No differences in implicit hand maps among different degrees of autistic traits

Author:

Hidaka Souta12,Chen Na34,Ishii Naomi3,Iketani Risa1,Suzuki Kirino1,Longo Matthew R.5,Wada Makoto3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Rikkyo University Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Human Sciences Sophia University Tokyo Japan

3. Developmental Disorders Section, Department of Rehabilitation for Brain Functions Research Institute of National Rehabilitation Center for Persons with Disabilities Tokorozawa City Japan

4. The Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center Bar‐Ilan University Ramat Gan Israel

5. Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck University of London London UK

Abstract

AbstractPeople with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or higher levels of autistic traits have atypical characteristics in sensory processing. Atypicalities have been reported for proprioceptive judgments, which are tightly related to internal bodily representations underlying position sense. However, no research has directly investigated whether self‐bodily representations are different in individuals with ASD. Implicit hand maps, estimated based on participants' proprioceptive sensations without sight of their hand, are known to be distorted such that the shape is stretched along the medio‐lateral hand axis even for neurotypical participants. Here, with the view of ASD as falling on a continuous distribution among the general population, we explored differences in implicit body representations along with autistic traits by focusing on relationships between autistic traits and the magnitudes of the distortions in implicit hand maps (N ~ 100). We estimated the magnitudes of distortions in implicit hand maps both for fingers and hand surfaces on the dorsal and palmar sides of the hand. Autistic traits were measured by questionnaires (Autism Spectrum [AQ] and Empathy/Systemizing [EQ‐SQ] Quotients). The distortions in implicit hand maps were replicated in our experimental situations. However, there were no significant relationships between autistic traits and the magnitudes of the distortions as well as within‐individual variabilities in the maps and localization performances. Consistent results were observed from comparisons between IQ‐matched samples of people with and without a diagnosis of ASD. Our findings suggest that there exist perceptual and neural processes for implicit body representations underlying position sense consistent across levels of autistic traits.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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