Abstract

Individuals with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnosis are often described as having an eye for detail. But it remains to be shown that a detail-focused processing bias is a ubiquitous property of vision in individuals with ASD. To address this question, we investigated whether a greater number of autistic traits in neurotypical subjects is associated with an increased reliance on image details during a natural image recognition task. To this end, we use a novel reverse correlation-based method (feature diagnosticity mapping) for measuring the relative importance of low-level image features for object recognition. The main finding of this study is that image recognition in participants with an above-median number of autistic traits benefited more from the presence of high-spatial frequency image features. Furthermore, we found that this reliance-on-detail effect was best predicted by the presence of the most clinically relevant autistic traits. Therefore, our findings suggest that a greater number of autistic traits in neurotypical individuals is associated with a more detail-oriented visual information processing strategy and that this effect might generalize to a clinical ASD population.

Highlights

  • Individuals with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnosis are often described as having an eye for detail

  • We obtained evidence for natural image recognition depending more on high spatial frequency features in individuals with an above-median number of autistic traits

  • The presence of a greater number of autistic traits appears to predict enhanced reliance on fine details for natural image recognition. This effect was found to be driven most by the presence of autistic traits with the highest clinical relevance, which increases the likelihood that our main finding generalizes to clinically diagnosed ASD individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Individuals with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnosis are often described as having an eye for detail. To address this question, we investigated whether a greater number of autistic traits in neurotypical subjects is associated with an increased reliance on image details during a natural image recognition task. Our findings suggest that a greater number of autistic traits in neurotypical individuals is associated with a more detail-oriented visual information processing strategy and that this effect might generalize to a clinical ASD population. ASD-related detail-focused processing has been initially supported by superior detail-focused abstract visual tasks, including the embedded figure t­ ask[3] and the Navon t­ ask[17] These early findings, are highly controversial given the fact that more recent studies have frequently been unable to replicate ­them[18]. ­relationship[25,26] while a more recent study by Kéïta et al.[20] did find a relationship between ASD and enhanced sensitivity for high-spatial frequency grating stimuli

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