Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck, University of London, Malet St, London, WC1E 7HX, UK.
Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.
Mol Autism. 2021 Dec 15;12(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s13229-021-00476-0.
The neurocognitive mechanisms underlying autism spectrum disorder (ASD) remain unclear. Progress has been largely hampered by small sample sizes, variable age ranges and resulting inconsistent findings. There is a pressing need for large definitive studies to delineate the nature and extent of key case/control differences to direct research towards fruitful areas for future investigation. Here we focus on perception of biological motion, a promising index of social brain function which may be altered in ASD. In a large sample ranging from childhood to adulthood, we assess whether biological motion preference differs in ASD compared to neurotypical participants (NT), how differences are modulated by age and sex and whether they are associated with dimensional variation in concurrent or later symptomatology.
Eye-tracking data were collected from 486 6-to-30-year-old autistic (N = 282) and non-autistic control (N = 204) participants whilst they viewed 28 trials pairing biological (BM) and control (non-biological, CTRL) motion. Preference for the biological motion stimulus was calculated as (1) proportion looking time difference (BM-CTRL) and (2) peak look duration difference (BM-CTRL).
The ASD group showed a present but weaker preference for biological motion than the NT group. The nature of the control stimulus modulated preference for biological motion in both groups. Biological motion preference did not vary with age, gender, or concurrent or prospective social communicative skill within the ASD group, although a lack of clear preference for either stimulus was associated with higher social-communicative symptoms at baseline.
The paired visual preference we used may underestimate preference for a stimulus in younger and lower IQ individuals. Our ASD group had a lower average IQ by approximately seven points. 18% of our sample was not analysed for various technical and behavioural reasons.
Biological motion preference elicits small-to-medium-sized case-control effects, but individual differences do not strongly relate to core social autism associated symptomatology. We interpret this as an autistic difference (as opposed to a deficit) likely manifest in social brain regions. The extent to which this is an innate difference present from birth and central to the autistic phenotype, or the consequence of a life lived with ASD, is unclear.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的神经认知机制仍不清楚。进展主要受到样本量小、年龄范围变化以及由此导致的结果不一致的阻碍。迫切需要进行大型明确的研究,以描绘关键病例/对照差异的性质和程度,从而将研究引向未来有成果的领域。在这里,我们专注于生物运动知觉,这是一种有前途的社交大脑功能指标,在 ASD 中可能会发生改变。在一个从儿童到成年的大样本中,我们评估 ASD 患者与神经典型参与者(NT)相比,在生物运动偏好上是否存在差异,这种差异如何受到年龄和性别的调节,以及它们是否与同时或随后的症状表现的维度变化相关。
我们从 486 名 6 至 30 岁的自闭症(N=282)和非自闭症对照(N=204)参与者中收集眼动追踪数据,当他们观看 28 个配对生物(BM)和控制(非生物,CTRL)运动的试验时,记录他们的眼动。生物运动刺激的偏好用(1)注视时间差异比例(BM-CTRL)和(2)注视持续时间差异峰值(BM-CTRL)来计算。
与 NT 组相比,ASD 组对生物运动的偏好虽然存在,但较弱。两种群体的控制刺激性质都调节了对生物运动的偏好。在 ASD 组中,生物运动偏好并不随年龄、性别或同时或随后的社交沟通技能而变化,尽管在基线时对任何一种刺激都缺乏明显偏好与更高的社交沟通症状相关。
我们使用的配对视觉偏好可能低估了对较年轻和较低智商个体的刺激的偏好。我们的 ASD 组的平均智商约低 7 分。由于各种技术和行为原因,我们的样本中有 18%未进行分析。
生物运动偏好引发了小到中等大小的病例对照效应,但个体差异与核心自闭症相关症状没有强烈关系。我们将其解释为一种自闭症差异(而不是缺陷),可能表现在社交脑区。这种差异是从出生起就存在的、是自闭症表型的核心,还是 ASD 生活的结果,目前还不清楚。