McGovern Institute for Brain Research and Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139
McGovern Institute for Brain Research and Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139.
J Neurosci. 2023 Mar 15;43(11):1952-1962. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0608-22.2023. Epub 2023 Feb 9.
Repeated exposure to a stimulus results in reduced neural response, or repetition suppression, in brain regions responsible for processing that stimulus. This rapid accommodation to repetition is thought to underlie learning, stimulus selectivity, and strengthening of perceptual expectations. Importantly, reduced sensitivity to repetition has been identified in several neurodevelopmental, learning, and psychiatric disorders, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by challenges in social communication and repetitive behaviors and restricted interests. Reduced ability to exploit or learn from repetition in ASD is hypothesized to contribute to sensory hypersensitivities, and parallels several theoretical frameworks claiming that ASD individuals show difficulty using regularities in the environment to facilitate behavior. Using fMRI in autistic and neurotypical human adults (females and males), we assessed the status of repetition suppression across two modalities (vision, audition) and with four stimulus categories (faces, objects, printed words, and spoken words). ASD individuals showed domain-specific reductions in repetition suppression for face stimuli only, but not for objects, printed words, or spoken words. Reduced repetition suppression for faces was associated with greater challenges in social communication in ASD. We also found altered functional connectivity between atypically adapting cortical regions and higher-order face recognition regions, and microstructural differences in related white matter tracts in ASD. These results suggest that fundamental neural mechanisms and system-wide circuits are selectively altered for face processing in ASD and enhance our understanding of how disruptions in the formation of stable face representations may relate to higher-order social communication processes. A common finding in neuroscience is that repetition results in plasticity in stimulus-specific processing regions, reflecting selectivity and adaptation (repetition suppression [RS]). RS is reduced in several neurodevelopmental and psychiatric conditions including autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Theoretical frameworks of ASD posit that reduced adaptation may contribute to associated challenges in social communication and sensory processing. However, the scope of RS differences in ASD is unknown. We examined RS for multiple categories across visual and auditory domains (faces, objects, printed words, spoken words) in autistic and neurotypical individuals. We found reduced RS in ASD for face stimuli only and altered functional connectivity and white matter microstructure between cortical face-recognition areas. RS magnitude correlated with social communication challenges among autistic individuals.
重复暴露于刺激会导致负责处理该刺激的大脑区域的神经反应减弱,即重复抑制。这种对重复的快速适应被认为是学习、刺激选择性和感知期望增强的基础。重要的是,在几种神经发育、学习和精神疾病中,包括自闭症谱系障碍 (ASD),已经确定了对重复的敏感性降低,自闭症谱系障碍是一种神经发育障碍,其特征是社交沟通和重复行为以及兴趣受限方面存在挑战。自闭症谱系障碍中对重复的利用或学习能力下降被假设为导致感觉过敏的原因,与几个理论框架平行,这些框架声称自闭症谱系障碍个体在使用环境中的规律来促进行为方面存在困难。我们使用功能磁共振成像 (fMRI) 在自闭症和神经典型的成年人类(女性和男性)中评估了两种模态(视觉、听觉)和四种刺激类别(面孔、物体、印刷文字和口语)的重复抑制状态。自闭症个体仅对面刺激表现出特定于域的重复抑制减少,但对物体、印刷文字或口语没有。对面孔的重复抑制减少与自闭症中的社交沟通挑战更大有关。我们还发现,在自闭症中,异常适应的皮质区域与高阶面孔识别区域之间的功能连接发生改变,以及相关白质束的微观结构差异。这些结果表明,自闭症中面部处理的基本神经机制和全系统电路选择性改变,并增强了我们对稳定面部表示形式的形成中断如何与高阶社交沟通过程相关的理解。神经科学中的一个常见发现是,重复会导致刺激特异性处理区域的可塑性,反映出选择性和适应性(重复抑制[RS])。RS 在包括自闭症谱系障碍 (ASD) 在内的几种神经发育和精神疾病中降低。自闭症的理论框架假设,适应性降低可能导致社交沟通和感觉处理方面的相关挑战。然而,自闭症中 RS 差异的范围尚不清楚。我们检查了自闭症和神经典型个体在视觉和听觉领域(面孔、物体、印刷文字、口语)的多个类别中的 RS。我们发现自闭症中仅对面刺激的 RS 降低,并且皮质面孔识别区域之间的功能连接和白质微观结构发生改变。RS 幅度与自闭症个体的社交沟通挑战相关。