Abstract

Characteristic problems with social interaction have prompted considerable interest in the face processing of individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Studies suggest that reduced integration of information from disparate facial regions likely contributes to difficulties recognizing static faces in this population. Recent work also indicates that observers with ASD have problems using patterns of facial motion to judge identity and gender, and may be less able to derive global motion percepts. These findings raise the possibility that feature integration deficits also impact the perception of moving faces. To test this hypothesis, we examined whether observers with ASD exhibit susceptibility to a new dynamic face illusion, thought to index integration of moving facial features. When typical observers view eye-opening and -closing in the presence of asynchronous mouth-opening and -closing, the concurrent mouth movements induce a strong illusory slowing of the eye transitions. However, we find that observers with ASD are not susceptible to this illusion, suggestive of weaker integration of cross-feature dynamics. Nevertheless, observers with ASD and typical controls were equally able to detect the physical differences between comparison eye transitions. Importantly, this confirms that observers with ASD were able to fixate the eye-region, indicating that the striking group difference has a perceptual, not attentional origin. The clarity of the present results contrasts starkly with the modest effect sizes and equivocal findings seen throughout the literature on static face perception in ASD. We speculate that differences in the perception of facial motion may be a more reliable feature of this condition.

Highlights

  • Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by social-communicative atypicalities, and a restrictive and rigid repertoire of behaviours (American Psychiatric Association, 2013)

  • All participants completed a measure of autistic traits, the Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ: Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Skinner, Martin, & Clubley, 2001), on which the ASD group scored significantly higher than the control group (Table 1)

  • Previous research employing the composite-face paradigm suggests that ASD may be associated with reduced integration of information derived from different regions of static faces (Gauthier et al, 2009; Teunisse & de Gelder, 2003; but see Nishimura et al, 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by social-communicative atypicalities, and a restrictive and rigid repertoire of behaviours (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Characteristic problems with social interaction have prompted considerable interest in the face processing of individuals with ASD. Where cortex 7 5 ( 2 0 1 6 ) 1 1 3 e1 1 9 observed, deficits of face perception may hamper social interaction, contributing to the emergence of wider sociocognitive features of ASD (Klin, Schultz, & Jones, 2015; Schultz, 2005). Previous work suggests that a failure to integrate information from different facial regions may contribute to static face recognition difficulties experienced by observers with ASD (Behrmann, Thomas, & Humphreys, 2006; Gauthier, Klaiman, & Schultz, 2009; Teunisse & de Gelder, 2003). The present study is, to our knowledge, the first to examine whether reduced integration of information from dynamic features underlies the poor recognition and interpretation of facial motion in this population

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