Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Michigan State University, Michigan, USA.
Waisman Center and Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Autism Res. 2021 Jun;14(6):1147-1162. doi: 10.1002/aur.2457. Epub 2020 Dec 28.
Differences in visual attention have long been recognized as a central characteristic of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Regardless of social content, children with ASD show a strong preference for perceptual salience-how interesting (i.e., striking) certain stimuli are, based on their visual properties (e.g., color, geometric patterning). However, we do not know the extent to which attentional allocation preferences for perceptual salience persist when they compete with top-down, linguistic information. This study examined the impact of competing perceptual salience on visual word recognition in 17 children with ASD (mean age 31 months) and 17 children with typical development (mean age 20 months) matched on receptive language skills. A word recognition task presented two images on a screen, one of which was named (e.g., Find the bowl!). On Neutral trials, both images had high salience (i.e., were colorful and had geometric patterning). On Competing trials, the distracter image had high salience but the target image had low salience, creating competition between bottom-up (i.e., salience-driven) and top-down (i.e., language-driven) processes. Though both groups of children showed word recognition in an absolute sense, competing perceptual salience significantly decreased attention to the target only in the children with ASD. These findings indicate that perceptual properties of objects can disrupt attention to relevant information in children with ASD, which has implications for supporting their language development. Findings also demonstrate that perceptual salience affects attentional allocation preferences in children with ASD, even in the absence of social stimuli. LAY SUMMARY: This study found that visually striking objects distract young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) from looking at relevant (but less striking) objects named by an adult. Language-matched, younger children with typical development were not significantly affected by this visual distraction. Though visual distraction could have cascading negative effects on language development in children with ASD, learning opportunities that build on children's focus of attention are likely to support positive outcomes.
视觉注意力的差异长期以来一直被认为是自闭症谱系障碍 (ASD) 的一个核心特征。无论社会内容如何,患有 ASD 的儿童都表现出对感知显著性的强烈偏好——某些刺激根据其视觉属性(例如颜色、几何图案)有多有趣(即引人注目)。然而,我们不知道当注意力分配偏好与自上而下的语言信息竞争时,对感知显著性的注意力分配偏好会持续到何种程度。本研究考察了竞争感知显著性对视词识别的影响,参与者为 17 名 ASD 儿童(平均年龄 31 个月)和 17 名具有典型发展的儿童(平均年龄 20 个月),这些儿童在接受性语言技能上相匹配。在字词识别任务中,屏幕上会呈现两张图片,其中一张会被命名(例如,找出碗!)。在中性试验中,两张图片的显著性都很高(即色彩鲜艳,有几何图案)。在竞争试验中,分心图片的显著性高,而目标图片的显著性低,这就产生了自下而上(即显著性驱动)和自上而下(即语言驱动)过程之间的竞争。尽管两组儿童在绝对意义上都表现出了字词识别能力,但只有 ASD 儿童的竞争感知显著性显著降低了对目标的注意力。这些发现表明,物体的感知属性可以干扰 ASD 儿童对相关信息的注意力,这对支持他们的语言发展有影响。研究结果还表明,即使没有社会刺激,感知显著性也会影响 ASD 儿童的注意力分配偏好。