Seymour Robert A, Rippon Gina, Gooding-Williams Gerard, Wang Hongfang, Kessler Klaus
Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity (OHBA), Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Department of Imaging Neuroscience, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
Eur J Neurosci. 2025 Apr;61(8):e70109. doi: 10.1111/ejn.70109.
Taking another's perspective is a high-level mental skill underlying many aspects of social cognition. Perspective-taking is usually an embodied egocentric process whereby people mentally rotate themselves away from their physical location into the other's orientation. This is accompanied by increased theta-band (3-7 Hz) brain oscillations within a widespread fronto-parietal cortical network including the temporoparietal junction. Individuals with autism spectrum conditions (ASC) have been reported to experience challenges with high-level perspective-taking, particularly when adopting embodied strategies. To investigate the potential neurophysiological basis of these autism-related individual differences, we used magnetoencephalography in combination with a well-replicated perspective-taking paradigm in a group of 18 autistic and 17 age-matched non-autistic adolescents. Findings revealed that increasing the angle between self and other perspective resulted in prolonged reaction times for the autistic group during perspective-taking. This was accompanied by reduced theta power across a wide network of regions typically active during social cognitive tasks. On the other hand, the autistic group showed greater alpha power decreases in visual cortex compared with the non-autistic group across all perspective-taking conditions. These divergent theta and alpha power effects, coupled with steeper response time slopes, suggest that autistic individuals may rely more on alternative cognitive strategies, such as mental object rotation, rather than an egocentric embodied approach. Finally, no group differences were found when participants were asked to track, rather than take, another's viewpoint, suggesting that autism-related individual differences are specific to high-level perspective-taking.
换位思考是一种高级心理技能,是社会认知诸多方面的基础。换位思考通常是一个具身自我中心过程,即人们在脑海中将自己从身体所处位置旋转到他人的方向。这伴随着在包括颞顶联合区在内的广泛额顶叶皮质网络中,θ波段(3 - 7赫兹)脑振荡增加。据报道,患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASC)的个体在进行高级换位思考时会遇到挑战,尤其是在采用具身策略时。为了探究这些与自闭症相关的个体差异的潜在神经生理基础,我们对一组18名自闭症青少年和17名年龄匹配的非自闭症青少年,使用脑磁图结合一个经过充分验证的换位思考范式进行了研究。研究结果显示,在换位思考过程中,自闭症组中自我与他人视角之间的角度增加会导致反应时间延长。与此同时,在社交认知任务中通常活跃的广泛区域网络中,θ波功率降低。另一方面,在所有换位思考条件下,与非自闭症组相比,自闭症组在视觉皮层中显示出更大的α波功率下降。这些不同的θ波和α波功率效应,再加上更陡的反应时间斜率,表明自闭症个体可能更多地依赖于替代认知策略,如心理物体旋转,而不是自我中心的具身方法。最后,当要求参与者追踪而不是采取他人的观点时,未发现组间差异,这表明与自闭症相关的个体差异特定于高级换位思考。