Richard Williams Nicole, Tremblay Luc, Hurt-Thaut Corene, Brian Jessica, Kowaleski Julia, Mertel Kathrin, Shlüter Sebastian, Thaut Michael
Music and Health Science Research Collaboratory, University of Toronto, Faculty of Music, Toronto, ON, Canada.
College of Music and Performing Arts, Belmont University, Nashville, TN, United States.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2024 Apr 16;18:1379208. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2024.1379208. eCollection 2024.
Autistic individuals demonstrate greater variability and timing error in their motor performance than neurotypical individuals, likely due at least in part to atypical cerebellar characteristics and connectivity. These motor difficulties may differentially affect discrete as opposed to continuous movements in autistic individuals. Augmented auditory feedback has the potential to aid motor timing and variability due to intact auditory-motor pathways in autism and high sensitivity in autistic individuals to auditory stimuli.
This experiment investigated whether there were differences in timing accuracy and variability in autistic adults as a function of task (discontinuous vs. continuous movements) and condition (augmented auditory feedback vs. no auditory feedback) in a synchronization-continuation paradigm. Ten autistic young adults aged 17-27 years of age completed the within-subjects study that involved drawing circles at 800 milliseconds intervals on a touch screen. In the discontinuous task, participants traced a series of discrete circles and paused at the top of each circle for at least 60 milliseconds. In the continuous task, participants traced the circles without pausing. Participants traced circles in either a non-auditory condition, or an auditory condition in which they heard a tone each time that they completed a circle drawing.
Participants had significantly better timing accuracy on the continuous timing task as opposed to the discontinuous task. Timing consistency was significantly higher for tasks performed with auditory feedback.
This research reveals that motor difficulties in autistic individuals affect discrete timing tasks more than continuous tasks, and provides evidence that augmented auditory feedback may be able to mitigate some of the timing variability present in autistic persons' movements. These results provide support for future investigation on the use of music-based therapies involving auditory feedback to address motor dysfunction in autistic individuals.
与神经典型个体相比,自闭症个体在运动表现上表现出更大的变异性和时间误差,这可能至少部分归因于小脑特征和连接的异常。这些运动困难可能对自闭症个体的离散运动与连续运动产生不同的影响。由于自闭症患者听觉 - 运动通路完整且对听觉刺激高度敏感,增强听觉反馈有可能有助于运动计时和变异性。
本实验采用同步 - 持续范式,研究自闭症成年人在任务(不连续与连续运动)和条件(增强听觉反馈与无听觉反馈)方面,在计时准确性和变异性上是否存在差异。十名年龄在17至27岁的自闭症青年完成了这项被试内研究,该研究要求他们在触摸屏上以800毫秒的间隔画圆。在不连续任务中,参与者绘制一系列离散的圆,并在每个圆的顶部暂停至少60毫秒。在连续任务中,参与者不间断地绘制圆。参与者在非听觉条件下或听觉条件下绘制圆,在听觉条件下,他们每次完成一个圆的绘制时都会听到一个音调。
与不连续任务相比,参与者在连续计时任务上的计时准确性明显更好。在有听觉反馈的任务中,计时一致性明显更高。
本研究表明,自闭症个体的运动困难对离散计时任务的影响大于连续任务,并提供证据表明增强听觉反馈可能能够减轻自闭症患者运动中存在的一些时间变异性。这些结果为未来关于使用基于音乐的疗法(涉及听觉反馈)来解决自闭症个体运动功能障碍的研究提供了支持。