Abstract

Objective: There appears to be a common network of brain regions that underlie the ability to recall past personal experiences (episodic memory) and the ability to imagine possible future personal experiences (episodic future thinking). At the cognitive level, these abilities are thought to rely on “scene construction” (the ability to bind together multimodal elements of a scene in mind—dependent on hippocampal functioning) and temporal “self-projection” (the ability to mentally project oneself through time—dependent on prefrontal cortex functioning). Although autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by diminished episodic memory, it is unclear whether episodic future thinking is correspondingly impaired. Moreover, the underlying basis of such impairments (difficulties with scene construction, self-projection, or both) is yet to be established. The current study therefore aimed to elucidate these issues. Method: Twenty-seven intellectually high-functioning adults with ASD and 29 age- and IQ-matched neurotypical comparison adults were asked to describe (a) imagined atemporal, non-self-relevant fictitious scenes (assessing scene construction), (b) imagined plausible self-relevant future episodes (assessing episodic future thinking), and (c) recalled personally experienced past episodes (assessing episodic memory). Tests of narrative ability and theory of mind were also completed. Results: Performances of participants with ASD were significantly and equally diminished in each condition and, crucially, this diminution was independent of general narrative ability. Conclusions: Given that participants with ASD were impaired in the fictitious scene condition, which does not involve self-projection, we suggest the underlying difficulty with episodic memory/future thinking is one of scene construction.

Highlights

  • Episodic Memory and Episodic Future Thinking Impairments in High-Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Underlying Difficulty With Scene Construction or Self-Projection?

  • Given that the ability to remember previously experienced episodes is thought to depend on the same underlying cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms/processes as the ability to imagine self-relevant future events, a diminution of episodic future thinking should be evident among people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

  • Previous studies of episodic future thinking among individuals with ASD have produced mixed results, providing a significant challenge to theories that posit an inherent link between episodic memory and episodic future thinking

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Summary

Objective

There appears to be a common network of brain regions that underlie the ability to recall past personal experiences (episodic memory) and the ability to imagine possible future personal experiences (episodic future thinking). Conclusions: Given that participants with ASD were impaired in the fictitious scene condition, which does not involve self-projection, we suggest the underlying difficulty with episodic memory/future thinking is one of scene construction. The difficulty in ASD could be with self-projection/self-related processing, rather than with scene construction This idea is consistent with the notion that ASD involves diminished awareness of aspects of self (e.g., Williams, 2010), as well as with theories that explicitly implicate diminished self-awareness as a contributory cause of the specific profile of memory that characterizes ASD (e.g., Lind, 2010). A final possibility is that difficulties with scene construction and difficulties with self-projection independently contribute to episodic future thinking and episodic memory deficits in ASD In this case, participants with ASD should be impaired in all conditions, but relatively more so in the past and future events conditions. This was an important aim of our study

Participants
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