Higher or lower? Interpersonal behavioral and neural synchronization of movement imitation in autistic children

Author:

Du Bang1,Zhang Wenjun12,Chen Liu1,Deng Xiaorui1,Li Kaiyun1ORCID,Lin Fengxun13,Jia Fanlu1,Su Shuhua1,Tang Wanzhi4

Affiliation:

1. School of Education and Psychology University of Jinan Jinan China

2. Department of Special Education East China Normal University Shanghai China

3. School of Education Qingdao Huanghai University Qingdao China

4. Faculty of Arts, Psychology University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

Abstract

AbstractHow well autistic children can imitate movements and how their brain activity synchronizes with the person they are imitating have been understudied. The current study adopted functional near‐infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning and employed a task involving real interactions involving meaningful and meaningless movement imitation to explore the fundamental nature of imitation as a dynamic and interactive process. Experiment 1 explored meaningful and meaningless gesture imitation. The results revealed that autistic children exhibited lower imitation accuracy and behavioral synchrony than non‐autistic children when imitating both meaningful and meaningless gestures. Specifically, compared to non‐autistic children, autistic children displayed significantly higher interpersonal neural synchronization (INS) in the right inferior parietal lobule (r‐IPL) (channel 12) when imitating meaningful gestures but lower INS when imitating meaningless gestures. Experiment 2 further investigated the imitation of four types of meaningless movements (orofacial movements, transitive movements, limb movements, and gestures). The results revealed that across all four movement types, autistic children exhibited significantly lower imitation accuracy, behavioral synchrony, and INS in the r‐IPL (channel 12) than non‐autistic children. This study is the first to identify INS as a biomarker of movement imitation difficulties in autistic individuals. Furthermore, an intra‐ and interindividual imitation mechanism model was proposed to explain the underlying causes of movement imitation difficulties in autistic individuals.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Social Science Fund of China

Publisher

Wiley

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