Abstract

Behavioral studies indicate that autistic traits predict reduced gaze toward social stimuli. Moreover, experiments that require participants to make an explicit choice between stimuli indicate reduced preferences for social stimuli in individuals with high autistic traits. These observations, in combination, fit with the idea that gaze is actively involved in the formation of choices-gaze toward a stimulus increases the likelihood of its subsequent selection. Although these aspects of gaze and choice behavior have been well characterized separately, it remains unclear how autistic traits affect the relationship between gaze and socially relevant choices. In a choice-based eye-tracking paradigm, we observed that autistic traits predict less frequent and delayed selection of social stimuli. Critically, eye tracking revealed novel phenomena underlying these choice behaviors: first, the relationship between gaze and choice behavior was weaker in individuals with high autistic traits-an increase in gaze to a stimulus was associated with a smaller increase in choice probability. Second, time-series analyses revealed that gaze became predictive of choice behaviors at longer latencies in observers with high autistic traits. This dissociation between gaze and choice in individuals with high autistic traits may reflect wider atypicalities in value coding. Such atypicalities may predict the development of atypical social behaviors associated with the autism phenotype. LAY SUMMARY: When presented with multiple stimuli to choose from, we tend to look more toward the stimuli we later choose. Here, we found that this relationship between looking and choosing was reduced in individuals with high autistic traits. These data indicate that autistic traits may be associated with atypical processing of value, which may contribute to the reduced preferences for social stimuli exhibited by individuals with autism.

Highlights

  • A large body of evidence indicates that individuals with autism exhibit reduced tendencies to seek and exchange information about other people

  • We observed that autistic traits predict differences in social choice behaviors, and the role of gaze in influencing choices

  • We found that a higher level of autistic traits predict later and less frequent selection of social rewards

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Summary

Introduction

A large body of evidence indicates that individuals with autism exhibit reduced tendencies to seek and exchange information about other people. This constitutes part of the diagnostic criteria for autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Traits associated with ASD are observed to varying degrees throughout the population (Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Skinner, Martin, & Clubley, 2001). One approach to studying autism is to investigate how autistic traits predict behaviors. This approach is motivated by the observation that autistic traits are associated with similar aetiologies at extreme ends (Robinson et al, 2011). Dimensional approaches are more methodologically tractable than case–control designs and have good explanatory power in generalizing findings to clinical samples (Bölte, Westerwald, Holtmann, Freitag, & Poustka, 2011; Chandler et al, 2007; Stevenson et al, 2018)

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