Abstract

Interpreting the world around us requires integrating incoming sensory signals with prior information. Autistic individuals have been proposed to rely less on prior information and make more cautious responses than non-autistic individuals. Here, we investigated whether these purported features of autistic perception vary as a function of autistic-like traits in the general population. We used a diffusion model framework, whereby decisions are modelled as noisy evidence accumulation processes towards one of two bounds. Within this framework, prior information can bias the starting point of the evidence accumulation process. Our pre-registered hypotheses were that higher autistic-like traits would relate to reduced starting point bias caused by prior information and increased response caution (wider boundary separation). 222 participants discriminated the direction of coherent motion stimuli as quickly and accurately as possible. Stimuli were preceded with a neutral cue (square) or a directional cue (arrow). 80% of the directional cues validly predicted the upcoming motion direction. We modelled accuracy and response time data using a hierarchical Bayesian model in which starting point varied with cue condition. We found no evidence for our hypotheses, with starting point bias and response caution seemingly unrelated to Adult Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) scores. Alongside future research applying this paradigm to autistic individuals, our findings will help refine theories regarding the role of prior information and altered decision-making strategies in autistic perception. Our study also has implications for models of bias in perceptual decision-making, as the most plausible model was one that incorporated bias in both decision-making and sensory processing.

Highlights

  • Processing visual information and integrating it with prior experience to guide decisions is key to successfully interacting with the dynamic world around us

  • 95% CI = [−0.15, 0.11], showing that the adaptive procedure did not lead to important between-participants differences as a function of Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ)

  • We found no evidence for a relationship between starting point bias and autistic-like traits

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Summary

Introduction

Processing visual information and integrating it with prior experience to guide decisions is key to successfully interacting with the dynamic world around us. 2002; Pellicano et al, 2005), while other studies show improved sensitivity (Chen et al, 2012; Foss-Feig et al, 2013; Manning et al, 2015) or similar performance in autistic individuals relative to neurotypical individuals (Del Viva et al, 2006; Jones et al, 2011) This disparate literature may be due to differences in participant samples and the type of experimental task or stimuli used (see Kaiser & Shiffrar, 2009; Simmons et al, 2009, for reviews). These tasks have in common that they require integrating motion signals over space (“global” motion sensitivity)

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