When social and action spaces diverge: A study in children with typical development and autism

Author:

Candini Michela1ORCID,Giuberti Virginia2,Santelli Erica2,di Pellegrino Giuseppe13,Frassinetti Francesca14

Affiliation:

1. University of Bologna, Italy

2. Center for Children with ASD, Reggio Emilia, Italy

3. Center for Studies and Research in Cognitive Neuroscience, Cesena, Italy

4. Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Operative Unit for Recovery and Functional Rehabilitation of the Institute of CastelGoffredo (Mantova), Italy

Abstract

The space around the body has been defined as action space ( peripersonal space) and a social space ( interpersonal space). Within the current debate about the characteristics of these spaces, here we investigated the functional properties and plasticity of action and social space in developmental age. To these aims, children with typical development and autism spectrum disorders were submitted to Reaching- and Comfort-distance tasks, to assess peripersonal and interpersonal space, respectively. Participants approached a person (confederate) or an object and stopped when they thought they could reach the stimulus (Reaching-distance task), or they felt comfortable with stimulus’ proximity (Comfort-distance task). Both tasks were performed before and after a cooperative tool-use training, in which participant and confederate actively cooperated to reach tokens by using either a long (Experiment 1) or a short (Experiment 2) tool. Results showed that in both groups, peripersonal space extended following long-tool-use but not short-tool-use training. Conversely, in typical development, but not in autism spectrum disorders children, interpersonal space toward confederate reduced following the cooperative tool-use training. These findings reveal that action and social spaces are functionally dissociable both in typical and atypical development, and that action but not social space regulation is intact in children with autism.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology

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