Abstract

A common interpretation of the face-processing deficits associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is that they arise from a failure to develop normative levels of perceptual expertise. One indicator of perceptual expertise for faces is the own-age bias, operationalized as a processing advantage for faces of one's own age, presumably due to more frequent contact and experience. This effect is especially evident in domains of face recognition memory but less commonly investigated in social-emotional expertise (e.g., facial emotion recognition; FER), where individuals with ASD have shown consistent deficits. In the present study, we investigated whether a FER task would elicit an own-age bias for individuals with and without ASD and explored how the magnitude of an own-age bias may differ as a function of ASD status and symptoms. Ninety-two adolescents (63 male) between the ages of 11 and 14 years completed the child- and adult-face subtests of a standardized FER task. Overall FER accuracy was found to differ by ASD severity, reflecting poorer performance for those with increased symptoms. Results also indicated that an own-age bias was evident, reflecting greater FER performance for child compared to adult faces, for all adolescents regardless of ASD status or symptoms. However, the strength of the observed own-age bias did not differ by ASD status or severity. Findings suggest that face processing abilities of adolescents with ASD may be influenced by experience with specific categories of stimuli, similar to their typically developing peers.

Highlights

  • Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate impaired categorization of the emotional facial expressions of others [1,2,3]

  • In order to better understand the role of experience in face processing for individuals with ASD, the present study aimed to explore whether adolescents with and without ASD would evidence an own-age bias (OAB) while completing a task of facial emotion recognition (FER); that is, demonstrate greater performance accuracies in emotion identification for own-age compared to other-age faces

  • The present study investigated whether a task of facial emotion recognition (FER) would elicit a performance advantage for own-age compared to other-age faces, known as an own-age bias (OAB) for individuals with and without ASD

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate impaired categorization of the emotional facial expressions of others [1,2,3]. Face-relevant expertise develops with frequent and recent experience [7,8,9], resulting in improved performance on behavioral tasks of recognition memory and emotion identification for faces of one's own age compared to faces of another age, known as the own-age bias [OAB; [10,11,12]]. ASD-related deficits in FER can be explained by a failure to develop normative levels of face-relevant perceptual expertise, people with ASD may not be expected to demonstrate an OAB to the same extent as their peers. Whether such a bias occurs among individuals with ASD to the same extent as their peers has not been tested.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call