task where the visibility of the target was determined by the pace of a display sequence. On integration trials, each display viewed alone had no visible target, but if integrated over time, the target became visible. On segmentation trials, the target became visible only when displays were perceptually segmented. We measured the percent of trials when participants fixated the target as a function of the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between displays. We computed the crossover point of the integration and segmentation performance functions for each group, an estimate of the temporal integration window (TIW), the period in which visual input is combined. We found that both groups of toddlers had significantly longer TIWs (125 ms) than adults (65 ms) from previous studies using the same paradigm, and that toddlers with ASD had significantly shorter TIWs (108 ms) than chronologically age-matched TD controls (142 ms). LAY SUMMARY: We investigated how young children, with and without autism, organize dynamic visual information across time, using a visual search paradigm. We found that toddlers with autism had higher temporal resolution than typically developing (TD) toddlers of the same age - that is, they are more likely to be able to detect rapid change across time, relative to TD toddlers. These differences in visual temporal processing can impact how one sees, interprets, and interacts with the world. Autism Res 2021, 14: 946-958. © 2020 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.
患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的个体在视觉时间处理方面存在差异,视觉时间处理是视觉的一部分,负责将连续输入解析为离散的物体和事件。在这里,我们研究了被诊断为ASD的2岁幼儿以及年龄匹配的发育正常(TD)幼儿的时间处理能力。我们使用了一种视觉搜索任务,其中目标的可见性由显示序列的节奏决定。在整合试验中,单独查看的每个显示都没有可见目标,但如果随着时间进行整合,目标就会变得可见。在分割试验中,只有当显示在感知上被分割时目标才会变得可见。我们测量了参与者注视目标的试验百分比,作为显示之间刺激起始异步(SOA)的函数。我们计算了每组整合和分割性能函数的交叉点,这是对时间整合窗口(TIW)的估计,即视觉输入被组合的时间段。我们发现,与之前使用相同范式的研究中的成年人(65毫秒)相比,两组幼儿的TIW都显著更长(125毫秒),并且患有ASD的幼儿的TIW(108毫秒)比按年龄匹配的TD对照组(142毫秒)显著更短。简要总结:我们使用视觉搜索范式研究了患有和未患有自闭症的幼儿如何随时间组织动态视觉信息。我们发现患有自闭症的幼儿比同年龄的发育正常(TD)幼儿具有更高的时间分辨率——也就是说,相对于TD幼儿,他们更有可能能够检测到随时间的快速变化。视觉时间处理方面的这些差异会影响一个人看待、解释世界以及与世界互动的方式。《自闭症研究》2021年,14卷:946 - 958页。©2020国际自闭症研究协会和威利期刊有限责任公司。