Author:
Langenbach Benedikt P.,Grotegerd Dominik,Mulders Peter C. R.,Tendolkar Indira,van Oort Jasper,Duyser Fleur,van Eijndhoven Philip,Vrijsen Janna N.,Dannlowski Udo,Kampmann Zarah,Koelkebeck Katja
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Autistic and non-autistic individuals often differ in how they perceive and show emotions, especially in their ability and inclination to infer other people’s feelings from subtle cues like facial expressions. Prominent theories of autism have suggested that these differences stem from alterations in amygdala functioning and that amygdala hypoactivation causes problems with emotion recognition. Thus far, however, empirical investigations of this hypothesis have yielded mixed results and largely relied on relatively small samples.
Methods
In a sample of 72 autistic and 79 non-autistic participants, we conducted a study in which we used the Hariri paradigm to test whether amygdala activation during emotional face processing is altered in autism spectrum disorder, and whether common mental disorders like depression, ADHD or anxiety disorders influence any potential alterations in activation patterns.
Results
We found no evidence for differences in amygdala activation, neither when comparing autistic and non-autistic participants, nor when taking into account mental disorders or the overall level of functional impairment.
Limitations
Because we used one basic emotion processing task in a Dutch sample, results might not generalise to other tasks and other populations.
Conclusions
Our results challenge the view that autistic and non-autistic processing of emotional faces in the amygdala is vastly different and call for a more nuanced view of differences between non-autistic and autistic emotion processing.
Funder
Mercator Research Center Ruhr
Universitätsklinikum Essen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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