Atypical and variable attention patterns reveal reduced contextual priors in children with autism spectrum disorder

Author:

Hou Wenwen12ORCID,Cheng Rong123,Zhao Zhong3,Liao Haotian3,Li Jing12

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Behavioral Science, Institute of Psychology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. Department of Psychology University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. College of Mechatronics and Control Engineering Shenzhen University Shenzhen China

Abstract

AbstractAccumulating evidence suggests that individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show impairments in using contextual priors to predict others' actions and make intention inference. Yet less is known about whether and how children with ASD acquire contextual priors during action observation and how contextual priors relate to their action prediction and intention inference. To form proper contextual priors, individuals need to observe the social scenes in a reliable manner and focus on socially relevant information. By employing a data‐driven scan path method and areas of interest (AOI)‐based analysis, the current study investigated how contextual priors would relate to action prediction and intention understanding in 4‐to‐9‐year‐old children with ASD (N = 56) and typically developing (TD) children (N = 50) during free viewing of dynamic social scenes with different intentions. Results showed that children with ASD exhibited higher intra‐subject variability when scanning social scenes and reduced attention to socially relevant areas. Moreover, children with high‐level action prediction and intention understanding showed lower intra‐subject variability and increased attention to socially relevant areas. These findings suggest that altered fixation patterns might restrain children with ASD from acquiring proper contextual priors, which has cascading downstream effects on their action prediction and intention understanding.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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