Shafer Robin L, Bartolotti James, Driggers Abigail, Bojanek Erin, Wang Zheng, Mosconi Matthew W
University of Kansas.
University of Kansas Medical Center.
Res Sq. 2024 Sep 4:rs.3.rs-4831158. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4831158/v1.
Autistic individuals show deficits in sustained fine motor control which are associated with an over-reliance on visual feedback. Motor memory deficits also have been reported during sustained fine motor control in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). The development of motor memory and visuomotor feedback processes contributing to sustained motor control issues in ASD are not known. The present study aimed to characterize age-related changes in visual feedback and motor memory processes contributing to sustained fine motor control issues in ASD.
Fifty-four autistic participants and 31 neurotypical (NT) controls ages 10-25 years completed visually guided and memory guided sustained precision gripping tests by pressing on force sensors with their dominant hand index finger and thumb. For visually guided trials, participants viewed a stationary target bar and a force bar that moved upwards with increased force for 15s. During memory guided trials, the force bar was visible for 3s, after which participants attempted to maintain their force output without visual feedback for another 12s. To assess visual feedback processing, force accuracy, variability (standard deviation), and regularity (sample entropy) were examined. To assess motor memory, force decay latency, slope, and magnitude were examined during epochs without visual feedback.
Relative to NT controls, autistic individuals showed a greater magnitude and steeper slope of force decay during memory guided trials. Across conditions, the ASD group showed reduced force accuracy (β = .41, R = 0.043, t=2.36, p = 0.021) and greater force variability (β=-2.16, R = .143, t=-4.04, p = 0.0001) and regularity (β=-.52, R = .021, t=-2.21, p = 0.030) relative to controls at younger ages, but these differences normalized by adolescence (age × group interactions). Lower force accuracy and greater force variability during visually guided trials and steeper decay slope during memory guided trials were associated with overall autism severity.
Our findings that autistic individuals show a greater rate and magnitude of force decay than NT individuals following the removal of visual feedback indicate that motor memory deficits contribute to fine motor control issues in ASD. Findings that sensorimotor differences in ASD were specific to younger ages suggest delayed development across multiple motor control processes.
自闭症个体在持续精细运动控制方面存在缺陷,这与过度依赖视觉反馈有关。在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的持续精细运动控制过程中,也有运动记忆缺陷的报道。目前尚不清楚导致ASD持续运动控制问题的运动记忆和视觉运动反馈过程的发展情况。本研究旨在描述与年龄相关的视觉反馈和运动记忆过程的变化,这些变化导致了ASD中的持续精细运动控制问题。
54名年龄在10 - 25岁的自闭症参与者和31名神经典型(NT)对照者用优势手的食指和拇指按压力传感器,完成视觉引导和记忆引导的持续精确抓握测试。在视觉引导试验中,参与者观看一个静止的目标条和一个随着力的增加而向上移动的力条,持续15秒。在记忆引导试验中,力条可见3秒,之后参与者尝试在没有视觉反馈的情况下再维持12秒的力输出。为了评估视觉反馈处理,检查了力的准确性、变异性(标准差)和规律性(样本熵)。为了评估运动记忆,在没有视觉反馈的时间段内检查了力衰减潜伏期、斜率和幅度。
相对于NT对照者,自闭症个体在记忆引导试验中表现出更大的力衰减幅度和更陡的斜率。在所有条件下,ASD组在较年轻年龄段相对于对照组显示出较低的力准确性(β = 0.41,R = 0.043,t = 2.36,p = 0.021)、更大的力变异性(β = -2.16,R = 0.143,t = -4.04,p = 0.0001)和规律性(β = -0.52,R = 0.021,t = -2.21,p = 0.030),但这些差异在青春期时趋于正常(年龄×组间交互作用)。视觉引导试验中较低的力准确性和较大的力变异性以及记忆引导试验中较陡的衰减斜率与整体自闭症严重程度相关。
我们的研究结果表明,自闭症个体在去除视觉反馈后,其力衰减的速度和幅度比NT个体更大,这表明运动记忆缺陷导致了ASD中的精细运动控制问题。ASD中感觉运动差异特定于较年轻年龄段的研究结果表明,多个运动控制过程的发育延迟。