Predictive responses in the Theory of Mind network: A comparison of autistic and non-autistic adults

IF 3.3 2区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Lucie Zimmer , Hilary Richardson , Carolina Pletti , Markus Paulus , Tobias Schuwerk
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Abstract

Social cognitive processes, particularly Theory of Mind (ToM) reasoning, appear to differ between autistic and non-autistic individuals. This has been proposed to reflect the autistic core symptomatology of communication and social interaction difficulties. According to the predictive coding theory, autistic individuals' ToM reasoning difficulties arise from an attenuated use of prior information about others' mental states to explain and predict their behavior. This reduced use of prior assumptions makes the social world less predictable for autistic people, causing interactive mismatch and stress. Despite strong theoretical claims, robust and replicable neural differences in ToM brain regions remain elusive. Here, we investigated whether brain regions supporting ToM reasoning anticipate a narrative during repeated exposure (i.e., the narrative anticipation effect) in non-autistic adults (Experiment 1) and tested whether this effect was attenuated in autistic adults (Experiment 2). We presented a short movie with a plot including mental states with associated actions, twice, to 61 non-autistic adults who underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging [Experiment 1: M(SD)age = 25.9(4.4) years]. In Experiment 2, we used the same protocol with 30 autistic [M(SD)age = 32.4(10.7) years] and 30 non-autistic adults [M(SD)age = 33.2(10.1) years]. Analyses revealed no narrative anticipation effect in the ToM network in either group. Exploratory reverse correlation analyses identified a ToM scene that evoked a smaller difference in response between movie viewings (i.e., less repetition suppression) in autistic adults, compared to non-autistic adults. In sum, our study shows that predictive processing in the ToM network during a naturalistic movie-viewing experiment was absent in adults. Subtle differences in a key scene provide preliminary neural evidence for the predictive coding theory and open a promising avenue for future research to better understand the nature of differences in social interaction in autistic adults.
心理理论网络中的预测反应:自闭症与非自闭症成人的比较
社会认知过程,特别是心理理论(ToM)推理,似乎在自闭症和非自闭症个体之间有所不同。这反映了自闭症的核心症状是沟通和社会互动困难。根据预测编码理论,自闭症个体的ToM推理困难来自于对他人心理状态的先验信息的使用减弱,以解释和预测他们的行为。这种对先验假设的减少使自闭症患者的社会世界更难以预测,导致互动不匹配和压力。尽管有强有力的理论主张,但在ToM大脑区域中稳健且可复制的神经差异仍然难以捉摸。在此,我们研究了非自闭症成人(实验1)中支持ToM推理的大脑区域是否在重复暴露时预测叙述(即叙述预期效应),并测试了这种效应在自闭症成人中是否减弱(实验2)。我们给61名接受功能磁共振成像的非自闭症成年人播放了两段包含心理状态和相关行为的短片[实验1:M(SD)年龄= 25.9(4.4)岁]。在实验2中,我们对30名自闭症患者[M(SD)年龄= 32.4(10.7)岁]和30名非自闭症成年人[M(SD)年龄= 33.2(10.1)岁]使用了相同的方案。分析结果显示,两组的ToM网络均无叙事预期效应。探索性反向相关分析发现,与非自闭症成年人相比,一个ToM场景在自闭症成年人观看电影时引起的反应差异较小(即较少的重复抑制)。总之,我们的研究表明,在成人的自然观影实验中,ToM网络的预测处理是不存在的。关键场景的细微差异为预测编码理论提供了初步的神经证据,并为未来更好地理解自闭症成人社会互动差异的本质开辟了一条有希望的研究途径。
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来源期刊
Cortex
Cortex 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
250
审稿时长
74 days
期刊介绍: CORTEX is an international journal devoted to the study of cognition and of the relationship between the nervous system and mental processes, particularly as these are reflected in the behaviour of patients with acquired brain lesions, normal volunteers, children with typical and atypical development, and in the activation of brain regions and systems as recorded by functional neuroimaging techniques. It was founded in 1964 by Ennio De Renzi.
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