Abstract

Progression of pupil dilation (PD) in response to visual stimuli may indicate distinct internal processes. No study has been performed on PD progression during a social cognition task. Here, we describe PD progression during the Movie for the Assessment of Social Cognition (MASC) test in n = 23 adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and n = 24 age, IQ and sex-matched neurotypical controls (NTC). The MASC consists of 43 video sequences depicting human social interactions, each followed by a multiple-choice question concerning characters' mental states. PD progression data were extracted by eye tracking and controlled for fixation behavior. Segmenting PD progression during video sequences by principal component analysis, three sequential PD components were unveiled. In ASD compared with NTC, a distinct PD progression was observed with increased constriction amplitude, increased dilation latency, and increased dilation amplitude that correlated with PD progression components. These components predicted social cognition performance. The first and second PD components correlated positively with MASC behavioral performance in ASD but negatively in NTC. These PD components may be interpreted as indicators of sensory-perceptual processing and attention function. In ASD, aberrant sensory-perceptual processing and attention function could contribute to attenuated social cognition performance. This needs to be tested by additional studies combining the respective cognitive tests and the outlined PD progression analysis. Phasic activity of the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine system is discussed as putatively shared underlying mechanism. Autism Res2019. © 2019 The Authors. Autism Research published by International Society for Autism Research published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. LAY SUMMARY: In adolescents with autism, we found an altered pupil dilation during watching scenes of human interactions. Early pupil dilation correlated positively with the number of correct answers to questions about the shown human interactions. Our findings suggest that aberrant sensory processing and attention function may contribute to altered social cognition in autism.

Highlights

  • Pupil dilation (PD) is a versatile and accessible indicator of internal processes [Beatty & Lucero-Wagoner, 2000]

  • The current study investigates PD progression during social cognition in adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) compared with neurotypical controls (NTC)

  • Adolescents with ASD showed reduced social cognition performance compared with NTC (t(44) = 2.31, P = 0.025, d = 0.68; ASD: m = 23.9, SD = 7.2, range = 6–34; NTC: m = 28.7, SD = 6.8, range = 10–37)

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Summary

Introduction

Pupil dilation (PD) is a versatile and accessible indicator of internal processes [Beatty & Lucero-Wagoner, 2000]. PD progression describes continuous change in stimulusevoked PD, which delivers temporally dense time series that are visually comparable to electroencephalography data This allows eliciting different PD components within task trials, which might represent underlying processes that cause PD changes. Another paper differentiated PD progression of neurotypical adults into three sequential components by contrasting task conditions of the Attention Network Task (ANT) [Geva, Zivan, Warsha, & Olchik, 2013] These PD progression components were not interpreted as indicators of sensory-perceptual processing but as indicators of Posner’s attention functions: alerting, orienting, and executive control [Peterson & Posner, 2012]. Attention function—besides sensory-perceptual processing—is another promising modulator of attenuated physiological reactivity during social cognition in ASD These modulating effects are expected to be represented in PD progression components during social cognition tasks. We (3) expect PD progression components to differentially predict social cognition performance across and within groups

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