Abstract

BackgroundPoor emotional self-awareness, often referred to as ‘alexithymia’ may be a common area of difficulty in autism. However, emotional self-awareness is labelled and defined differently in various strands of research, and is often measured by self-report. These issues may influence differences in emotional self-awareness between autistic and non-autistic groups. Thus, we need to examine how emotional self-awareness is defined and measured in this literature. MethodWe systematically reviewed studies comparing emotional self-awareness in autistic and non-autistic participants. Forty-seven papers were identified for inclusion, and how emotional self-awareness was defined was extracted from each. Thematic analysis was conducted on extracted definitions. The measurement tools used in each paper were also reviewed, to assess the extent to which studies are reliant upon self-report. ResultsWe identified seven key themes in definitions of emotional self-awareness, with little consistency. Also, the themes identified mapped poorly onto the tools used to measure them. Most studies relied exclusively on self-report, and few used more than one tool. Only three behavioural measurement tools were identified. ConclusionEmotional self-awareness has been variably defined by researchers in different strands of autism research. Moreover, most studies exclusively use self-report alone to measure this outcome, and this may not be reliable. To account for the multi-faceted nature of emotional self-awareness, future research would benefit from specifically defining which aspect of emotional self-awareness is under study and utilising multi-method approaches.

Highlights

  • Our emotions are important features of everyday life, informing and shaping our actions and social interactions

  • Research has consistently found that higher self-reported alexithymia is associated with hypo-activation in brain areas serving emotion perception (Grynberg et al, 2012) and awareness (Kano & Fukudo, 2013) but hyper-activation in somatic and motor areas in response to physical sensation such as pain (Kano & Fukudo, 2013), as well as greater functional connectivity in these areas (Liemburg et al, 2012). These findings suggest that self-reported alexithymia does reflect meaningful differences in emotional self-awareness, with high alexithymia associated with a focus on ‘lower level’ aspects of emotional awareness, such as somatic sensitivity (Moriguchi & Komaki, 2013)

  • Items were excluded based on the following criteria: (a) study was not published in English, (b) study was not an empirical paper published in a peer-reviewed journal, (c) study did not include at least one measure assessing the construct of interest, as defined above, or (d) study matched autistic and non-autistic groups on emotional self-awareness

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Summary

Introduction

Our emotions are important features of everyday life, informing and shaping our actions and social interactions. Many different constructs have arisen in psychology to describe this ability to identify and understand one’s own emotions (Kashdan, Barrett, & McKnight, 2015), but in this review we shall broadly refer to it as ‘emotional self-awareness’. At this point our definition of emotional self-awareness remains intentionally vague, as a key aim of this review is to examine the range of definitions used within the literature to arrive at a consensus position. Emotional self-awareness is labelled and defined differently in various strands of research, and is often measured by self-report. To account for the multi-faceted nature of emotional self-awareness, future research would benefit from defining which aspect of emotional self-awareness is under study and utilising multi-method approaches

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