Affiliation:
1. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada
2. Graduate Program in Neuroscience University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada
3. School of Psychology Victoria University of Wellington Wellington New Zealand
4. Department of Psychology Simon Fraser University Burnaby British Columbia Canada
Abstract
AbstractDifficulties in various face processing tasks have been well documented in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Several meta‐analyses and numerous case–control studies have indicated that this population experiences a moderate degree of impairment, with a small percentage of studies failing to detect any impairment. One possible account of this mixed pattern of findings is heterogeneity in face processing abilities stemming from the presence of a subpopulation of prosopagnosic individuals with ASD alongside those with normal face processing skills. Samples randomly drawn from such a population, especially relatively smaller ones, would vary in the proportion of participants with prosopagnosia, resulting in a wide range of group‐level deficits from mild (or none) to severe across studies. We test this prosopagnosic subpopulation hypothesis by examining three groups of participants: adults with ASD, adults with developmental prosopagnosia (DP), and a comparison group. Our results show that the prosopagnosic subpopulation hypothesis does not account for the face impairments in the broader autism spectrum. ASD observers show a continuous and graded, rather than categorical, heterogeneity that span a range of face processing skills including many with mild to moderate deficits, inconsistent with a prosopagnosic subtype account. We suggest that pathogenic origins of face deficits for at least some with ASD differ from those of DP.
Funder
Canada Foundation for Innovation
Marsden Fund
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience
Cited by
5 articles.
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