Abstract

It has been argued that autistic individuals have difficulties with face memory but typical face perception. However, only one previous study has examined both face memory and face perception in the same individuals, and this study was conducted with a small group of autistic children. Here, face recognition was examined with a group of autistic adults using two face perception tasks (including one designed to avoid a neurotypical bias) and a standard test of face memory. Self-reported face recognition difficulties in everyday life were also recorded. The group of adults with autism scored lower than a matched neurotypical control group on all face tasks and reported more problems with face recognition in everyday life. On the whole, results suggest difficulties with both face perception and face memory in autistic adults, although it should be noted that a wide range of scores were recorded from the autistic individuals, with some scoring in the neurotypical range.Lay abstractIt is well known that some people with autism have difficulties recognizing faces. It is generally thought that this is not because autistic individuals cannot perceive faces, but because autistic individuals have greater problems than people without autism in remembering faces. Here, we worked with a group of autistic adults and a group of non-autistic adults to test their ability to perceive and remember faces. We also asked each person to report any difficulties that they have with recognizing faces in everyday life. We find that, as a group, people with autism have difficulties with both remembering and perceiving faces, and report more problems recognizing faces in everyday life. However, it is worth noting that we observed a wide range of scores in the group of people with autism, with some autistic participants scoring as well as the group of people without autism.

Highlights

  • Lay abstract It is well known that some people with autism have difficulties recognizing faces

  • It has been claimed that autistic individuals are impaired on face memory but not face perception tasks (Weigelt et al, 2012, but see Tang et al, 2015)

  • A group of autistic adults completed a test of face memory (CFMT) and two tests of face perception (GMFT and Oxford Face Matching Test (OFMT))

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Summary

Introduction

Lay abstract It is well known that some people with autism have difficulties recognizing faces. It is generally thought that this is not because autistic individuals cannot perceive faces, but because autistic individuals have greater problems than people without autism in remembering faces. As a group, people with autism have difficulties with both remembering and perceiving faces, and report more problems recognizing faces in everyday life. Across approximately 150 studies, results are mixed, with reports of both typical and impaired face recognition in autism. It is important to test face perception and face memory in the same individuals because differential performance across groups of individuals in different studies may be explained by sample differences in, for example, age or gender ratio or differences in experimental stimuli, rather than the type of face processing required for good performance. If autistic individuals are less likely to process faces holistically than NT individuals (Joseph & Tanaka, 2003), and NT performance is used to calibrate the difficulty of stimulus items such that on average NT individuals get 75% correct, the set of particular stimuli selected may produce better or worse performance in a group of autistic individuals (if those stimuli are easier/harder to distinguish based on local features) even if the autistic individuals are as good as NT individuals on an infinitely large set of face stimuli

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