Atypical neural encoding of faces in individuals with autism spectrum disorder

Author:

Wang Yue1,Cao Runnan1ORCID,Chakravarthula Puneeth N1,Yu Hongbo2,Wang Shuo1

Affiliation:

1. Washington University in St. Louis Department of Radiology, , 4525 Scott Ave, St. Louis, MO 63110, United States

2. University of California Santa Barbara Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, , Santa Barbara, CA 93106, United States

Abstract

Abstract Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience pervasive difficulties in processing social information from faces. However, the behavioral and neural mechanisms underlying social trait judgments of faces in ASD remain largely unclear. Here, we comprehensively addressed this question by employing functional neuroimaging and parametrically generated faces that vary in facial trustworthiness and dominance. Behaviorally, participants with ASD exhibited reduced specificity but increased inter-rater variability in social trait judgments. Neurally, participants with ASD showed hypo-activation across broad face-processing areas. Multivariate analysis based on trial-by-trial face responses could discriminate participant groups in the majority of the face-processing areas. Encoding social traits in ASD engaged vastly different face-processing areas compared to controls, and encoding different social traits engaged different brain areas. Interestingly, the idiosyncratic brain areas encoding social traits in ASD were still flexible and context-dependent, similar to neurotypicals. Additionally, participants with ASD also showed an altered encoding of facial saliency features in the eyes and mouth. Together, our results provide a comprehensive understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying social trait judgments in ASD.

Funder

NIH

National Science Foundation

AFOSR

McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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