Neural responses to biological motion distinguish autistic and schizotypal traits

Author:

Hudson Matthew1234ORCID,Santavirta Severi12,Putkinen Vesa12ORCID,Seppälä Kerttu125,Sun Lihua126,Karjalainen Tomi12,Karlsson Henry K12,Hirvonen Jussi78,Nummenmaa Lauri19

Affiliation:

1. Turku PET Centre, University of Turku , Turku 20520, Finland

2. Turku University Hospital , Turku 20520, Finland

3. School of Psychology, University of Plymouth , Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK

4. Brain Research & Imaging Centre, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, Research Way , Plymouth PL6 8BU, UK

5. Department of Medical Physics, Turku University Hospital , Turku 20520, Finland

6. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University , Shanghai 200040, China

7. Department of Radiology, University of Turku and Turku University Hospital , Turku 20520, Finland

8. Medical Imaging Centre, Department of Radiology, Tampere University and Tampere University Hospital , Tampere 33100, Finland

9. Department of Psychology, University of Turku , Turku 20520, Finland

Abstract

AbstractDifficulties in social interactions characterize both autism and schizophrenia and are correlated in the neurotypical population. It is unknown whether this represents a shared etiology or superficial phenotypic overlap. Both conditions exhibit atypical neural activity in response to the perception of social stimuli and decreased neural synchronization between individuals. This study investigated if neural activity and neural synchronization associated with biological motion perception are differentially associated with autistic and schizotypal traits in the neurotypical population. Participants viewed naturalistic social interactions while hemodynamic brain activity was measured with fMRI, which was modeled against a continuous measure of the extent of biological motion. General linear model analysis revealed that biological motion perception was associated with neural activity across the action observation network. However, intersubject phase synchronization analysis revealed neural activity to be synchronized between individuals in occipital and parietal areas but desynchronized in temporal and frontal regions. Autistic traits were associated with decreased neural activity (precuneus and middle cingulate gyrus), and schizotypal traits were associated with decreased neural synchronization (middle and inferior frontal gyri). Biological motion perception elicits divergent patterns of neural activity and synchronization, which dissociate autistic and schizotypal traits in the general population, suggesting that they originate from different neural mechanisms.

Funder

European Research Council

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

Reference117 articles.

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