Abstract

BackgroundAutism Spectrum Conditions (ASC) are a set of pervasive neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by a wide range of lifelong signs and symptoms. Recent explanatory models of autism propose abnormal neural connectivity and are supported by studies showing decreased interhemispheric coherence in individuals with ASC. The first aim of this study was to test the hypothesis of reduced interhemispheric coherence in ASC, and secondly to investigate specific effects of task performance on interhemispheric coherence in ASC.MethodsWe analyzed electroencephalography (EEG) data from 15 participants with ASC and 15 typical controls, using Wavelet Transform Coherence (WTC) to calculate interhemispheric coherence during face and chair matching tasks, for EEG frequencies from 5 to 40 Hz and during the first 400 ms post-stimulus onset.ResultsResults demonstrate a reduction of interhemispheric coherence in the ASC group, relative to the control group, in both tasks and for all electrode pairs studied. For both tasks, group differences were generally observed after around 150 ms and at frequencies lower than 13 Hz. Regarding within-group task comparisons, while the control group presented differences in interhemispheric coherence between faces and chairs tasks at various electrode pairs (FT7-FT8, TP7-TP8, P7-P8), such differences were only seen for one electrode pair in the ASC group (T7-T8). No significant differences in EEG power spectra were observed between groups.ConclusionsInterhemispheric coherence is reduced in people with ASC, in a time and frequency specific manner, during visual perception and categorization of both social and inanimate stimuli and this reduction in coherence is widely dispersed across the brain.Results of within-group task comparisons may reflect an impairment in task differentiation in people with ASC relative to typically developing individuals.Overall, the results of this research support the value of WTC in examining the time-frequency microstructure of task-related interhemispheric EEG coherence in people with ASC.

Highlights

  • Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASC) are a set of pervasive neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by a wide range of lifelong signs and symptoms

  • There were patterns of significantly decreased coherence for the ASC group when compared to the control group, for both tasks and for all the electrode pairs studied, at Puncorrected

  • Across both tasks this relatively decreased coherence in the ASC group was observed largely for frequencies below about 13 Hz and, except at the parietal electrode pair, only at times later than about 150 ms post stimulus onset. For this time-frequency region, no significant correlations were found between coherence and Intelligence Quotient (IQ) or Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) scores, for either group

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Summary

Introduction

Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASC) are a set of pervasive neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by a wide range of lifelong signs and symptoms. The core features of ASC include impairments in reciprocal social interactions, repetitive behaviors, a restricted range of interests and a variety of language disturbances, ranging from a complete absence of receptive and expressive speech to subtle problems of semantics and pragmatics [1]. In addition to these characteristic social and cognitive features, atypical patterns of perception and sensory integration are increasingly recognized as features of ASC [2,3,4]. Models of abnormal connectivity, including increased short-range connectivity and decreased long-range connectivity, have been proposed by several authors as a possible neurological substrate for the full range of behavioral and cognitive characteristics of ASC [9,10,11,12,13], [for recent reviews see 14,15]

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